Jump to content

Traffic Cameras Start On April 1 (no Joke)


NaiGreg

Recommended Posts

Traffic cameras are being installed at a number of major intersections. Rim Kham, Chotana, and others to start.

The warning leaflet says (I am paraphrasing)

"We are warning honorable citizens .. we don't like arresting (you) ... we don't like fining (you) ...

We ask that you follow the traffic laws ...

We will start arresting and fining from April 1 2553"

They are specifically looking for red-light runners and helmet-dodgers.

Since they can track down vehicle owners, but not the particular driver, using these cameras, think twice about lending you car to anyone.

-NG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They will enforce it for the first couple of weeks and then it will fade away....

Driving whilst speaking on your mobile phone is probably one of the biggest causes of car accidents in Thailand but the BIB don't give a <deleted>. The BIB are not into preventative policing, they are reactive not proactive.... TIT...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They will enforce it for the first couple of weeks and then it will fade away....

Driving whilst speaking on your mobile phone is probably one of the biggest causes of car accidents in Thailand but the BIB don't give a <deleted>. The BIB are not into preventative policing, they are reactive not proactive.... TIT...

In Thailand the mobile phone is God......I wonder how many deaths are caused, because someone wants to know if dinner is getting cold?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is odd as over the past two months two of my staff have received letters from the police with a picture of them in their car speeding and they have had to go and pay 1000 baht fine, so it has already started. Caused all sorts of giggling at work and quite a brouhaha. And is being well enforced by all accounts. One girl was going 110 km/h at Sarn Dek intersectoin and a guy was doing about 100 on the superhighway.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is odd as over the past two months two of my staff have received letters from the police with a picture of them in their car speeding and they have had to go and pay 1000 baht fine, so it has already started. Caused all sorts of giggling at work and quite a brouhaha. And is being well enforced by all accounts. One girl was going 110 km/h at Sarn Dek intersectoin and a guy was doing about 100 on the superhighway.

They often have a speed trap under one of the flyovers on hwy 11, just south of Big C.  Then a couple of km further south, there'll be the checkpoint set up to hand out tickets.  Usually in the afternoon.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well I reckon most people would have to agree that something needs to be done with the traffic... it's chaotic.

The complete lack of respect for even the most common-sense traffic rules makes driving in this city very dangerous. That is 'de facto'. So perhaps we shouldn't be quite so cynical and see if the authorities actually do make a serious attempt to bring some real deterrent into the frame. Regardless of the possibly flawed bureaucracies behind it, if the camera scheme saves a few lives (or ruined lives) then it has got to be good - yes?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

rules and regs are only as good as enforcement, and as i expressed my opinion that most are just there to provide opportunities for tea money....

well, that leaves me with the general perception that said rules and regs are merely advisories, AND, in the case of a REAL problem, they are a strategic way to lay blame on someone else.

This ain't the first country i lived in like this.... hel_l, Rio Brasil 35 yrs ago was a cakewalk compared to this.... again, the predominate theme being the payoff. In Mexico, they remove your license plates, which are then offered back to you at a "discount" price to save paperwork and hassle....

i guess it depends on where you come from and what you are used to, as to how 'offensive" you find thai driving

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We had our water meter stolen last year and now it has a locked cage around it. these cameras are worth more than my old water meter.

They'll probably mount the cameras at intersections, where there are already manned police cabins.  Heaven knows why the police can't look out their window once in a while to note down license plate details of red light jumpers.  It's happening right in front of them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are cameras for a long time at intersections like rincome (look at the black domes overhead) and they enable the police in the cabin to see the roads in all four directions without getting up and looking out of the window.

They use it to switch the traffic lights by hand e.g. turn them red if noone is coming from that direction anymore or turn them green if there are a lot of cars waiting or an ambulance is stuck in front of the lights.

Most of the time the lights work in automatic mode though and there are different automatic modes for daytime and nighttime (faster switches at night).

But I doubt that the resolution of the cameras is high enough to read license plates.

Red light cameras as known back in europe usually flash and take a high resolution picture necessary to read the plate and identify the driver. They are automatically triggered when a car passes a red light and usually take at least two pictures to show that the car really passed the light and not only stopped a bit too late. The camera also has to be synchronized with the lights to show the state and the time passed since the last state change.

The left lane hast to be exempt, because left turns are always free but there has to be a sensor preventing motorists going on straight in the "turn left" lane.

Installing and calibrating all these devices requires a lot of skilled work, so I think if they wanted to go live with it on 1st april, they should already be working on it (can't see anything about that till now).

Concerning the speed checks on the superhighway, I never saw anything like that. I don't even know what the speed limit is there, I guess the default 90km/h in thailand? Sometimes on the second ring you can see ridiculous signs showing 30km/h or 50km/h, I guess they forgot to remove them after a construction.

But the speed itself is not the dangerous part. It is the big speed difference on cars using the road. there are walking pedastrians or old people with wheelchairs at 5kmh, then cyclists at 20kmh, motorbikes and slow cars at 40-60 kmh the normal traffic at about 100kmh and of course the really fast ones at usually 120-160kmh.

Back in europe of course a road like that wouldn't exists, but if it did, there were hundreds of speed limit signs everywhere and maybe even a minimum speed for the use of the highway.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

a few months ago, on HWY 11, i saw a MONK in a motorized wheel chair using the road! one hand on prayer beads, the other hand on the speed/direction control ... only in thailand.

and of course, the occasional water buffalo (i have photos of ones on overpass to Central Airport Plaza) and cows, not that unusual on 121 or 1317

wonder how cameras would handle those?

but one of my favorite pet peeves is when you have a green light (including a right turn green) and some guy, 10 cars back, crosses OVER the median barrier and speeds up so he can be sure to make the green light... and sometimes he does not.... seen a couple of accidents on 1317/121 for just that reason

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wear a helmet, stop at red lights, and try not to kill myself or anyone else. How will this cameras affect me?

They may deter red light jumpers who may otherwise have run straight through you.

It still wont stop the stupid <deleted>* who turn straight in front of you when the lighrts are on green ,and if that happens dont expect any help from the BIBs the one we had was worse than usless.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.






×
×
  • Create New...