Rules of the road ireland - Information signs      

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Rules of the road 2007
|  Road Signs |  Driving Schools |   Forum |  Advanced Test 

Pick a section from "Rules of the road" new 2007 version

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Appendix
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |                      |       Glossary     |     Index      |

Section 6 - Traffic Signs and Road Markings

  1. Traffic Signs and Road Markings
  2. Regulatory Signs
  3. Stop and Yield Signs
  4. One-way streets
  5. Road markings
  6. Warning signs
  7. Information signs
  8. Traffic calming signs
  9. Special Signs
  10. Bus
  11. Trams/Light Rail
  12. Rail/light rail signs
  13. Railway bridges signs 
  14. Road tunnel signs

Print this page       Rules of the road ireland - Information signs

Section 6.7 - Traffic Signs and Road Markings
Information Signs

As their name suggests, these signs give information about directions and distances from your current location.


What they look like

There are three formats for information signs:

 

Advanced direction signs







Motorway information signs

All motorway signs are blue. The following table identifies the most common signs and what they mean.

Motorway signs What they mean
  Motorway ahead

There is an entrance to a motorway ahead and the road users listed on the sign must not enter the motorway.

  Entry to motorway

The road user is now entering a motorway and must obey motorway rules.
This sign usually appears beside the 'Motorway ahead' sign.

  Countdown sign

The driver is 300 metres from the next exit off the motorway.

  Countdown sign.

The driver is 200 metres from the next exit.

  Countdown sign

The driver is 100 metres from the next exit.

  Motorway ends 500m ahead

There are 500 metres to the end of the motorway.

  End of motorway

The driver has reached the end of the motorway.


Section 11 covers the main rules on motorway driving. It is an offence to disobey these rules.



Markings for merging and diverging traffic (hatched markings)

The diagrams show how the markings can be used for:

  • merging traffic, for example, where two lanes of traffic become one,

 


  • diverging traffic, for example where channelling traffic taking a left turn away from traffic going straight ahead, and

 


 


  • separating traffic travelling in opposite directions (in what are called central median islands).

If you see these markings on a road, you must not enter the area they cover.



Road markings on '2-plus-1 roads'

A 2-plus-1 road consists of two lanes in one direction of travel and one lane in the other direction. The two-lane section allows for safe overtaking and alternates with a one-lane section roughly every 2 kilometres.

 

 There may be a safety barrier in the centre of the road which separates the two directions of traffic and prevents drivers from overtaking in the one-lane section. If vehicles need to turn right, they can do so at junctions.


In other cases vehicles which need to turn right or turnaround may first turn left onto a minor road and perform a U-turn in the area provided for that purpose. They can then resume their journey as originally intended.

 

 

A form of 2-plus-1 road already exists on some climbing national primary roads - the uphill stretch is two lanes and the downhill stretch is just one.

© LIreland 2004

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