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stephenperry View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: ....And In 100 Yards You Have Reached Your Final Resting Place
    Posted: 06-April-2006 at 06:26

Locals in a North Yorkshire village are demanding that satnav companies remove from their databases a rural track recommended by in-car systems as a plausible route from Swaledale to Wensleydale, the BBC reports.

The problem is, the road is unsurfaced and runs alongside a 100ft cliff over which, the concerned villagers reckon, someone will eventually plummet. Carol Porter and hubby Steven, who live beside the carriageway of potential death, have been using their tractor to extricate bogged-down vehicles at the rate of one a week. More seriously, some drivers who are unable to progress attempt a reversing manoeuvre "perilously close to the cliff edge".

Porter told the BBC: "The drivers are going up and through the gate on to the gravel track. You can see it goes from tarmac to the stones - and it's only just passable with 4x4s.

"But we get a lot of sales reps in posh cars coming and they get so cross. We're three miles off the main road and having to turn them back and tell them to take a different road, they're getting really frustrated.

"It's only a matter of time before something happens - and it's a 100ft drop over the edge. We want this sorting out before something terrible happens."

The name of the village in question is, readers will be delighted to learn, Crackpot. The Beeb rather nicely adds that Trafficmaster, "said it had removed the Crackpot route from its mapping database after tests on Wednesday morning".

The parish council is, meanwhile, looking into the matter of suitable warning signage.

http://www.theregister.com/2006/04/05/crackpot_satnav/


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Peter Fenwick View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06-April-2006 at 07:23
I guess Sat Nav systems not all there 'cracked' up to be  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06-April-2006 at 16:24
Ho, ho Peter. 

I've had my satnav take me down some tracks in my time!  They certainly don't take low profiles and sport suspension into account when they do the mapping.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06-April-2006 at 18:20
Sat-nav is like the new religion. People follow it blindly

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06-April-2006 at 18:28

'tis true

i've been led up the garden path many a time....

...and the one-way road

...and the farmyard track

...and the no-entry sign


    2007 Ford Mondeo 2.0 TDCI Titanium X Auto

    1983 Ford Sierra XR4i
    2000 Alpina B10 3.3 #118
    1999 BMW 323Ci
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    1994 Vauxhall Omega 2.0 GLS
    1995 Ford Mondeo 1.8 LX
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    1989 Ford Fiesta 1.1 Firefly
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06-April-2006 at 19:08

Never used it, been tempted a few times but I don't need a sat-nav to loose myself.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07-April-2006 at 07:45
I actually learnt a skill which avoids the need for Sat nav, it's called map reading. People should try it sometime, it's actually quite easy...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07-April-2006 at 11:20
Hehe, you do become lost without it, had to get the old map out the other day.  Reading a map whilst driving isn't very safe though.  And pulling over every few minutes gets irritating. 

Had a scare with a oneway street in Luton a while back, made me learn not to blank the signage out! 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-April-2006 at 12:14

Speaking of final resting places:


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