PRIN.OF HIGHWAY ENGINEERING&TRAFFIC ANA.
7th Edition
ISBN: 9781119610526
Author: Mannering
Publisher: WILEY
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Chapter 7, Problem 13P
To determine
The maximum length of the effective red that will satisfy the local standards.
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An observer notes that an approach to a pretimed signal has a maximum of eight vehicles in a queue in a given cycle. If the saturation flow rate is 1440 veh/h and the effective red time is 40 seconds, how much time will it take this queue to clear after the start of the effective green (assuming that approach capacity exceeds arrivals and D/D/1 queuing applies)?
An intersection approach has a saturation flow rate of 1500 veh/h, and vehicles arrive at the approach at the rate of 800 veh/h. The approach is controlled by a pretimed signal with a cycle length of 60 seconds and D/D/1 queuing holds. Local standards dictate that signals should be set such that all approach queues dissipate 10 seconds before the end of the effective green portion of the cycle. Assuming that approach capacity exceeds arrivals, determine the maximum length of effective red that will satisfy the local standards.
Compute the average approach delay per cycle, given the saturation flow rate of 2400 veh/h and is allocated 24 seconds of effective green in an 80-second signal cycle. Flow at the approach is 500 veh/h. Assume the traffic flow accounts for the peak 15-min period and that there is no initial queue at the start of the analysis period.
Chapter 7 Solutions
PRIN.OF HIGHWAY ENGINEERING&TRAFFIC ANA.
Ch. 7 - Prob. 1PCh. 7 - Prob. 2PCh. 7 - Prob. 3PCh. 7 - Prob. 4PCh. 7 - Prob. 5PCh. 7 - Prob. 6PCh. 7 - Prob. 7PCh. 7 - Prob. 8PCh. 7 - Prob. 9PCh. 7 - Prob. 10P
Ch. 7 - Prob. 11PCh. 7 - Prob. 12PCh. 7 - Prob. 13PCh. 7 - Prob. 14PCh. 7 - Prob. 15PCh. 7 - Prob. 16PCh. 7 - Prob. 17PCh. 7 - Prob. 18PCh. 7 - Prob. 19PCh. 7 - Prob. 20PCh. 7 - Prob. 21PCh. 7 - Prob. 22PCh. 7 - Prob. 23PCh. 7 - Prob. 24PCh. 7 - Prob. 25PCh. 7 - Prob. 26PCh. 7 - Prob. 27PCh. 7 - Prob. 28PCh. 7 - Prob. 29PCh. 7 - Prob. 30PCh. 7 - Prob. 31PCh. 7 - Prob. 32PCh. 7 - Prob. 33PCh. 7 - Prob. 34PCh. 7 - Prob. 35PCh. 7 - Prob. 36PCh. 7 - Prob. 37PCh. 7 - Prob. 38PCh. 7 - Prob. 39PCh. 7 - Prob. 40PCh. 7 - Prob. 41PCh. 7 - Prob. 42PCh. 7 - Prob. 43PCh. 7 - Prob. 44PCh. 7 - Prob. 45PCh. 7 - Prob. 46PCh. 7 - Prob. 47PCh. 7 - Prob. 48PCh. 7 - Prob. 49PCh. 7 - Prob. 50PCh. 7 - Prob. 51PCh. 7 - Prob. 52PCh. 7 - Prob. 53PCh. 7 - Prob. 54PCh. 7 - Prob. 55PCh. 7 - Prob. 56PCh. 7 - Prob. 57PCh. 7 - Prob. 58PCh. 7 - Prob. 59PCh. 7 - Prob. 60PCh. 7 - Prob. 61PCh. 7 - Prob. 62P
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- An approach to a pre-timed signal has 40 sec of effective green in a 75-second cycle.The approach volume is 700 veh/h and the saturation flow rate is 1600 veh/h.Calculate the time to queue clearance after the start of the effective green, themaximum number of vehicles in the queue, the total vehicle delay per cycle andthe average delay per vehicle assuming D/D/1 queuing.arrow_forwardThe saturation flow for an intersection approach is 3600 veh/h. At the beginning of cycle no vehicles are queued. The signal is timed so that what the queue is 13 vehicles the effective green begins. If the queue dissipates 8 seconds before the end of the cycle and the cycle length is 60 seconds. What is the arrival rate assuming D/D/1 queuing?arrow_forwardAn observer notes that an approach to a pretimed signal, the time it will take the queue to clear after the start of the effective green (assuming that approach capacity exceeds arrivals and D/D/1 queuing applies) is 60 s. If the saturation flow rate is 1440 veh/h and the effective red time is 40 seconds, what is the maximum number of vehicles in a queue in a given cycle?arrow_forward
- An observer notes that an approach to a pretimed signal, the time it will take the queue to clear after the start of the effective green (assuming that approach capacity exceeds arrivals and D/D/1 queuing applies) is 60 s. If the saturation flow rate is 1440 veh/h and the effective red time is 40 seconds, what is the maximum number of vehicles in a queue in a given cycle? Round off the final answer to whole number (no units).arrow_forwardVehicles arrive at an intersection approach at 550 veh/h at the beginning of an effective red and 15 vehicles are left in the queue from the previous cycle (end of the effective green). Due to peak hour congestion, the arrival rate increases 50 veh/h/min. Therefore after 1 minute, the arrival rate will be 600 veh/h, after 2 minutes it is 650 veh/h. The saturation flow rate of the approach is 1800 veh/h, the cycle length is 65 seconds, and the effective green time is 30 seconds. Determine the total vehicle delay until complete queue clearance. (Assume D/D/1 queuing).arrow_forwardThree-phase a pretimed signalized system for T- intersection, the total lost time per phase is 15 sec. Given that PHF for intersection is 0.91. The table below shows information for all movements included in each phase. (Assume the intersection is isolated, and the traffic flow accounts for the peak 15-min period, and there is no initial queue at the start of the analysis period.) 1 Phase Direction Lane group Number of Lanes Volume (veh/h) 2 Northbound Southbound Northbound LT TH & RT ΤΗ I I 250 1800 390 1800 1 270 1600 2- Determine the average vehicle delay for each traffic lane. 3- Evaluate the level of service (LOS) for each traffic lane. 3 Westbound LT 1 250 2500 Saturation flow (veh/lane/hr) 1- Using the Webster method, determine the optimum cycle length and the effective green time for each phase.arrow_forward
- An observer notes that an approach to a pretimed signal has a maximum of eight vehicles in a queue in a given cycle. If the saturation flow rate is 1440 veh/h and the effective red time is 40 seconds, how much time will it take this queue to clear after the start of the effective green (assuming that approach capacity exceeds arrivals and D/D/1 queuing applies) (in seconds)? Round off the final answer to whole numberarrow_forward(b) An approach to a pretimed signal has 25 seconds of effective green in a 60-second cycle. The approach volume is 500 vph and the saturation flow rate is 1400 vph. Calculate the average vehicle delay assuming D/D/1 queuing.arrow_forward7. An approach at a pretimed signalized intersection is allocated 30 seconds of effective green in an 80-second signal cycle. The flow at the approach is 500 veh/h and the saturation flow of the approach is 2500 veh/h. Assuming D/D/1 queuing, calculate: 1) the time needed to clear the queue, 2) the average delay per vehicle, and 3) the maximum delay of any vehicle.arrow_forward
- An approach to a pretimed signal has 25 seconds of effective green in a 60-second cycle. The approach volume is 500 veh/h and the saturation flow rate is 1400 veh/h. Calculate the average vehicle delay (in seconds) assuming D/D/1 queuing. Round off the final answer to whole number (no units).arrow_forwardAn approach to a pretimed signal has 25 seconds of effective green. The approach volume is 500 veh/h and the saturation flow rate is 1400 veh/h. If the average vehicle delay is 20 seconds assuming D/D/1 queuing, determine the cycle length (in seconds). Round off the final answer to whole number (no units).arrow_forwardTraffic demand shown in the figure below uniformly arrives at an intersection. Determine the optimal cycle length and split for the 2- phase signal control. The saturation flow rate of each approach is 2000 [veh/hr of effec-tive green] during the first 40 [sec] after the start of green, but it drops to 1900 [veh/hr of effective green] thereafter. Also, the lost time is assumed to be 5 [sec/phase]. 1000[veh/h] 300[veh/h] 500[veh/h] 1300[veh/h]arrow_forward
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