hawg_ryder
Elio Addict
Say Jim, maybe before you start quoting Texas highway statutes you might take a look at the actual statute...when it comes to automotive related things, we find two things to be very different about they handle things in Texas ....
1 - they allow flashing blue lights on most every type of vehicle that has flashing lights
2 - their interstate exits aren't anywhere close to the intersection with the road you want to leave the interstate and get onto
Jim
- a motor vehicle lamp or illuminating device, other than a headlamp, stop lamp, auxiliary lamp, turn signal lamp, or emergency vehicle or school bus warning lamp, that projects a beam with an intensity brighter than 300 candlepower shall be directed so that no part of the high-intensity portion of the beam strikes the roadway at a distance of more than 75 feet from the vehicle.
- except as expressly authorized by law, a person may not operate or move equipment or a vehicle, other than a police vehicle with a lamp or device that displays a red light visible from directly in front of the center of the equipment or vehicle.
- a person may not operate a motor vehicle equipped with a red, white, or blue beacon, flashing, or alternating lights unless the equipment is:
- used as specifically authorized by this chapter; or
- a running lamp, tail lamp, backup lamp, or turn signal lamp that is used as authorized by law.
- a vehicle may be equipped with alternately flashing lighting equipment described by Section 547.701 or 547.702 only if the vehicle is:
- a school bus.
- an authorized emergency vehicle;
- a church bus that has the words “church bus” printed on the front and rear of the bus so as to be clearly discernable to other vehicle operators;
- a tow truck while under the direction of a law enforcement officer at the scene of an accident or while hooking up to a disabled vehicle on a roadway; or
- a tow truck with a mounted light bar, which has turn signals and stop lamps in addition to those required by Sections 547.322, 547.323, and 547.324, Transportation Code.
- a person may not operate highway maintenance or service equipment, including snow-removal equipment, that is not equipped with lamps or that does not display lighted lamps is required by the standards and specifications adapted by the Texas Department of Transportation.
- in this section, “tow truck” means a motor vehicle or mechanical device that is adapted or used to tow, winch, or move a disabled vehicle.
- Further information is available in Section 541.201 of the Transportation Code. In pertinent part, 541.201 states.
- a fire department or police vehicle.
- a public or private ambulance operated by a person who has been issued a license by the Texas Department of Health;
- a municipal department of public service corporation emergency vehicle that has been designated or authorized by the governing body of a municipality;
- a private vehicle of a volunteer firefighter or a certified emergency medical services employee or volunteer when responding to a fire alarm or medical emergency;
- an industrial emergency response vehicle, including an industrial ambulance, when responding to an emergency, but only if the vehicle is operated in compliance with criteria in effect September 1, 1989, and established by the Texas Industrial Fire Training Board of the State Firemen’s and Fire Marshall’s Association of Texas; or
- a vehicle of a blood bank or tissue bank, accredited or approved under laws of this State or the United States, when making emergency deliveries of blood, drugs, medicines, or organs.
Now as to your second point... well, I've observed in my travels across the United States (48 States and Canada) on scooter trips that in general the poorer the State the shorter the entrance and exit ramps on Interstates and freeways... No scientific proof you understand, just an observation... Sorry that our long ramps doesn't meet with your approval... Ya'll folks over there in NC don't worry about Ol' Texas... We're doing just fine...
h_r