It's not the ramp that's dangerous, just the "gotta get 'er done" truck drivers as they have and will continue to display their utter disregard for SAFETY, of their own as well of the motoring public.
Since there is a growing number of incompetent truck drivers (thick, incompetent, "not my fault"), I'll figure ALL states shall look into such "remedies".
In Greensboro NC, we have a exit ramp from I-73E to I-85N with a clearly posted speed limit of 25 mph. There have been a few trucks rolling over down the steep embankment. I'll figure it must be the (bad) design and not the fault of the truck drivers, yeah, sure, uh huh, okay, right.
To speed on ramps is often a great way to succeed in arriving to the final stop.
The guy in the latest accident said he was doing 55, on a ramp posted 35 with flashing lights ????? Rule of thumb has always been 10 miles per hour lower than posted speed limit. Slow the f?($ down !!!!!
I go to work dressed like that, so I thought I may as well look like it on here.BIG R GUY,
Digging on that crazy avatar. WELL DONE!!
We havr one in Milwaukee that is the same thing. It is down the road from all the oil company's tank farms. They finally posted the road leading to it forcing trucks to use a longer route to a safer ramp.While I can't comment about the ramp in the article, there is a notorious ramp in New Jersey commonly referred to as "tanker turn" because of all the TT's that have flipped in past years. This particular ramp which leads from the northbound NJ Turnpike to the local lanes of I-80 west is a horrible design. It's what is called a "decreasing radius curve", a most dangerous design. It starts out with a fairly gradual curve and then abruptly the curvature tightens about 2/3's of the way through. The PE who signed off on this design should lose his license in my opinion.