I'm heading up the A413 northbound just before the turn off for wendover. It's 1:30 on a Sunday afternoon with very few cars on the road. It's a two lane NSL single carriageway where the lanes are nearly two car widths, plenty of safe overtaking happens here since it's just after a twisty bit and some villages, so what do I see parked up on a bridge?
Yup, that's a Thames Valley Police camera van, you know the ones that have the big orange logo on the side so you can see them. You can just make out a tiny bit of orange that isn't hidden behind the brick wall if you look at the van for long enough (as opposed to, say, the road)
Why is this necessary? Perhaps there are children playing in the street up ahead, or a bus stop or heavy traffic, lets take a look shall we?
View from just in front of the bridge, looking in the direction of travel for vehicles liable to get caught by the van
View from under the bridge, looking in the same direction as the van itself.
Nope, no children, junctions, crossings, cows, deers, badgers or sheep here, there's a few pigs out of shot though.
Coming the other way, the van is much easier to see, and performing it's advertised function of being a deterrent and slowing people down. People were doing 50 in this direction, but the van isn't clocking these people, it's clocking the others.
Lastly, a view from a different angle, note how hard the van is to spot:
Edit: I meant single carriageway in the first paragraph, not dual, doh! Should be clear from the pictures though.
Edit 2:
Here is a map showing the location Note the railway line separating this road from the town full of happy frollicing innocent little non-chav children