Capri2.8i wrote:
There are a couple of single carriageway motorways I can think of where you could legally do 70mph, despite their being no central resevertation. They are the A601(M) near Carnforth and the Axxxx(M) Carrington Spur south of Manchester, off the M60. The latter is quite bizzare, and really needs to be driven. There are lots of repeater signs reminding you that there is traffic in either direction, which is a good thing as it's not beyond the realms of possibility that someone could assume it's a two lane carriageway. From memory this is because the centre line is not solid, but dashed. This throws up an interesting question. Are you allowed to overtake? The lines are solid, so yes. BUT! If you overtook you would be driving the wrong way down a motorway. Anyone know?
The A6144(M) has centre hatchings bounded by dashes:

Yes folks, that really is a motorway

AIUI this layout would allow overtaking if done carefully - but the curvature of the road limits the realistic opportunities.
A couple of weeks ago I was actually in a car with someone who managed to do the legal 70 along there

- you normally find yourself behind a queue of Micras and lorries.
Quote:
What amazes me is that this has generated 3 pages of discussion, amongst people who take an active interest in driving, so what about the people that don't? I've always thought of the definition along the lines of what Observer said. However, people I've talked to think that because something has two lanes, then it is a DC. This belief is widespread I reckon.
Agreed - but I reckon virtually all the confusion disappears once you accept that a DC has two carriageways separated by a central reservation, and that the fact a road has more than one lane in each direction is irrelevant.