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Flashing Yellow Arrows Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation
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Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Flashing Yellow ArrowsFlashing Yellow Arrows

Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manageron behalf ofEdward L. Fischer State Traffic EngineerOregon Department of Transportation

Page 2: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

History of Flashing Yellow ArrowsHistory of Flashing Yellow Arrows

• NCHRP 493 (2003) Evaluation of Traffic Signal Displays for Protected/Permissive Left Turn Control

• FHWA Interim Approval for Optional Use of Flashing Yellow Arrow for Permissive Left Turns (March 2006)

• NCHRP Web-Only Document 123 (2007) Evaluation of FYA

Page 3: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

BackgroundBackground

• Concerns with permissive circular green.• Concern with circular green in doghouse.• NCHRP 493 studied a wide variety of

potential displays.• Study included driver comprehension

studies, video conflict studies, and crash analyses.

Page 4: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Traditional Five-Section Traditional Five-Section “Doghouse”“Doghouse”

Courtesy of ODOT Photo and Video Services

Page 5: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Intersection with a FYA HeadIntersection with a FYA Head

Courtesy of ODOT Photo and Video Services

Page 6: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Flashing Yellow Arrow HeadFlashing Yellow Arrow Head

Courtesy of ODOT Photo and Video Services

Page 7: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Comparison of Conversions Comparison of Conversions

LEFT TURN YIELD

ON GREEN

Before

After

Page 8: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

FYA Head ConfigurationFYA Head Configuration

• Separate signal face for the left turn signal face.

• Standard FYA head has four sections, all arrows.

• A three-section signal face with bimodal section (green arrow and yellow flashing arrow) may be used where impractical to use four-section head.

Page 9: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Meaning of IndicationsMeaning of Indications

• The steady red, yellow and green indications have the usual meanings– Steady Red Arrow means stop– Steady Green Arrow means protected turn– Steady Yellow Arrow means the phase is changing

• The flashing yellow allows you to turn left when oncoming traffic is clear (oncoming traffic has a green light).

Page 10: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Summary of ResearchSummary of Research

• NCHRP 493 found that displays with exclusive heads were found to offer the higher ratings in terms of safety, operations, human factors, and versatility.

• The FYA was found to be more intuitive and had fewer “false positive” reactions as compared to the green ball.

• NCHRP Web-Only Document 123 follow-up study indicated significant safety benefits of the FYA.

Page 11: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Crash Reductions Crash Reductions Found in NCHRP 123Found in NCHRP 123

• 12 intersections studied (3 in Oregon)– Conversions from doghouses to FYA’s– Limited before/after data sets

• 74 percent reduction in left-turn related crashes.

Page 12: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Benefits of FYABenefits of FYA

• High level of understanding

• Best overall alternative to circular green

• More versatility in field operation– Lead/lag and left turn re-service – Time of day flexibility to run protected only,

PPLT, or permissive only.

Page 13: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

FYA AnimationFYA Animation

Click to start animation

Page 14: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

ImplementationImplementation

• Oregon, Florida, and Maryland were among the first few states with the FYA under the FHWA Experimental status.

• After FHWA Interim Approval, many other jurisdictions across the country are now using the FYA.

• Draft MUTCD includes the FYA.

Page 15: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

ODOT Evaluation of FYAODOT Evaluation of FYA

• Data available for 5 conversions from Doghouses to FYA before 2008

• Annual average left-turn-related crashes reduced from 1.1 crashes/yr/intersection to 0.35. (Reduction of 67%)

• Calculated Benefit/Cost Ratio from crash reductions is approximately 8:1

• More comparable crash data will be available starting in 2010. (30 recent conversions from Doghouse to FYA).

Page 16: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Operation of FYA’s in OregonOperation of FYA’s in Oregon

• Delay of Flashing Yellow Arrow allows opposing traffic to get started while the FYA head remains red. (~3 seconds)

• Minimum 3 second red indication during transition from protected to permissive operation.

• Seems to be some reluctance among signal timers to run coordinated lead/lag operation.

Page 17: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

FYA OperationFYA Operation

Courtesy of ODOT Photo and Video Services

Page 18: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

FYA’s in OregonFYA’s in Oregon

• Flashing Yellow Arrow is the ODOT standard for Protected/Permissive Phasing.

• We are systematically replacing doghouses with FYA. We are about 1/3 complete.

• 49 installations on ODOT highways

• 183 installations on city streets and/or county roads

• 46 cities now have at least one FYA within their city limits

Page 19: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

46 Cities with FYA in Oregon46 Cities with FYA in Oregon

Page 20: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Installation DetailsInstallation Details

• All ODOT installations had engineered signal plans prepared.

• Evaluation of loading changes alleviated structural concerns.

• Requires one more conductor than protected-only head.

• FYA monitored through conflict monitor.

• All 30 conversions in 2008/2009 were completed by ODOT electrical crews

Page 21: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Signal Timing Signal Timing

• ODOT currently using Wapiti’s W4IKS, W4HC11, or Voyage

• W4IKS requires command-box logic of approximately 200 lines of code. Necessitates use of laptop to download timing to controller.

• W4HC11 has new tables for FYA without command box.

• Voyage software for the 2070L controller runs the FYA without command box.

Page 22: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Costs of ConversionCosts of Conversion

• 30 intersections were converted from doghouse left turn heads to the FYA head.

• Most conversions involved 2 doghouse heads

• Average cost was $9,100 per intersection including:– Site assessment and engineering – Hardware– Installation labor– Temporary traffic control

Page 23: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Custom Bracket for Spanwire InstallationsCustom Bracket for Spanwire Installations

Page 24: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Custom Bracket for Spanwire InstallationsCustom Bracket for Spanwire Installations(Region 2 Electrical Crew Design)(Region 2 Electrical Crew Design)

Page 25: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Custom Bracket for Spanwire InstallationsCustom Bracket for Spanwire Installations

Page 26: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

Other IssuesOther Issues

• Oregon has a few bi-modal heads.

• 20-7 Project to compare the approved 4 section head with a three section bi-modal head.

• Jackson County in southern Oregon has experimental approval for FYA’s that operate differently from the interim approval.

Page 27: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

SummarySummary

In Oregon, the FYA has proven to be:

• Significant safety improvement over the doghouse

• Easily understood by drivers• Versatile• Easy to install, operate, maintain• Popular in many jurisdictions

Page 28: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

More InformationMore Information

Contact

Ed Fischer ([email protected])

Or

Gary Obery([email protected])

Page 29: Flashing Yellow Arrows Joel McCarroll, Region 4 Traffic Manager on behalf of Edward L. Fischer State Traffic Engineer Oregon Department of Transportation.

QuestionsQuestions