Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Emergency vehicle equipment in the United Kingdom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emergency vehicle equipment in the United Kingdom
Remove ads

Emergency vehicle equipment is used in the United Kingdom to indicate urgent journeys by an emergency service. This usage is colloquially known as "blues and twos", which refers to the blue lights and the two-tone siren once commonplace (although most sirens now have a range of tones like Wail, Yelp, Phaser, and Hi-Lo). A call-out requiring the use of lights and sirens is often colloquially known as a "blue light run". From 1993-1998 a television documentary following Britain's emergency services was titled Blues and Twos for this reason.

Thumb
An Incident Response Unit operated by Norfolk Fire and Rescue Service with a blue lightbar on top, alternately flashing LED lights on the front, and flashing headlights. This vehicle is part of the New Dimension programme and consequently does not carry any insignia of Norfolk Fire and Rescue Service.
Electronic sirens have replaced two-tone horns on most emergency vehicles
Remove ads

Permitted use

Summarize
Perspective

In Great Britain, the use of blue lights is regulated by the Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations 1989, and sirens by the Road Vehicles Construction and Use Regulations 1986, both of which have been amended by various other pieces of legislation (see right).

Regulation 16 of the Road Vehicle Lighting Regulations 1989 state that no vehicle, other than an emergency vehicle (or a vehicle used for special forces purposes), shall be fitted with a "blue warning beacon or special warning lamp", or a device which resembles a blue warning beacon or a special warning lamp, whether it works or not.[1]

Similarly, Regulation 37(4) of the Road Vehicle Construction and Use Regulations 1986 prohibit vehicles from having a siren, bell, gong, or two-tone horn, unless the vehicle met the conditions of paragraph 5 (for emergency vehicles), paragraph 6 (for goods inside a vehicle that are on sale), or paragraph 7 (for car alarms, or for summoning help onboard a bus).[2]

More information Type of vehicle, Blue flashing lights ...

Each of the emergency services listed above has different policies regarding the use of blue lights and sirens. Most require the driver to be trained to a particular standard in response driving, but currently, no national standard exists. Provision exists for a national standard to be required in order to utilise speed limit exemptions, but this has not been brought into force.

Remove ads

Road traffic exemptions

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Six Metropolitan Police Service motorcycles driving with the blues and twos on. They can be seen breaking a number of normal traffic rules. Each motorbike has driven through a red light, and the motorbike on the far right can be seen driving on the wrong side of the road and passing on the right of a keep left sign.

In the UK, vehicles used for certain purposes may have exemptions from some road traffic regulations whilst responding to an emergency. Merely being authorised to use blue lights and sirens does not of itself grant exemptions from road traffic law.[5] These exemptions apply whether or not blue lights and/or sirens are being used, although it is mainly desirable:[6]

  • treating a red traffic light as a give way sign[7][8][9][10]
  • passing to the right of a keep left sign or to the left of a keep right sign (but not disobeying a turn left, turn right, or ahead only sign)[11][12][13]
  • driving on a motorway hard shoulder (even against the direction of traffic)[14]
  • exceeding the statutory speed limit (police, fire and ambulance purposes only; and National Crime Agency purposes only, where the driver is trained or is being trained in high-speed driving)[15][16]
  • stopping on zig-zag lines[17][18][19]
  • parking in restricted areas, including against flow of traffic at night [20][21][22]
  • leaving the vehicle with the engine running, normally the offence of "quitting" (police and ambulance utilising the run lock feature on most cars)[23]
  • using audible warnings outside permitted hours[24]
  • using a bus lane during hours of operation [25]
  • using a siren, bell, gong, or two-tone horn, whether the emergency vehicle is stationary or not[26]
Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads