On 04/05/18 07:11, Graeme Fitzpatrick wrote:
Hi Mike
I agree with you that a slipway is not a boat ramp & vice versa, &
have wondered the same thing myself when marking them, but don't think
there are any alternatives?
I guess it's another OSM "one word used worldwide" problem?
Looks like
Hi Mike
I agree with you that a slipway is not a boat ramp & vice versa, & have
wondered the same thing myself when marking them, but don't think there are
any alternatives?
I guess it's another OSM "one word used worldwide" problem?
Thanks
Graeme
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Yes. A sub-tag should be used to distinguish. Something like 'rails'?
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I'm more concerned at the lack of water into which a vessel could be
launched. Is the reservoir accurate? Does the level fluctuate?
DaveF.
On 03/05/2018 19:16, Malcolm Herring wrote:
On 03/05/2018 17:14, Mike H w
On 03/05/2018 17:14, Mike H wrote:
there are two different kinds of slipway
Yes, but both are commonly called "slipway". See
:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slipway
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Oops, I forgot to include the changeset discussion. Here it is,
https://www.openstreetmap.org/changeset/58388640#map=17/31.39739/-94.52454
On Thu, May 3, 2018 at 12:16 PM Mike H <1jg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The user Tex Shotcaller made me realize that there are two different kinds
> of slipway. T
The user Tex Shotcaller made me realize that there are two different kinds
of slipway. There is the traditional slipway where you have a track to
slide the boat down, and then there are boat ramps where you drive a
trailer into the water and float the boat off the trailer. Both of these
are very di