For example, US 270 (barely) enters Kansas, which has I-70 (but no I-270). Is this the only such case, ignoring those where both two-digit routes enter the state (California before US 80 pulled out, Wisconsin I-41/US 141, Texas US 69/I-369)? US 220 gets close but ends before entering SC.
I-74/US 74 in NC
Texas has I-69E/W/C (and upcoming I-369) and US 69. :suffix:
Quote from: formulanone on February 05, 2015, 12:12:33 PM
Texas has I-69E/W/C and US 69. :suffix:
A letter is not a digit.
I-369 is coming soon? Not sure of its official status.
Quote from: formulanone on February 05, 2015, 12:15:37 PM
369 is coming soon?
It's already come in my initial post...
Oops.
The US 270 says it all in his OP. If US 69 had a child in Texas then it and the I-69 would count. It is got to be a three digit US route with the same number parent of a particular interstate within the same state.
Quote from: roadman65 on February 05, 2015, 12:25:24 PM
It is got to be a three digit US route with the same number parent of a particular interstate within the same state.
or vice versa
"Three-digit federal route in the same state as the two-digit other parent"
Federal routes belong in Mexico, unless you're Calrog.
Quote from: 1 on February 05, 2015, 02:33:00 PM
"Three-digit federal route in the same state as the two-digit other parent"
Federal routes belong in Mexico, unless you're Calrog.
Fuck you.
Quote from: NE2 on February 05, 2015, 11:49:01 AM
For example, US 270 (barely) enters Kansas, which has I-70 (but no I-270). Is this the only such case, ignoring those where both two-digit routes enter the state (California before US 80 pulled out, Wisconsin I-41/US 141, Texas US 69/I-369)? US 220 gets close but ends before entering SC.
I presume you're omitting state numbered routes as a parent because of your Rogerian description of a federal route (which is incorrect, since he only calls US routes "federal routes" and doesn't use that term for interstates).
Anyway, there is no KY 50 (US 150) so our only candidates if state routes count would be US 119 and US 421. Interestingly enough. US 421 took over a portion of what was once KY 21.
Quote from: 1 on February 05, 2015, 02:33:00 PM
"Three-digit federal route in the same state as the two-digit other parent"
Federal routes belong in Mexico, unless you're Calrog.
This is why the forum needs a like button. :-D
Quote from: NE2 on February 05, 2015, 02:35:05 PM
Quote from: 1 on February 05, 2015, 02:33:00 PM
"Three-digit federal route in the same state as the two-digit other parent"
Federal routes belong in Mexico, unless you're Calrog.
Fuck you.
Ok people. Play nice. No need to pedantically chafe at choice of semantics when the meaning's clear.