scottydl
Site Team
Holy cow... for $68 or $84 I'd want to be able to stop and camp ON the bridge. With full hookups!
RVRAC said:In the Houston area an EZ Tag is required for the MH and the toad. They are separate tags, both must be purchased. The one for Class C comes with instructions to place it in the lower part of the windshield close to the middle of it. You are charged $40 for initial deposit and a monthly report is sent to you by email. This is what I have. In IL, we use an I-Pass for all vehicles. You also need a credit card on file.
cadee2c said:Personally, I like Kansas Turnpike the best... you get a ticket when you get on and then you stop and pay when you get off. You dont have a bunch of different toll plazas to have to go through
cadee2c said:Personally, I like Kansas Turnpike the best... you get a ticket when you get on and then you stop and pay when you get off. You dont have a bunch of different toll plazas to have to go through
NY_Dutch said:I like toll roads like the NY Thruway, Mass Pike, etc., where we can get on and never need to stop for tickets or tolls at all. They just read our E-ZPass tag as we roll on by.
Bill N said:Best is Missouri where I have yet to see any toll road. Not sure if any exist.
Bill
Bill N said:Best is Missouri where I have yet to see any toll road. Not sure if any exist.
Bill
NY_Dutch said:I like toll roads like the NY Thruway, Mass Pike, etc., where we can get on and never need to stop for tickets or tolls at all. They just read our E-ZPass tag as we roll on by.
That reminds me Scotty of the last toll road I was on several years ago. I think it was I-80 on the southern edge of Chicago. Was sailing along on free interstate and came to a toll booth. Paid toll for a 5 mile stretch the entirely of which was under reconstruction and limited to one lane in each direction. After the 5 miles, the interstate continued on free of any tolls. I think that was nothing more than a toll trap but looking at a map I see it is still the same.scottydl said:Lots of talk about Illinois, but the only tolls you will find here are in the Chicagoland area (uppermost NE corner of the state). The rest of the state (and that's most of us) let you drive the roads for free.
Perhaps true Dutch but maybe I am on the Missouri Tourism Commission and trolling for non-toll seekers......lolNY_Dutch said:Since the topic is about toll tags, references to places without tolls is really pretty irrelevant.
NY_Dutch said:Since the topic is about toll tags, references to places without tolls is really pretty irrelevant.
Bill N said:That reminds me Scotty of the last toll road I was on several years ago. . .I think that was nothing more than a toll trap but looking at a map I see it is still the same.
Old_Crow said:I use to have my GPS set to avoid toll roads.
scottydl said:You bet it's the same. When I was younger my dad told me a story about one of the first new tollways around Chicago (1970's or 80's?)... at the time the state said it was a temporary revenue generator to help pay for the road to be finished, and then the tollway would be removed. Well guess what. Once they realized how much money it was making, the thing never left. And of course, hundreds more have since been built!