oldandslow
Guru
Not really. In my understanding, "No Entry" means "vehicles (probably) are allowed in here - just not by this entrance." For example in car parks with one-way entry/exit systems, where motor vehicles are the whole point. Widely misused, partly because too few motorists understand flying motorbikes. If motor vehicles weren't allowed in in the first place, the No Entry sign would be pointless. If no vehicles were allowed in, it should be "No Vehicles", not "No Entry".
The "Except cycles" adds nothing because the original flying motorbike sign excludes neither cycles nor horses.
The "Except cycles" adds nothing because the original flying motorbike sign excludes neither cycles nor horses.