In my own travels in Ontario, some segments do have signed names that we might want to use where they exist.
Good to know there's some official support for our segment names, and that they're not just hobbyist inventions. This gives me some confidence they're legitimate names.
I'd argue we need to pick one as a "Main".
Agreed.
If none is the "offically" the Main (is that an actual concept or a CHM invention?)
I believe this is the first instance of the "Main" concept coming into use on CHM. Don't know about whether it's official or not, and thus whether it'd be a CHM invention.
maybe pick the shortest or most traveled.
The simplest most sensible adaptation of the status quo would be to break on.tchnor out of the (Main) connected route, and make it its own connected route. TCHNor can't be part of (Main) as things are, as at its west end, TCHLak continues in both directions. This would create another 3-pronged route.
This would leave the (Main) segment via TCHLak & TCHOtt.
Is it the shortest?Longer than TCHKir by 64 km, however, QC TCHMai is already established as the route connecting to TCHOtt.
Shorter than TCHKen by 4.4 km
Longer than TCHNor by 35 km, however, TCHNor cannot be part of the (Main) connected route for reasons cited above.
Shorter then TCHVoy by 66 km. TCHVoy also cannot be part of (Main) for the same reason; other chopped routes do not end at its endpoints.
Shorter than TCHGeo+TCHCen by 170 km. TCHGeo+TCHCen also can't be used.
Continuing thru movements at intersections:The (Main) route gets the main thru traffic movement at all its intersections with other TCH routes except for both ends of TCHKen. the ON17 vs ON17A designations give a pretty good indication of what's considered the main & auxiliary route here, and in any case, I wouldn't want to make major changes here that mess with people's list files anyway.
Most traveled: Determining this means a bit more getting into the data than I think necessary.
This all being said, I only see one workable solution for the (Main) TCH route:
cantch;TCH;;(Main);bc.tchmai,ab.tchmai,sk.tchmai,mb.tchmai,on.tchlak,on.tchott,qc.tchmai,nb.tchmai,ns.tchmaiIt all comes down to a simple matter of where the chopped routes end, and what can be concatenated together to make a single (Main) connected route.