I'm not sure if we are unique in having part-time signals. These are normally on roundabouts ('rotaries' in the US), mostly on highway junctions. These operate both on time and on loop information, using a set of various priority loops, down to the furthest 'demand' loops, on the off-ramps, to bring the signals into operation early to prevent traffic from spilling back onto the highway, [Edit: again 'rules of the road apply, stop lines, priorities etc.]
Unusual but they do exist in Australia (historical roundabout example below), more commonly now as onramp metering:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramp_meter
(another rant for another day)
Common on some Sydney motorways, such as the M4. I've driven on this road a few times when ramp metering is in force and it actually does make a huge difference to traffic flow and allows vehicles to merge at close to the prevailing speed limit. I can see why some people hate it on face value, but it makes everything flow at a more consistent rate compared to just letting every idiot driver do their own thing.
Done well, ramp meters can pick the gaps in arriving traffic platoons/bunches and really improve the merging experience along with better safety and higher throughput. The ones I've observed in Australia were however just dumb timers to rate limit the onramp, which does have throughput improvements downstream, but if people will accept that then it should be a no brainer to go for the full benefits.
I'd imagine the ones on the M4 at least would be getting data from the roads/intersections feeding the motorways, to avoid those blocking up entirely. I can't be for certain but it makes sense to do it this way solely because there is no specific time of day when ramp metering is enabled/disabled, it's entirely dependant on traffic volume and flow.
That would be the complete opposite of how a ramp meter should work, they should congest and fully block the feeding roads to maintain free flow on the highway.
I don't agree. Ramp metering is designed to regulate traffic flow, not just onto the on-coming highway but from those lower-speed roads feeding it. Without it, some roads would be chaos.
Prospect Highway southbound is a prime example of that. Without proper metering and traffic light phasing, significant traffic builds in the right turn lanes (onto the M4). There is plenty of "buffer" on the on-ramp itself, but there isn't a lot of room for vehicles along Prospect Highway. Roper Road is another example where there is only one turn lane onto the on-ramp (westbound) where you might only fit 10-15 cars at a time. If that lane fills up and you have more vehicles waiting to enter that lane, all southbound lanes along Roper Road are completely blocked and no one can go anywhere, until those entering the highway are cleared.
If the roads feeding the on-ramps/highways are all blocked up, then there would be little point to having metering on the on-ramps themselves. This is also why you see sensors and induction loops on the roadway not just at a set of traffic lights, but well before it. This allows the system to essentially know how many vehicles over any given time are occupying certain parts of the road network.
Ramp metering impacts several roads, not just one. Generally speaking, slower more consistent traffic during peak times is better than letting people just do their own thing. You always get some numbnuts who have no idea how to merge, leave it until the last moment, realise they've run out of lane and come to a complete stop. When you have thousands of vehicles per hour entering intersections during some parts of the day, this has a huge impact on traffic behind them. This is why phasing needs to be constantly monitored and adjusted. There is also little sense in having a green traffic signal that only leads onto a congested road. You might as well allow the traffic that can flow, to do so.
As police, we would occasionally manually alter phasing on primary and surrounding roads to account for things like lane closures, crashes, road blockages etc... Things that SCATS isn't really designed to (or can't) detect.
Not specific to ramp metering, but there's an interesting document by the NSW Government published in October 2023 about the M4
East Road Network performance.