Rhythm Thief
Legendary Member
- Location
- Ross on Wye
There strikes me as no need for revision of a text - which I've never read either - when only one person is confused about what it says.

Rhythm Thief said:There strikes me as no need for revision of a text - which I've never read either - when only one person is confused about what it says.![]()
jimboalee said:And confuse everyone even MORE...![]()
jimboalee said:Honestly, I've had worse 'bitter and twisted', 'acidic' response from Franklin's disciples on this chatboard than from my parish Vicar concerning my views of the Bible.
Norm said:But switching the names primary and secondary would be more akin to calling the star at the heart of our solar system "Pluto". You'd need to come up with completely different names.
jimboalee said:How many motorists have shouted "Get out of Primary into Secondary you f*cking tw*t!"
The two who shouted at me shouted "Get out the middle of the road you f*cking tw*t!"
jimboalee said:It took a few years for Franklin’s nomenclature to be accepted and now it’s carved in granite within the minds of his disciples, including the bureaucratic numbsculls in transport planning offices throughout the land.
jimboalee said:The fact of the matter is, Franklin ‘cocked up’, but then realised it was too late to correct the blunder once the book had gone into print.
jimboalee said:It is a dreadful error, giving new cyclists the confused idea they can ride down the middle of the carriageway, ‘bold as brass’ and motorists won’t mind a jot.
jimboalee said:Franklin’s ‘Secondary’ should be primary, the position where the cyclist is seen and where the motorist needs to manouver round to pass when he can. Franklin’s ‘Primary’ should be called Secondary, the position taken by the cyclist when there is a hazard in the road ahead.
jimboalee said:If I rode in 'Primary' on the roads I describe, I'm sure I would recieve a few shouts of dismay from motorists who have needed to brake to avoid me and then wait to pass me.
tdr1nka said:No-one here is advocating, as Jim seems so keen to believe, single mindedly grinding away at thirteen MPH with a tailback of furious traffic behind us.
Lets just try to be clear one more time, the terms 'Primary' and 'Secondary' refer to our position within the traffic.
There are times when being secondary to traffic is not safe, approaching a run of parked cars, for example.
It is here you would signal your intention to pull out, early and clearly, wait for a following gap in the traffic and pull out to avoid the parked cars, keeping away from the doors as well.
You then continue in this road position until there is enough space to, indicate clearly your intention to pull back into secondary, and let the traffic pass.
I always wave and give a thumbs up as I pull over.
The majority of drivers respect and can cope with this kind of cycling, only the occasional hot head driver takes exception and mostly because they are quite happily and unreservedly ignorant about sharing the road with anyone, let alone cyclists, and everyone is in their way.
It is preferable to remain in primary as long as you are not being an unnecessary obstruction.
The problem is that everyone has varying views as to what is considered an obstruction or what is an otherwise insignificant delay and simple respect for another road user.
jimboalee said:I have just ridden in such a situation riding back from my son's.
I put out of my head ( totally forgot any notion of 'primary' and 'secondary' ) all that Franklin's book suggests; and rode to a style I adopted years before Franklin thought of his wretched book.
What you have described could have been me this afternoon. Signalling, moving across to the centre out of the doorswing and riding along past the parked cars.
Does it really need a book to ride past a row of parked cars?
As a matter of fact, the roads around my home town were lined with parked cars when I was seven, and I twigged this method of riding past them without needing to study a book.
jimboalee said:What you have described could have been me this afternoon. Signalling, moving across to the centre out of the doorswing and riding along past the parked cars.
Does it really need a book to ride past a row of parked cars?
As a matter of fact, the roads around my home town were lined with parked cars when I was seven, and I twigged this method of riding past them without needing to study a book.