Riverman
Guru
- Location
- sur de Inglaterra
We all know this to be the case but does anyone here know of any research done on this?
Bit of a saving if true.
Bit of a saving if true.
I'm afraid not in my experience.I imagine a lot would depend on the experience of the cyclist - a 17 year old keen cyclist has less road experience than a cyclist learning in later life.
I'd suggest that it's not necessarily a question of learning quicker, but of having better appreciation of others. So a cyclist passing their test may well be of a higher, more considerate standard when they pass, than someone who's merely learned enough to pass the test.
User9609 - I don't jump red lights or ride on the pavement, on my bike, why would I do it learning to drive?
I'm afraid not in my experience.
I suppose not, judging by the number of close passes one gets from cars with bikes on the back...
I tend to think cycling is very different to driving and don't see how it would help at all, would guess a non driver would learn more being a passenger in a car. In any case if you jump a red light in a car or drove along the pavement you would fail the test.
... perhaps taking the roundabout below 60 next time?![]()
Do cyclists learn to drive faster than non-cyclists?