Motorway Road Rage - Brits are idiots when they arrive at roadworks

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Joey Shabadoo

My pronouns are "He", "Him" and "buggerlugs"
I pull in to the queuing lane as early as is reasonably practicable. I'm British and have highly developed queuing instincts.
 
I've found a pic of him before he sidled over, all innocent like, into the passenger seat.

View attachment 86458

The dog was asked to give a urine sample but it just laughed, cocked its leg, pi$$ed over the dog-handler then legged it.
 

threebikesmcginty

Corn Fed Hick...
Location
...on the slake
It's starting to make a bit more sense now I've found the original photo.

sheepish.jpg
 

marknotgeorge

Hol den Vorschlaghammer!
Location
Derby.
Pretty sure he ran me off the road near Purley Tescos, he was in an Audi.

He was driving a black Vauxhall Mokka this afternoon. He came from the opposite arm of the crossroads as I was waiting in the right turn lane at a red light, and drove past me on my left!
 
I pull in to the queuing lane as early as is reasonably practicable. I'm British and have highly developed queuing instincts.

Wot the Muppets don't realise is that if you do this then traffic flows smoothly

The delays are caused by the Muppets who are far too important to wait and force a second queue that then delays the traffic flow.

But , hey what is a few minutes extra waiting for you inferior and less important people if they can save a few seconds?
 

Joey Shabadoo

My pronouns are "He", "Him" and "buggerlugs"
The authors conclude that the late merge should be considered for 3-to-1 lane closure configurations but not until a sound methodology for deployment has been developed and tested in the field. For the 2-to-1 and 3-to-2 configurations, the late merge should be implemented only when the percentage of heavy vehicles is at least 20 percent.

http://www.virginiadot.org/vtrc/main/online_reports/pdf/05-r6.pdf
 

DaveReading

Don't suffer fools gladly (must try harder!)
Location
Reading, obvs
Why would it matter if people merge half a mile or a mile out, provided everyone does it at roughly the same point?

Because the wasted, unused road space means that the queue/tailback stretches back much farther. I saw one recently on the M4 that tailed back to the previous junction, causing chaos on the roundabout that affected even traffic joining the motorway in the opposite direction.
 

Joey Shabadoo

My pronouns are "He", "Him" and "buggerlugs"
Did anyone actually read the link? It says late merging may work when 2 lanes are closed on a 3 lane motorway, but optimum flow rates for single lane closures are achieved by early merging unless an exceptionally high number of HGVs are in the queues.
 
Did anyone actually read the link? It says late merging may work when 2 lanes are closed on a 3 lane motorway, but optimum flow rates for single lane closures are achieved by early merging unless an exceptionally high number of HGVs are in the queues.

Merging generally works better with early merging as the two streams converge

The other reason for merging early is that it leaves the access for emergency vehicles

Mind you I remember the chaos caused near Southampton with roadworks blocking the inside lane and late mergers slowing the third lane on the motorway as well

The Police were called out and as these vehicles hadn't merged were waving them on past the junction 20 odd miles further down

Amazing how the traffic flowed much better once the late mergers were removed from the equation
 

rich p

ridiculous old lush
Location
Brighton
[QUOTE 3657961, member: 45"]Yes, I've read a number of links. The jury is out across the board on the definitive answer, but generally the best result is achieved by merging towards the front, not as stupidly early as the British do. Merging at the front and traffic having to stop causes delays, but this isn't what's being suggested, despite what Cunobelin would like to think.[/QUOTE]
Thanks for clearing that up.
 

mybike

Grumblin at Garmin on the Granny Gear
[QUOTE 3657961, member: 45"]Yes, I've read a number of links. The jury is out across the board on the definitive answer, but generally the best result is achieved by merging towards the front, not as stupidly early as the British do. Merging at the front and traffic having to stop causes delays, but this isn't what's being suggested, despite what Cunobelin would like to think.[/QUOTE]

Sounds like you're pushing your own opinion rather than waiting for the jury to decide. :smile:

It's a bit like the fashion of having your headlights on, at night, in well lit suburban streets. Remember, the queue remains at least as long but it is spread over two lanes.
 
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