BentMikey said:
It's a good point, but I certainly would not want to be surprised by overtaking traffic like Bollo has been, especially not on fast rural roads and the associated deathrates.
Reading my post back I realise I haven't expressed myself clearly. I wasn't surprised by the existence of the passing vehicle (in the case I'm thinking of, it was a knackered old transit that you could
hear from about half a mile away) but that he'd even dreamt of overtaking, despite a reasonably strong primary position from me. On roads like the one in magger's video, things happen fast and they happen close. Seeing something and being able to do something about it can be very different things. My mistake was to assume that a driver would behave in a particular, rational way.
My point was more about the options available to a cyclist to control their environment on fast B roads against the behaviour required from motorists to ensure a safe overtake given the very limited time in which to make any decisions.
In a typical narrow, fast B road scenario, the cyclist has two options - either hold a strong primary or move left into the gutter (the road is about a transit van wide, so primary and the gutter may not be separated by much more than a metre). That's really about it.
Holding primary in theory prevents an overtake if the driver's concentrating and reacts in a reasonable time frame, given possibly limited sightlines and a high closing speed. But, this leaves no margin for error if the driver isn't concentrating but on the mobile, fiddling with the radio or setting the satnav. Also, there's a chance that the driver might simply not understand that you're going to stay in the middle of the road, which delays any sort of reaction, possibly until its too late.
Moving to the gutter increases the chance that an observant but misguided motorist might decide to squeeze past at high speed, but it might give enough margin of error to allow you, the overtaking car and a car coming in the opposite direction all to get past each other with nothing more than dirty underpants.
The driver will often make a decision about whether to brake or try an overtake very late in the interaction, giving the cyclist a very short time to observe the effect of the driver's decision (vehicle dips forward while braking or moves towards the centre of the road) and adjust their road position accordingly (stay in primary or bail out).
That's why I avoid certain rural B-roads - whatever precautions you take in terms of observation, road positioning etc, you're still disproportionately at the mercy of drivers' behaviour and more likely to suffer badly from the consequences of poor driving.