CotterPin said:
You clearly are happy to accept a different level of risk to Magnatom, Greenbank, which is your prerogative. Two points, though:
Do you really feel the need to keep moving that pushes you through such gaps? What's wrong with waiting? This is not just aimed at you but at others on this forum as well.
As I said, in this specific situation, as I can see it in the video, yes.
If there wasn't a clear bus lane ahead of it then almost certainly no. I know there's no point squeezing through a gap to gain 5 yards, but this is more than 5 yards.
There are lots of other simple things that, if different, would stop me going up the inside. Just because I'd do it on this situation doesn't mean I would do it in every situation.
If I didn't undertake a single vehicle on my commute it would probably take me 45 minutes instead of 25. That's the nature of a main road London commute. I often see the same cars crossing Putney Bridge as I see when I turn off Parliament Square. They overtake me after traffic lights. Sometimes I'm undertaking cars whilst in a dedicated cycle lane, sometimes in a dedicated bus lane, sometimes I'm in primary position on the inside lane of a dual carriageway, sometimes I'm in secondary position on a reasonable wide single carriageway. Sometimes they're stationary, sometimes they're moving slowly in traffic. Most of the time I have enough space, sometimes I don't, but I assess the risk and decide what to do.
Overtaking them is no different although you tend to have to consider faster/bigger motorbikes going up the outside rather than the scooters who come up the inside.
I'm not saying I'm perfect (as can be seen by my viewpoint on the above video) but if you think that's bad then you should see some of the stuff I see on my commute every day. You'd wonder why there isn't a death each and every day.
Tell you what, I'll dig out the helmet camera tomorrow and film my commute. I'll happily accept comments on it.
CotterPin said:
Do you not feel that you might not have some responsibility to the person following you who sees you getting through a small gap in the traffic? I know that their safety is their own responsibility but as a new cyclist they might not actually be aware they are putting themselves in danger, a view that might be re-inforced by observing the actions of other cyclists ahead of them.
They're busy learning from the 200 or so people who I see every day who RLJ, ride on the pavement, ride over pedestrian crossings when people are crossing. This video is perfect evidence:-
One person stops (he of the camera).
How many go up the inside?
How many go onto the pavement?
Their safety is their own responsibility; that's part of riding a bike on the road. My 6 year old nephew comes out with the "But but but, he did it first" line, it's not a valid defence.
(And no, that 200 figure isn't an exaggeration. I see hundreds of cyclists on my commute and, at a guess, more than a third routinely ignore traffic lights.)