want to turn right in busy traffic downhill?

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candyfloss94

New Member
Location
UK
I'm a newbie commuter. This is my first thread!!
I live in a 'hilly' area. On the way back home, I just go down until there's downhill through the busy traffic junction, and I want to turn right. I heard that the safest way is to go for left side to the junction, and when it's safe to do so, push your bike across the road. I usually see bikers take primary position and go through little way between vehicle lines. I feel awful everytime I want to overtake to be in primary position in this area, and one day a driver didn't give me chance and I end up in the middle of the street.
Does anyone could suggest the convenient way, or is the information that I got quite right? And... could someone describe how to overtake to be in primary position and when should I do it? Thanks for replying! (:

P.S There're usually some cars park in the left side of the street, make me can't smoothly take the left side. I have to "cut-in" through the vehicle on the right.
 

BentMikey

Rider of Seolferwulf
Location
South London
Could you link to a google maps location for us?
 

Melonfish

Evil Genius in training.
Location
Warrington, UK
[QUOTE 1825939, member: 1314"]Primary by default, secondary if safe. Early maneuver, loads of cheesy but assertive communication with drivers. Hand signals, thumbs up etc.

As said, cycle as though you're driving a car.

But remember to look cool at all times.[/quote]

^ This.
its brill when you use lots of signaling and wave to the motorists, it really catches their attention and saying thanks with a hand gesture is usually appreciated and unexpected by the drivers.
 

Ian Cooper

Expat Yorkshireman
[QUOTE 1825939, member: 1314"]Primary by default, secondary if safe...[/quote]

An excellent maxim. Though in some cases, primary can be best even when secondary is safe, as (on a road with more than one lane of same-way traffic) it communicates to drivers who are approaching far behind you that they should move to the next lane if they want to maintain their speed. Drivers often don't understand that we're trying to help them by doing this, but oh well.

The alternative would be to take secondary while it's safe and pull out into primary when cars approached close enough behind you to threaten an unsafe overtake within the lane. This would probably anger motorists more, as they might think they could overtake within the lane, but when they approached and you move to primary, they'd be frustrated because they'd have to slow down and then they'd be going too slow to merge right.

Illustrated in this video from the US:


View: http://vimeo.com/17300276


So I guess what I'm trying to say is this: Primary by default, secondary if safe, unless it makes things difficult for other road users. Though I suppose that destroys the simplicity of the maxim.
 

gavintc

Guru
Location
Southsea
I agree with the other posters. Look over your shoulder first to make sure it is clear, signal a right turn, get out into the middle (on the white line) and then turn when clear. If you are on the white line (just left of it actually), vehicles going straight on can undertake you and vehicles turning right cannot overtake you. Be positive and assertive.
 
Location
Edinburgh

I know that junction very well ... I turn left there every morning though.

An interesting one to turn right on, but as others have said, take control and communicate.
 

gambatte

Middle of the pack...
Location
S Yorks
keep thinking I'm riding assertively and then keep realising it needs to be more assertive. Such as when I turn right into a junction. I have a tendency to move into secondary when there's queuing traffic in the oncoming lane.
Meant it was partly my bad, when I got a close overtake from a small flat bed pick up. Of course I could see the driver through the back of his cab and realised that the main reason was that rather than observing the road he was having an animated discussion with his passenger.
I bet if you'd stopped him 50 yards on and asked him what he thought about his overtake... he'd have said "What cyclist?"
 
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