domd1979
Veteran
- Location
- Staffordshire
slowmotion said:Some people seem to get fairly irate just chatting about riding their bikes...
Yep, you only have to say "RLJ" and that's it.........
slowmotion said:Some people seem to get fairly irate just chatting about riding their bikes...
User3143 said:Don't want to preach but your primary concern on the approach to a r/about would be the traffic in front of you. Drive for other people, person in front could be old, young, just passed, blind, an amputee driving a disabled vehicle....the list goes on.
User3143 said:I was joking....having said that the amount of people out on our roads who would fail the eyesight test - reading a plate at 65 feet.....
There seems to be an increasing number of people under the impression that overtaking is illegal.belairman said:Or they do leave a gap, but take it as some sort of personal insult to their manhood when you overtake them and pull in.
Rhythm Thief said:To be honest, I actually had very little time to do anything. It came to a split second choice between braking quite heavily with a lightly loaded trailer (an easy way to lose control on a damp motorway), or holding the thing in a straight line and possibly nudging the back bumper of the twat who'd brake tested me at perhaps a five or ten mph speed differential. I've seen the aftermath of a lorry driver braking and swerving to avoid a brake tester (M1, seven or eight years ago when a tank transporter hopped the central reservation) and it's a lot less pretty than a damaged back bumper on a chavved up Citroen Oxo.
You are mistaken: zip-merging is actively encouraged by the Highways Agency as it maximises the capacity of the road.domd1979 said:No, the people who drive all the way to where the cones start tapering out the lane then try and force their way over are tossers and deserve not to be let in.
Ben Lovejoy said:You are mistaken: zip-merging is actively encouraged by the Highways Agency as it maximises the capacity of the road.
What this means is that drivers use the full length of *both* lanes, then take it in turns to merge into the one open lane at the cones. If everyone cooperates in doing this, traffic flows well.
They were running an education campaign for a time, aimed at people who hold your view, but it tapered out far too early to do much good.
slowmotion said:This is a bit of a grey area, perhaps. If the signs say "use both lanes" and "merge in turn", it is pretty clear what the motorist is supposed to do. The problem comes at road works, usually badly signposted, and there are no clear instructions, and the "last minute people" really get on my tits, maybe irrationally. I do not seem to be alone with this irritation, however.
bonj2 said:No - correct. You're far from being the only ignoramus on the planet.
Ben Lovejoy said:The TRL study that led to the recommendation of zip-merging was completed in 1998:
http://www.ha-research.gov.uk/projects/index.php?id=428
The only reason it remains a 'grey area' 11 years later is that the Highways Agency didn't put enough time and money into the education campaign to promote zip-merging, despite it being policy:
Better information and signing, including initiatives like "zip merging", can minimise any unavoidable delays and make queuing more efficient and less frustrating.
(http://www.highways.gov.uk/aboutus/1906.aspx)
People who use the full length of both lanes are not 'pushing in', they are doing exactly what we are all supposed to be doing - it's just that too many people don't know it.
domd1979 said:No, the people who drive all the way to where the cones start tapering out the lane then try and force their way over are tossers and deserve not to be let in.
thomas said:Pfft. You'd hate me. If there is a safe way that I can shorten my journey I see no reason not to. I wouldn't 'force' myself in or do it in a way to actively piss someone off, but it is silly not to utilise as much of the available road network as possible.
On the way to sixth form I used to save a few minutes by taking the right hand lane, going all the way around the roundabout to go left. If I stayed in the left hand lane (left and straight over) I'd be sitting there for a good few minutes.