Men and overtaking

Author
Discussion

Red 5

1,052 posts

180 months

Wednesday 20th May 2020
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I’ve always had interesting chats with ROSPA folk, as too many think that a GOLD pass is the highest level of driving humanly achievable.

If a Gold pass driver doesn’t indicate, it means there was nobody to benefit. FACT!
Even hinting there might be something unseen, is heresy!
Some of them are like flat earthers, in their doggedly held beliefs frown

I think almost all advanced road driver training, (that I know of) is actually dumbed down driving, designed to be replicatable, then learned by even the most disinterested ham fisted individuals.
Thus creating above all else, predictable drivers that are looking where they’re going and thinking out their actions.
I admit that would make driving in the UK like a dream, if everyone adopted a ‘System’
I do understand the benefits and have capitalised on them and amended some of my bad habits as a result.

As actual driving goes though, it’s just the beginning, much like the driving test.

Option 2 for me. It’s safest and I’ll explain why....
To adequately and 100% accurately asses there is nobody to see, or benefit from a signal, requires several full mirror checks, plus full physical 360deg vision. So lots of shoulder checks on both sides.

You can’t rely on experience gained either, as random things are random.
This all takes far too long, like a driving tester, checking 360 before requesting an emergency stop.
Far too much time not looking where you’re going!

Check mirrors twice, shoulder check and indicate. This is as thorough as it’s reasonably practical to be.
It’s predictable overtaking behaviour, that other drivers will see and understand. Seeing and understanding is the most important thing you need from other road users.



Cases I’ve noticed for indicating to overtake.....

If we all do this, the day an imperfect driver thinks a pass is on, when one of us is already alongside and committed, we get to see the signal and can sound the horn. I’ve had this happen at night, when the indication was very noticeable indeed alongside my nearside.
The other driver panicked and swerved violently left, not hitting me.
I’d have not noticed so quickly had they not indicated. Perhaps 1/2 second is all that’s needed to save the day?
I’m sure they thought they were way above average as a driver.



I see oncoming cars overtaking way sooner/better when they indicate. I get more time to decide if I need to modify my course of action / consider slowing, or an escape route.



On long straight roads, I can see an indication from a very long way ahead.
In the dark I’d most likely not be able to tell quite what was going on so far away.
I want this info, as I can now expect other oncoming cars to make similar overtake manoeuvres, possibly nearer be, which could be a concern.
I can then plan ahead for this likely outcome.

In hot weather, there is sometimes a heat shimmer over a road, so indicating helps massively, from a long way forward, back.

If others indicate ahead in my direction of travel, even if I’m behind them a fair way and they’ve not seem me, I like this.
I can tell the road most likely opens up and will be offering me an opportunity to asses.

I’me sure there are plenty of other situations, where the driver, however advanced, would not be able to tell if their lack of signalling could be a hinderance, or even cause danger.


I know we’re all brilliant on here, but others might not be. When those ‘other people’ overtake, I want them to be indicating.
So as I know I’m far from perfect, I’m happy to afford you these benefits.



(Bored C19 ramble again sorry)




Shadgrind

7 posts

138 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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The thing that really pisses me off is Mr 40mph everywhere. In a national in a 30, in a 50 it doesn't matter. I followed a police car thru' a national limit on a country road, doing 40, why? Anyway found a decent overtaking spot and 'made progress'. Came to a 30 and he caught me up! I was expecting lights on flashy flashy and a talking to by some kid in an ill fitting uniform but no, he stayed on my bumper until the GLF sign.

I put my foot down and he disappeared into the distance, until we came to another 30, where he caught up again WTAF is that all about?

Just spotted my post count, obviously too busy driving to be posting on forums wink

I actually am more active on several MX-5 forums, just. recovered the large expanse of plastic on my dash with alcantara, rather than paying £350 plus for one.


Edited by Shadgrind on Monday 8th June 08:46

RobM77

35,349 posts

234 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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Shadgrind said:
The thing that really pisses me off is Mr 40mph everywhere. In a national in a 30, in a 50 it doesn't matter. I followed a police car thru' a national limit on a country road, doing 40, why? Anyway found a decent overtaking spot and 'made progress'. Came to a 30 and he caught me up! I was expecting lights on flashy flashy and a talking to by some kid in an ill fitting uniform but no, he stayed on my bumper until the GLF sign.

I put my foot down and he disappeared into the distance, until we came to another 30, where he caught up again WTAF is that all about?
yes I get this too. I also get the same thing with wide open stretches of NSL, where 60mph is perfectly safe, and then you come to a section where <40mph is safe, such as around houses, a church on a Sunday morning, blind bends, a damp section under trees with blind bends etc; and that bumbler comes up behind me at 40mph and tailgates me.

LunarOne

5,179 posts

137 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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Shadgrind said:
I followed a police car thru' a national limit on a country road, doing 40, why?
I don't mind when people do 40 on an NSL road, because they're giving me the opportunity to overtake. It's more annoying being stuck behind a queue of traffic behind a 40-driver, because it seems I am the only one willing to overtake. So many drivers just sit behind like sheep.

But in the case of a police car, did it occur to you that police might have something else to do other than just getting from A to B? They may be surveying the area for an abandoned car or a missing person or just wanting to keep an eye out for anything unusual. That sort of thing is best done at a slower speed.

RobM77

35,349 posts

234 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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LunarOne said:
Shadgrind said:
I followed a police car thru' a national limit on a country road, doing 40, why?
I don't mind when people do 40 on an NSL road, because they're giving me the opportunity to overtake. It's more annoying being stuck behind a queue of traffic behind a 40-driver, because it seems I am the only one willing to overtake. So many drivers just sit behind like sheep.

But in the case of a police car, did it occur to you that police might have something else to do other than just getting from A to B? They may be surveying the area for an abandoned car or a missing person or just wanting to keep an eye out for anything unusual. That sort of thing is best done at a slower speed.
yes It's a limit, not a target. There are loads of reasons why someone might choose to go slowly; literally too many to even start listing. This is why overtaking is allowed.

LunarOne

5,179 posts

137 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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RobM77 said:
yes It's a limit, not a target. There are loads of reasons why someone might choose to go slowly; literally too many to even start listing. This is why overtaking is allowed.
Indeed. It is a limit rather than a target. However I treat it as guidance when the weather and road conditions suit. I recently posted a video of me hitting a pheasant on an NSL single carriageway road to Facebook, and a friend said, "You were going too fast surely?"
- despite being well below the speed limit for the majority of the time and just touching it at other times. It appears that the majority of drivers have absolutely no idea what is meant by National Speed Limit, nor when it applies. They don't know what those white roundels with the diagonal black line signify, and they have no idea that it's different for different kinds of vehicles. That probably explains 95% of the drive everywhere at 40 brigade.

66mpg

651 posts

107 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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I think the point that Shadgrind is making is that having overtaken the police car in the 50 zone it should not have caught up to him in the 30 zone unless it had exceeded the speed limit there.

Edited by 66mpg on Saturday 4th July 17:06

Shadgrind

7 posts

138 months

Monday 8th June 2020
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66mpg said:
I hunk the point that Shadgrind is making is that having overtaken the police car in the 50 zone it should not have caught up to him in the 30 zone unless it had exceeded the speed limit there.
Exactly! They caught up to me in a 30, I was doing bang on 30, how did they catch me, in the NSL I was doing at least 60, maybe a tad more, there is no way they could have caught me without braking the 30 by some margin!

LukeBrown66

4,479 posts

46 months

Saturday 4th July 2020
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I lose count of the amount of times I make a perfectly safe overtake to pass someone who then flashes as I move in front, or speeds up as I try to start the overtake.

Usually on a 60 NSA road, I do a lot of driving on single carriage A roads at weekends and find that a heck of a lot of people do not really drive at 60 when it is perfectly safe to do so, these are Fen roads, long and straight and I know them well.

Not quite sure why people feel the need to do these things, I almost think it is because they like having a clear road ahead and never, ever look in their mirrors, or maybe even enjoy having a queue behind, and obviously don't care.


LunarOne

5,179 posts

137 months

Saturday 4th July 2020
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LukeBrown66 said:
Not quite sure why people feel the need to do these things, I almost think it is because they like having a clear road ahead and never, ever look in their mirrors, or maybe even enjoy having a queue behind, and obviously don't care.
Because a vast number of drivers have no idea what the words "national speed limit" mean. They assume that any single carriageway road has a 40mph limit. In fact there are vast numbers of people who seem to believe that all roads should be driven at 40mph. And many of these people also believe that overtaking is a reckless, not to mention illegal, action.

7mike

3,010 posts

193 months

Sunday 5th July 2020
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Human nature being what it is, our view is always the right one. Whether it's arrogance, ignorance, selfishness or whatever, everyone's opinion is the right opinion.

So if I've chosen to drive a particular stretch of road at X mph then that's 'the right speed' for the road! Anyone attempting to overtake is going to incur my wrath and I'll damn well teach then a lesson (not really me of course tongue out ) Likewise if I catch up with someone driving slower then they need get a move on or get the hell out of my way because they are not driving at 'the right speed' for the conditions. Now, if you believe we, as a society are becoming more arrogant, selfish or (given the lack of knowledge we should all know when we learned to drive) ignorant then perhaps you can understand the problem.

Personally, one important piece of information I try to gain when considering an overtake is anticipating the sort of driver I am dealing with in front.

Baldchap

7,631 posts

92 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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Late to the thread but in my experience, more often than not you can't actually see into a car behind you for glare from the windscreen.

LimSlip

800 posts

54 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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RobM77 said:
yes It's a limit, not a target. There are loads of reasons why someone might choose to go slowly; literally too many to even start listing. This is why overtaking is allowed.
Go on then, why would you prefer to hold up traffic on a road that is appropriate for 60mph and you are driving a car that is easily capable of this (i.e. any reasonably modern car)?

Solocle

3,288 posts

84 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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LimSlip said:
Go on then, why would you prefer to hold up traffic on a road that is appropriate for 60mph and you are driving a car that is easily capable of this (i.e. any reasonably modern car)?
New tyres being worn in, a nauseous/nervous passenger, a warning light coming on...

markyb_lcy

9,904 posts

62 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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Solocle said:
LimSlip said:
Go on then, why would you prefer to hold up traffic on a road that is appropriate for 60mph and you are driving a car that is easily capable of this (i.e. any reasonably modern car)?
New tyres being worn in, a nauseous/nervous passenger, a warning light coming on...
The decent thing to do would be once a queue builds up behind, to pull in to the left and allow them to pass. In the case of a problem with the car necessitating a very low speed, one should really be banging the hazards on IMO.

Solocle

3,288 posts

84 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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markyb_lcy said:
The decent thing to do would be once a queue builds up behind, to pull in to the left and allow them to pass. In the case of a problem with the car necessitating a very low speed, one should really be banging the hazards on IMO.
That would be illegal.
You MUST NOT use hazard warning lights while driving or being towed unless you are on a motorway or unrestricted dual carriageway and you need to warn drivers behind you of a hazard or obstruction ahead.

RVLR 1989 section 27 said:
No person shall use, or cause or permit to be used, on a road any vehicle on which any lamp, hazard warning signal device or warning beacon of a type specified in an item in column 2 of the Table below is used in a manner specified in that item in column 3.

Hazard warning signal device
Used other than–

(i)to warn persons using the road of a temporary obstruction when the vehicle is at rest; or
(ii)on a motorway or unrestricted dual-carriageway, to warn following drivers of a need to slow down due to a temporary obstruction ahead; or
(iii)in the case of a bus, to summon assistance for the driver or any person acting as a conductor or inspector on the vehicle.

markyb_lcy

9,904 posts

62 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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Fair.

I must admit, I didn't know this one. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.

Seems to me to be one of the "Rules" that's somewhat ignored, I've have police cars thank me for letting them out on residential roads before by the use of flashing their hazards.

otolith

56,091 posts

204 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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Solocle said:
markyb_lcy said:
The decent thing to do would be once a queue builds up behind, to pull in to the left and allow them to pass. In the case of a problem with the car necessitating a very low speed, one should really be banging the hazards on IMO.
That would be illegal.
You MUST NOT use hazard warning lights while driving or being towed unless you are on a motorway or unrestricted dual carriageway and you need to warn drivers behind you of a hazard or obstruction ahead.

RVLR 1989 section 27 said:
No person shall use, or cause or permit to be used, on a road any vehicle on which any lamp, hazard warning signal device or warning beacon of a type specified in an item in column 2 of the Table below is used in a manner specified in that item in column 3.

Hazard warning signal device
Used other than–

(i)to warn persons using the road of a temporary obstruction when the vehicle is at rest; or
(ii)on a motorway or unrestricted dual-carriageway, to warn following drivers of a need to slow down due to a temporary obstruction ahead; or
(iii)in the case of a bus, to summon assistance for the driver or any person acting as a conductor or inspector on the vehicle.
That's a bit inconvenient for all those cars which automatically flash their hazard lights under hard braking.

Zetec-S

5,873 posts

93 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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markyb_lcy said:
The decent thing to do would be once a queue builds up behind, to pull in to the left and allow them to pass. In the case of a problem with the car necessitating a very low speed, one should really be banging the hazards on IMO.
yes

If I've had to use a space saver spare wheel on NSL roads then I've pulled over a few times to let people pass.

If I had to go significantly slower than the speed limit for whatever reason (towing, limp mode, etc) then I'll also stick the hazards on. I know you're not supposed to, but personally I think unless you get the most jobsworth of jobsworthy coppers you're unlikely to get more than, at worst, a ticking off...

Blakewater

4,309 posts

157 months

Tuesday 7th July 2020
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LunarOne said:
RobM77 said:
yes It's a limit, not a target. There are loads of reasons why someone might choose to go slowly; literally too many to even start listing. This is why overtaking is allowed.
Indeed. It is a limit rather than a target. However I treat it as guidance when the weather and road conditions suit. I recently posted a video of me hitting a pheasant on an NSL single carriageway road to Facebook, and a friend said, "You were going too fast surely?"
- despite being well below the speed limit for the majority of the time and just touching it at other times. It appears that the majority of drivers have absolutely no idea what is meant by National Speed Limit, nor when it applies. They don't know what those white roundels with the diagonal black line signify, and they have no idea that it's different for different kinds of vehicles. That probably explains 95% of the drive everywhere at 40 brigade.
If you collided with a hazard, you were going too fast to be able to stop within the distance you could see to be clear. Unless you kill wildlife deliberately, which isn't pleasant.