LHD why all the kerfuffle?
LHD why all the kerfuffle?
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Discussion

DodgyGeezer

Original Poster:

44,794 posts

207 months

Yesterday (16:25)
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on another thread (Mustang CS800DH) there was this comment "...But the Camaro and Challenger aren't available in RHD, making them undesirable, regardless..." which got me wondering why people seem to have a phobia about LHD. I'll accept that on occasion it does produce an inconvenience but surely no more than that if you're an even vaguely average driver?

kambites

69,917 posts

238 months

Yesterday (16:33)
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DodgyGeezer said:
on another thread (Mustang CS800DH) there was this comment "...But the Camaro and Challenger aren't available in RHD, making them undesirable, regardless..." which got me wondering why people seem to have a phobia about LHD. I'll accept that on occasion it does produce an inconvenience but surely no more than that if you're an even vaguely average driver?
I owned a LHD car in the UK for a short while and hated it. Overtaking was nigh on impossible and half of the junctions in small villages almost seemed to be deliberately designed to make it impossible to see what's coming from the left-hand side of the car.

I've also driven RHD cars on the continent a fair bit and had similar difficulties. I could live with it, but I certainly wouldn't by choice!

frisbee

5,372 posts

127 months

Yesterday (16:35)
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Ticket machines are a hassle. Overtaking is a pain, some people even faff around with cameras. The headlights might be st.

InitialDave

13,653 posts

136 months

Yesterday (16:36)
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I'd rather drive a RHD car on the continent than a LHD car in the UK.

Cliftonite

8,610 posts

155 months

Yesterday (16:49)
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InitialDave said:
I'd rather drive a RHD car on the continent than a LHD car in the UK.
A RHD car in mountainous regions on the continent makes confident positioning close to the rock face or cliff edge, as appropriate, easier!


wibble cb

3,971 posts

224 months

Yesterday (16:52)
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I have driven LHD in the Uk and do drive a RHD in Toronto, neither was especially tricky, common sense and some anticipation are required, if in any doubt about a manoeuvre, don’t do it, simple.


Wheel Turned Out

1,630 posts

55 months

Yesterday (16:57)
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Depends on the car I suppose - in something modern and American (namely huge and with poor visibility) I can see it being more of a ballache than with a classic car.

BunkMoreland

2,506 posts

24 months

Yesterday (17:26)
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Wheel Turned Out said:
Depends on the car I suppose - in something modern and American (namely huge and with poor visibility) I can see it being more of a ballache than with a classic car.
That. I owned LHD here, I've driven a lot of LHD cars over the years. Normal size cars are generally fine, but the later/newer a car is the wider it gets.


I sat in a McLaren SLR years ago and that's 2miles wide, so it would be a complete nightmare in the UK at ticket barriers etc. Fine if you have friends, but I don't have any of those biggrin

kambites

69,917 posts

238 months

Yesterday (17:53)
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BunkMoreland said:
I sat in a McLaren SLR years ago and that's 2miles wide...
According to Google, the SLR is 12mm narrower than a current BMW X3...

generationx

8,505 posts

122 months

Yesterday (18:02)
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My car is RHD, Frau GenX’s in LHD. I guess it’s what one is used to but I don’t find a problem with either in the UK or Europe. If I have to use a ticket machine on the “wrong” side I’ll just get out and walk around, although my car is just about reachable. The situation I find a bit, but not very, tricky is normal urban roads when caught behind stopped buses etc, but just giving a bit more space to compensate and gain visibility usually solves things.

InitialDave

13,653 posts

136 months

Yesterday (18:12)
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generationx said:
My car is RHD, Frau GenX s in LHD. I guess it s what one is used to but I don t find a problem with either in the UK or Europe. If I have to use a ticket machine on the wrong side I ll just get out and walk around, although my car is just about reachable. The situation I find a bit, but not very, tricky is normal urban roads when caught behind stopped buses etc, but just giving a bit more space to compensate and gain visibility usually solves things.
Litter picking grabber thing is my solution.

nickfrog

23,096 posts

234 months

Yesterday (18:19)
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My first Boxster was LHD in the UK. It didn't bother me, I couldn't afford the RHD equivalent in my 20s anyway!

McGee_22

7,578 posts

196 months

Yesterday (18:28)
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My second car bought when I was 20 was a 1973 left hand drive BMW 2002tii - I had no particular problems except ticket machine barriers for car parks. Years later I bought a 1993 BMW M5 Touring which were all left hand drive - again no real issues, except for the standard opening the door the first time inside of changing gear biggrin

andy-integrale

462 posts

208 months

Yesterday (19:02)
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The integrale is LHD but small, so not an issue in my experience over the last 17 years with it. It actually makes it feel more special.

LastPoster

3,017 posts

200 months

Yesterday (19:10)
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I had an E30 M3 when they were still cheap. No real issues in driving although not a daily as I had a van as well but it did get used for everything outside work and boring domestic stuff.

The only issue I ever had was when some tt saw my wife sat in the right hand seat and proceeded to shout at her to move so he could get through a gap (which had previously been there until another tt had parked too close for anyone to get through) embarrassingly for both of them this was in a BMW dealership and they were both staff. I took great delight in pointing this out, I wouldn't have bothered normally but they were the ones who started the shouting biggrin

CSR Performance

10 posts

5 months

Yesterday (19:13)
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Had at least 2 LHD cars in the UK, must have been for a total of over 2 years, one of them was my daily. Never had any issues.

Overtaking needs a better line of sight, but with the advent of mobile speed cameras and an increase in the number of fkwits on the roads I can’t remember the last time I actually did one.

Most car parks are now barrierless and I don’t do drive though food/drink establishments very much and if I do, then I’m with my wife/family anyway so would have a passenger.

On one my lefties was a mk2 Golf, and having had about 9 of them in various versions I was amazed how much nicer the LHD version was to drive. The pedals were in a far less compromised position, there was space to rest my left foot and the steering felt much nicer, presumably down to a straighter run for the steering column.

If the car was engineered to be LHD in the first place then I would much sooner have the steering wheel on the ‘correct’ side, otherwise I would just buy on condition. Driving a LHD takes a couple of hours at most to get used to, it’s really not an issue.

Shnozz

29,350 posts

288 months

Yesterday (19:22)
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nickfrog said:
My first Boxster was LHD in the UK. It didn't bother me, I couldn't afford the RHD equivalent in my 20s anyway!
Ironic now with anything LHD being worth far more than its RHD comparable.

nickfrog

23,096 posts

234 months

Yesterday (19:47)
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Shnozz said:
nickfrog said:
My first Boxster was LHD in the UK. It didn't bother me, I couldn't afford the RHD equivalent in my 20s anyway!
Ironic now with anything LHD being worth far more than its RHD comparable.
Yes it was an early car in 2001 before UK prices went down. The delta was around £4k. I sold it before prices went up and £ started sliding of course... I am pretty sure it soon went back to Germany after that!