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Yesterday evening I drove from Hastings back to my home in Berkshire. The route involved using M25 J5-J12. As on all previous occasions when using this motorway, I could not help but notice the somewhat cavalier attitude to lane usage that exists on the 4-lane sections. It's all too typical to see cars being driven at 60-65mph in lane 3, when there is next to nothing in lanes 1-2. There's one other thing I notice as I go past these cars: Many of the drivers have that switched off/bored expression, and have their right elbow up on the window ledge. After passing them, I'll go to lane 2, or even lane 1 if it's free, which it often is, depending on the time of day. Some then realise that they can do the same, but others continue in lane 3, seemingly on autopilot.
Worse was to come last night. Around J6/J7, lane 4 slowed to about 50mph. It wasn't until getting past J8 that I saw one possible cause - a small Peugeot at 60mph in lane 4. He had two opportunities to let me past, but did not move over. I'm not a headlight flasher but I did turn on my right indicator as a suggestion that I would like to get by, please. No joy. With a clear road ahead, nothing in lane 3 and nothing in lane 2, I switched to lane 2 and accelerated past. Yes, I know it's naughty, but so is lane hogging. The fact that I was able to pass this Peugeot in the manner described demonstrates that he had ample opportunity to move over, but didn't.
Why is this sort of lane hogging/switched off driving so much more apparent on 4-lane motorways?
We seem to have the worst of two worlds in Britain. In Germany, most of the 3-lane autobahnen I have driven on have no speed restriction, and drivers are very good at moving back to the slower lanes after overtaking. There are big roadside signs in Germany and Austria, counselling drivers to move over after overtaking. The signs I have seen portray a line of frustrated looking snails being held up by someone who has not moved over. At the other end of the scale is the USA, particularly the California freeways. There, you just pick a lane and drive in it! Lane choice is governed more by where you are going than by speed. Quite often, a four lane freeway splits in two as it joins another, and speed does not enter into it. So it's not unusual to see "undertaking".
In Britain, we have a mix - a law requiring us to overtake on the right, but without the necessary lane discipline to go with it. What can be done?
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