I'd like some opinions on showing courtesy on the roads.
I like helping people out, but I don't like annoying people. To that effect, if I can let someone out of a junction without inconveniencing anyone else, I often will (unless I'm at the back of a queue - in which case they can pull out behind me and save inconveniencing me for nothing).
What's brought this question on?
Ok scene setting:
The A90 to Aberdeen from the north is partly single carriageway.
On one long stretch of SC in particular, there is one junction alone which causes disproportionate congestion. It is a T-junction joining the A90 from a very small village.
Every morning, nose to tail stop-start traffic is encountered at peak times on the A90 around 1.5 ~ 2 miles from the junction. If a driver can stay in 1st gear with the clutch out, he/she is greatful. The queue will typically comprise several hundred vehicles.
Upon reaching this junction, the cause of the frustrating stop start, left knee killing faff becomes obvious. There is a constant, yet very light flow of traffic from this village (Newburgh). It is seldom that the queue from Newburgh is more than 3 cars long. On average, each car arriving at the junction has been let onto the A90 before the next car pulls up at the junction.
Clearly people are being kind and letting all the Newburgh drivers onto the main road. That's nice eh?
1/4 mile after the junction the traffic is moving at 40ish again all the way to the next stretch of DC when free-flow is re-established.
What bugs me a bit is that Newburgh drivers experience no congestion whatsoever, whilst users of the main road (A90) are forced to queue in stop-start for miles (a good 15 minutes) just to save joining traffic from any wait whatsoever.
What are other people's opinions? Is this overuse of courtesy?
Personally I would rank this up with that person you are behind at a traffic light cross-roads, who when the light turns green waves 10 cars turning right from the opposite direction across, finally moving off himself just as the lights turn amber again, leaving you (and 20 other irate roadusers behind) stuck there waiting for the next cycle of the lights.
In short - the needs of the few seem to outweigh the needs of the many.
