weepej wrote:
Sixy_the_red wrote:
But the speedo doesn't measure closing speed, does it? Current instrumentation is NOT going to help in this situation and therefore the ONLY choice you have is to rely on your senses.
No, I was just using the speedo example to say that you should never trust what your senses are telling you.
If you first think a car up head is going at a decent speed, check how fast its passing the white lines, or how other cars move in relation to it, don't just trust its going forward at the same speed as you are.
So .. you are on a bicycle on a normal 30 mph commute. You are at .. .. well if I can manage 20 mph without really trying that hard

.. then presumably you would be at this and perhaps higher on average cadence

- since you commute probably each day per week on bike compared to my one or two dependent on schedules and demands on time given I do like to spend time with my wife and family .. plus choir time and playtime..
You are closing in on a vehicle ahead at 10 mph. I would bet that like anyone else - you would be thinking this car is stopping or about to pull in to stop - and that YOU as CYCLIST could be taken by surprise when he or she suddenly starts to drift out towards you whilst you are overtaking.
Now that is dangerous enough on an urban road.
On that motorway - the action was potentially lethal and really it's pure luck nothing happened given the report that she was not even keeping in any one lane - but weaving between the hard shoulder and L2.
I would have tested for drink. I would also have been establishing whether or not any medication was affecting her ability. If either tested positive - would have prosecuted and got a proper ban of 12 months minimum.
Please stop deluding yourself for the sake of arguing that her driving was safe "because it was below the speed limit". It was not safe for the traffic conditions she was driving in. It was sub-standard. This was a motorway and she claimed "fear" as an excuse for her actions. I have my doubts on this and wonder if she was maybe trying something on - and playing on a milder form of stress which fortunately back- fired on her.. such is the cycnism I have developed after witnessing every trick in the book when it comes to trying to squirm out of a prosecution or a conviction by a court ..
Motorways are clearly signed after all and shops like Staples are reachable for those not qualified to drive on motorways all the same. I suspect, being the cynic I am really, perhaps she over-played the "panic card" in an attempt to keep her licence. I have seen this scenario played before and will probably do so again
It was very dangerous given the traffic condition and type of road. A trained police officer thought so. A court thought so. A judge in that court so. The woman herself accepted it was so as she pleaded guilty.
Not being disrespectful to you .. but please..
Get it into your head, weepej mate, that erratic, inconsiderate and downright dangerous driving can be so at any speed below , at and above the speed limit.. and that any police officer worthy of wearing his or her uniform will make a decision which will be objective and professional - and if he judges the standard warrants further action - then will be no hesitation.
Sigma Motion..

The majority of us would be defending ourselves against this woman.. diffusing the danger by using all the COAST skills as trained by tests and experiences. I think the majority did so given no one thankfully did have an accident as a result of this.
But dangerous driving is dangerous driving regardless of the speed and had anything hit her - then we'd be picking up bodies... and forensics would have pointed to her driving being the more dangerous in reality for the road in question. When we investigate any incident - every single detail gets examined. If the evidence points to any criminal liability/ serious traffic offence on the part of any one or more involved - then we can and do press charges.
Fortunately, a common sense police office, and the court, removed the hazard of this driver permanently in the real outcome of this case.