RobinXe wrote:
Cooler wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Cooler wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Whats all this bollocks about ecological and economical? Keep left unless overtaking. Stopping at red lights is also uneconomical, but no more optional than the above!
Robin,
There are no red lights on a motorway, which makes motorway driving more economical than A road driving, provided that we maintain a steady speed (not too fast because of wind resistance) with a minimum of braking a light touch on the throttle. Braking always costs us in fuel unless we have one of these new hybrids.
C.
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Fallacious, the point is not the lights, and where they may be sited, but the fact that keep left unless overtaking and stopping at red lights are both rules of the road, neither of which are optional based on your fuel consumption concerns.
Robin,
This is not strictly correct. I use a motorway most days and vehicles do not 'keep left unless overtaking'. Vehicles use all the lanes of the motorway, mostly lorries in L1, with faster traffic in L2 and L3.
I just don't see most or even many drivers dodging in and out of L1. This is not an opinion, but an observation of fact.
C.
PS - Admittedly, the motorway I use is pretty busy. Of course it is different when traffic is quieter and L1 is emptier. The pressure of traffic does change the dynamic.
Actually, it
is strictly correct. Many don't, but they have no valid reason not to. Are you as poor a driver as they, "police qualifications" and all?
The majority of people once believed the earth was flat. Does that make them correct, or vindicate the luddite who agrees with them?
Robin,
Yes, I agree that rules of the road, as published in the highway code, are not optional. My point is that many people do not follow certain rules to the letter and this includes lingering in the middle lane and it includes motorway speeding.
In my original question I was quite interested to see whether posters saw 'middle lane hogging' or speeding as most condonable and I have used examples to reveal poster's attitudes.
From the answers so far it looks like speeding might be the lesser evil in some people's views. For, logically, we would have to condone speeding in order to expect a driver travelling at 70mph in the middle lane of a motorway to get out of our way.
This has been a most interesting discussion, if a little emotive.
Maybe we should ask the following straight question. Which is the least serious motorway driving offence?
a. Middle lane hogging at the legal speed limit.
b. Speeding.
C.