I have never really had the problem of a tailing car closing the gap so I could not abort, if I decide to abort it is usually quite early so they have not had time to close the gap, that type of driver tends not to react to changes very quickly anyway. I do get cars accelerating, but I tend to allow enough room for that and just accelerate harder, if they can accelerate harder than my car then it is unlikely a follower will have closed the gap anyway. The worst one I have had is when I overtook an accelerator and the car next in front apparently brake tested me as I started to pull back onto the left hand side of the road, the guy I had overtaken noticed and braked as well fortunately, it was originally a very big gap, but with one accelerating and one braking is got smaller fast. I know why he braked and I have not put myself in the same situation again, other than that though I cannot remember having any real problem getting back into a gap. I think that similarly to your reason for preferring a flying pass I just try to overtake quickly enough that the driver does not have time to mess it up for me.
Lum wrote:
If you want to avoid the risk of any impact at all then you probably shouldn't be overtaking in the first place.

When you decide to overtake you accept a certain amount of risk. Earlier you wrote that Hazard = risk x probability. I'd come up with a similar formula, something like Risk = Likelihood of impact x Likely severity of impact.
As a biker the formula for likely severity is probably very different to in a car. I've never been a biker so this is speculation now, but in a car, having someone pull out into the side of you isn't going to hurt very much wheras a head-on collision is going to hurt an awful lot. On a bike the head on collision is probably more easily avoidable if you do end up trapped on the wrong side of the road, but having someone pull into the side of you is going to send you off the bike and hurt rather a lot.And yes I have a quick car, but I also have an old Volvo 940.

Ahh, this might be it. I usually rate the chance of a head on as far lower than the chance that the car I am trying to pass will pull into my path so for me it is about minimising the time over which I could not avoid it. A flying pass with a high speed differential means that you commit to the overtake quite early, I am not talking about 10-20mph more in the 30+ region.
My Hazard = your risk, my risk = your severity - just different words for the same ideas imo. Glad we did not get hung up on semantics

What do you do if passing multiple vehicles, say six or more at one go? This assumes a nice long straight and gaps at least every second vehicle.
Whether you start with a flying pass or not do you sustain the overtake as effectively a flying pass with each vehicle or hop into gaps?
I tend to pass one or two vehicles then slow in the gap between vehicle without pulling back left into the gap, this gives me the option to abort and the time to assess each vehicle as I catch it. If the other vehicles are travelling at 40 - 45mph my speed would vary between 45 - 75 mph, I can see a clear lane in front so am safe to stay out it just lets me allow for one of the sheep suddenly waking up and deciding to overtake. On one occasion using this method let me see the line of vehicle pull out to pass a cyclist, I could easily drop back halfway into the left in a gap to let the car in front pull out to pass the cycle before I continued to pass the next cars.
I hope you do not mind me going on, it is always interesting to get a different pov at this level.
My slowest car is the Smart at about 120bhp/ton, fine for passing 40mphers from a following position, but the acceleration starts to flag at 60mph so I can see how a flying pass could start to come in for cars doing 55 - 60 mph if you have less space to use the rhs.