basingwerk wrote:
Rewolf wrote:
The tailgaters are not those wanting to overtake, it is those forming the front of the queue behind the obstructing vehicle. So we have lorry driving at his correct speed of 40mph on a NSL road with occasional passing opportunities, but the 5 vehicles behind it all have no intention of passing, but are less than 1 second from each other, meaning that there are no gaps available into which anybody can safely pull-in. To make a safe overtake, a driver at position 6 has to find a section of road that will allow the passing of 6 vehicles at the same time.
Let’s try an mind-game to test this. Imagine the scenario you have described. Now think of yourself, in that scenario. Are you in the group of tailgaters, or one of the frustrated ‘good’ drivers behind. If I know you, Rewolf, you are one of the ‘good’ drivers behind, aren’t you? In this mind game, you never show up in the group of frustrating ‘bad’ drivers up front, do you – you are perfect!
And the funny thing? Whoever tries this game, nobody ever thinks of themselves in the group of frustrating ‘bad’ drivers up front! Perhaps there is only really one group of drivers, after all! There’s nought queerer than folk, as they say up north!
Not perfect, but with a fast car, and a mere 3 vehicles in front of me, I would have passed them miles back
However when baulked by this situation there are two choices - sit there maintaining a safe gap that the "suicidal" can pull into if necessary, while the tedium forces my mind into neutral, or find an alternative route.
I really don't care if somebody passes me, and I would rather give them a safe space to pull into, so when stuck in 4 or further back, I am actually that rare person that does leave a 2 second+ gap.
But I prefer the alternative route option - that I why I have a Sat Nav system, and a car that likes the white roads. I know that it may not be any faster (normally slower), but at least I am free to think for myself and keep myself stimulated.
basingwerk wrote:
Rewolf wrote:
I know that you think that everybody should calmly drive at the speed of the slowest driver, but if you have say a 150 mile journey ahead of you, this is a choice between 4 hours of mind numbing tedium at a maximum of 40, or 3 hours of driving where you drive at a comfortable speed and are stimulated enough to maintain concentration.
It’s actually a choice between driving calmly, or a one way trip to the cemetery! In any case, once you have passed one truck, you just get a bit sooner to the next one, so not much gain there!
A huge generalisation there - believe it or not, there isn't always another truck a bit further on, and I never said to get angry or do anything stupid. Believe it or not, in the hundreds of millions of vehicle miles each year only a very small percentage actually involve a trip to the cemetery. If you then exclude those where you are a rear passenger with a very reclined seating position we are talking about, at most, a few hundred fatal overtaking collisions each year. I would be able to give you figures, but those that do have this information are refusing to tell because it exposes the 1/3 lie.
basingwerk wrote:
Rewolf wrote:
What the drivers at the front of the queue, that have no intention of overtaking should be doing, is to extend the gap to the vehicle in front to between 2 and 3 seconds, which clearly tells any driver behind them that they do not want to overtake, but that they are giving them a safe gap to pull into should anybody else want to. Instead these drivers at the front are not thinking, and are not considering anybody else, they are just mindlessly setting a 1 second gap and then get angry if somebody has to pull into it.
Let’s try a bit of game theory to explain this. The drivers at the front of the queue don’t overtake because they are making safe progress and don’t like risk, but they might overtake if a good opportunity comes up. What they don’t want is to encourage drivers from behind to push them back down the queue, limiting their overtake possibilities and dangerously barging into
their space. If they extended the gap to the vehicle in front to 3 seconds this would happen. Now I have already shown you that there is no ‘second’ group of good drivers just behind this bunch of silly nit wits up front – that distinction exists only in jealous minds. In other words, everybody is at it.
Driving is not fair, but it can be safer.
There is this stick thing by the side of your steering wheel, if when you spot an overtaking opportunity, you wish to overtake, you push this stick up and these flashy light things call indicators come on. You can pull out after checking those mirror things that are not just for checking your makeup.
Now you might argue that these evil petrol-head monsters will come screaming past you before you have had a chance to react, but this is not true unless you take ages to make up your mind. Firstly those idiots coming up from behind are
behind you. This means that you are first to see the passing opportunity, as you come around the corner, or if you need to wait for an oncoming vehicle, it passes you first. Even if they are the car right behind you it still takes time to accellerate up to your position - this is not a microsecond thing, it takes a couple of seconds at least for a dangerous potential clash to develop. In either case you can indicate first because you see the opportunity first. Secondly, petrol-head behind you knows that it is a dangerous move passing multiple vehicles in one move, and the one thing that they are really, really looking out for is somebody indicating and pulling out without looking.
The thing that your group of "ideal world" drivers, that are too close to the vehicles in front, need is some training either in confidence so that they make decisive moves rather than faffing for 20 seconds before deciding that this might actually be a good spot to pass, or in considerate driving where they think about how they could help other people make progress even if they don't want to.