Noob Saibot wrote:
You may be right, although aggressive tailgating would be pointless. But yeah, lorries are hardly immune from tailgating themselves, I often see them on the M6 driving unbelieveably close. I suppose they often don't want to 'sacrifice their hard earned speed' as I think I saw it put elsewhere in the forum. It can sometimes make it hard to pull off the motorway as well, I know you should be looking ahead and try to get in lane in good time, but I've seen situations where there's almost a solid mile of lorries with barely a car length between them.
Separate but related point so I'm splitting it from my other response.
The truck behviour you've described, imo, represents a significant hazard and a direct and major cause of congestion. Why? Well, what happens when a driver cruising at 70-75 sees a line of trucks nose to tail approaching his exit. He either tries to get to the front, perhaps accelerating and then having to cut in and/or brake sharply to force his way into a small gap or he has brake down to 55 and drop back in line. Of course the braking down to 55 sends a wave back down the motorway and it's quite easy to imagine traffic further back being forced to a halt as the wave spreads backwards.
Whose fault is it? Partly the driver who either brakes or forces his way in but mostly the trucks (and not particularly trucks but all vehicles) which leave inadequate gaps. If all drivers would leave ample gaps
especially around junctions, faster traffic could enter and leave at slip roads without difficulty or drama, improving the flow of traffic for everybody.