Well my advice to Rick99 would be to try a little experiment, next time the opportunity arises.
Imagine the next time you are in a merging situation. There you are tailgating the car in front to stop anyone "pushing in", alternately flooring the throttle and standing on the brakes every time the tiniest gap starts to appear in front of you, lest someone boldly barges in, and all the while glaring fixedly ahead with the customary 1000 yard stare.
Next thing you get one of those utter, utter swines who has decided that you are the car he is going to merge in front of. He has probably chosen that gap as the car in front of him merged in front of the car in front of you. Either way, that is the gap he has chosen and he's coming in.
The lane is getting ever narrower, he's overlapped half a length ahead of you but there ain't no way you are backing down. Now you are barely inches away from the car in front, inches from the cones on the left and inches from his nearside rear bumper, and
still he won't back down.
The lane gets narrower, and narrower, he gets closer, and you push up even closer to the car in front,
desperate not to let the bastard in. All is now silent in your car and you are aware of your wife wincing in the passenger seat and glaring at you for being so ridiculously territorial.
In the end he eases up, you slot through the gap with several inches to spare and the guy behind effortlessly lets him in. You will now be tailgated mercilessly by him for the duration of the roadworks, after which he will overtake aggressively at the earliest opportunity to regain the car-length of roadspace you invested so much zeal and stress in guarding, mouthing obscenities at you and yours as he does so.
Is it really worth it?
No, I don't think so. Next time why not try this approach:
If you insist on getting in the eventual lane early then fine, that's your prerogative. But this time, instead of using it as a battleground make a point of chivalrously giving just
one other road user a break. Guard your gap if you must, but when you finally reach the end of the two lane section pick your man out of the other lane (yes, even if he's just come whizzing up out of nowhere) and make a point of ostentatiously opening up a gap especially for him and then waving him generously into it. As soon as he does so, overlap behind him to make it plain that you have now formed your part of the zip and this is now a single lane.
You lose one car length, but you also lose all the hassle. You gain a friend (ok only transiently) but moreover you get a really nice warm feeling inside from doing your good deed for the day. And what's more, you just shortened the queue!
You know it makes sense...!
