smeggy wrote:
My take on slow drivers: It seems to me that many slow drivers do so deliberately just to wind up other drivers. I say this because of the number of times the overtakees suddenly speed up when I pass...
I'm not so sure... I attribute it more to the "sheep" mentality. The ones that I see doing it appear to be not very competant and not at all good at selecting their speed, so they tend to err on the side of (excessive) caution. Once you've gone past, assuming that you've not gone by at a massive speed differential, I reckon they then just follow you, letting you select the speed for them, which is fine as long as you're going at a speed that is within their ability.
smeggy wrote:
...sometimes as I pass

they make an obvious effort to keep up (the rising engine revs and the crunch of gears are a dead giveaway). Therefore I agree with the sentiments of the former traffic officer.
They're the dangerous ones. It's just as dangerous and inconsiderate to do that sort of stupid trick as is the kami-kasi overtake.
Anyway, I'm back from a pleasant weekend in Wales. I decided to undertake an experiment on my trips there and back, it's actually a journey that I do very regularly, so I have quite a good amount of "data" to base my comparisons on. I decided to take Basingwerk's advice and "chill out, slow down and get with the program" - Friday afternoon's traffic was ideal for this. Instead of overtaking as I would normally do, I simply plodded along at the prevailing speed of the traffic, only overtaking
very slow vehicles (tractors and the like) when it came to "my turn" as the queue in which I was travelling finally negotiated the hazard...
Results:
1. Despite leaving plenty of room for an overtaker, I was overtaken very infrequently - quite surprising considering that we rarely went much over 40mph.
2. I found it very stressful... Speeding up and slowing down for no apparent reason, as others in the queue jumped on their brakes also for no apparent reason. Reducing speed to less than 30mph (in an NSL) almost every time we encountered a bend that required the wheel to be turned more than about 10 degrees.
3. It was
boring beyond belief - I had trouble keeping awake...!
4. A journey that normally takes around an hour and a half took two and a half.
5. Nobody in the queue thought it necessary to do anything other than obey speed limits through built-up areas... Classic example, the little village of Cemmaes has, for some reason known only to the CC, a speed limit of 40mph. I
never go through the village at more than about 25, frequently less than that, it's just not safe... Yet "my" 45mph queue trundled straight through at 45 - in fact the only pleasant part of the trip was catching them back up again after coming out of the village, as I'd slowed to my normal "safe speed" going through and hence had a couple of miles of clear road...
6. Most annoying of all -
my fuel consumption was about 20% worse!. I normally average 37-38mpg on this trip as I tend to accellerate briskly to my cruising speed then amble along at 60 to 70 on a light throttle in 5th gear (slowing of course to around the limit for built-up areas, and for the odd tight or poor-visibility bend). Most of this trip was instead done in 3rd and 4th (and not infrequently 2nd!!) as the poor little car chugs quite pathetically at anything less than about 50 in 5th, and the continual speedup/slow down on straight roads is very wasteful of energy - so I got slightly less than 30mpg.
So... All-in-all, I think I'll stick to my unreconstructed "speed-crazed-fiend" approach, it's less stressful, quicker, smoother and
cheaper!
