keni wrote:
I'm sure this would apply in one set of circumstances but the number of variables is almost infinite, tyre condition, age/state of other drivers, etc etc, Also no "fat" at all, i.e. no safety/error margins. Ken
Yes, you are right, which is why I stated it as the minimum. It goes without saying that the following driver is not half asleep, know with confidence that their car is roadworthy and conditions are good. The age/state of other drivers don’t come into it. This exercise proves you
can leave a gap of 1.1 seconds, accounting for the driver in front spotting something you don’t, but only if you’re alert and undistracted (excluding the pointless
regular mirror check, but that’s for another thread).
Without doubt you would be leaving your destiny in the hands of others if you leave a gap of less than 1 second.
Steering back to the original point: Don’t assume that drivers leaving gaps of 1.1 seconds as territorial tailgaters (especially now that I’ve shown justification for it). It’s a shame that most leave less, some far less

keni wrote:
Those drivers who are allowed to enter this envelope of space in front of us will, 90% of the time, be travelling slower than ourselves but not dramatically so and will return to lane two as soon as they've passed the slower vehicle.
With this I’m in agreement (except of course for drivers of german cars

).
Perhaps this is something else Paul could broadcast to the general public?