Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
Good God above Mr Denmark, positive thread necrophilia!
That beer may be 11 years out of date
Go and have a beer. Lesson learnt.
I was using a busy but wide A-road, holding a strong primary position and 59km/h (36mph) descending the long hill. Five cars shouldered past me so close that I could have reached out and touched them. Then a van did the same but shouted at me to move over as he went past. Bearing in mind this road is subject to a 40mph limit, I was pretty close to it. I moved further out in the lane to protect myself from more idiots squeezing past against the oncoming flow of traffic. .
fark em!Why are you surprised at having several motor vehicles force their way past you if you're occupying a whole lane on a wide road? As far as they were concerned you were deliberately obstructing them. "strong primary position" is fine for short distances when approaching junctions or passing a parked vehicle or roadworks etc, but if you try to take control of a traffic lane for any considerable time/distance, drivers who don't want to do 36mph down a hill are going to quickly get very pissed off with you. All you achieved was to increase the danger to yourself by provoking other road users into close passes. If you'd kept further over to the left and not tried to monopolise the road, the other vehicles would have overtaken you anyway, but with more room and no aggro. It's not your job to enforce the speed limit either, if someone else wants to go over 40 that's up to them if they choose to break the law, it's not your job to try to baulk them.
If you'd kept further over to the left and not tried to monopolise the road, the other vehicles would have overtaken you anyway, but with more room and no aggro. It's not your job to enforce the speed limit either, if someone else wants to go over 40 that's up to them if they choose to break the law, it's not your job to try to baulk them.
Why are you surprised at having several motor vehicles force their way past you if you're occupying a whole lane on a wide road? As far as they were concerned you were deliberately obstructing them. "strong primary position" is fine for short distances when approaching junctions or passing a parked vehicle or roadworks etc, but if you try to take control of a traffic lane for any considerable time/distance, drivers who don't want to do 36mph down a hill are going to quickly get very pissed off with you. All you achieved was to increase the danger to yourself by provoking other road users into close passes. If you'd kept further over to the left and not tried to monopolise the road, the other vehicles would have overtaken you anyway, but with more room and no aggro. It's not your job to enforce the speed limit either, if someone else wants to go over 40 that's up to them if they choose to break the law, it's not your job to try to baulk them.
If I'm travelling at a similar speed to other vehicles on the road, I will, and have taken the lane to prevent anyone trying to pass me.Why are you surprised at having several motor vehicles force their way past you if you're occupying a whole lane on a wide road? As far as they were concerned you were deliberately obstructing them. "strong primary position" is fine for short distances when approaching junctions or passing a parked vehicle or roadworks etc, but if you try to take control of a traffic lane for any considerable time/distance, drivers who don't want to do 36mph down a hill are going to quickly get very pissed off with you. All you achieved was to increase the danger to yourself by provoking other road users into close passes. If you'd kept further over to the left and not tried to monopolise the road, the other vehicles would have overtaken you anyway, but with more room and no aggro. It's not your job to enforce the speed limit either, if someone else wants to go over 40 that's up to them if they choose to break the law, it's not your job to try to baulk them.
I know a midwife who rides a motorbike, surely that meets the description?‘Green lights and twos’ don't exist (legally) in the U.K.