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#1
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And Now For a Bad Lane Change
In article >,
Scott en Aztl?n > wrote: > The other day I posted video of a proper lane change. Here's an > example of a bad one: > > http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=23ww6sk > > Keep an eye on the silver Durango in the lane to my right. He wants to > turn left at the next block, but like many drivers he failed to plan > ahead and was four lanes to the right of the lane he wanted to be in. > So of course he panics and starts changing lanes, nearly clobbering a > motorcyclist in the process (and, of course, slowing down in my lane, > forcing me and everyone behind me to slow down needlessly also. He doesn't "nearly clobber" anyone. He makes a perfectly normal change into your lane and then slows slightly to align with a space in the lane to your left *behind* the motorcycle. He then accelerates into that lane and then moves into the left hand of the two turn lanes only because it is convenient. -- Alan Baker Vancouver, British Columbia "If you raise the ceiling four feet, move the fireplace from that wall to that wall, you'll still only get the full stereophonic effect if you sit in the bottom of that cupboard." |
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#2
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And Now For a Bad Lane Change
Alan Baker wrote:
> He makes a perfectly normal change into your lane and then slows > slightly He slowed down quite a bit more than just "slightly." > to align with a space in the lane to your left *behind* the > motorcycle. He could have just let up on the accelerator and switched lanes behind. It looks like he slowed down by at least 10 mph. |
#3
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And Now For a Bad Lane Change
In article >,
Arif Khokar > wrote: > Alan Baker wrote: > > > He makes a perfectly normal change into your lane and then slows > > slightly > > He slowed down quite a bit more than just "slightly." Watch the cadence of the lane markers passing the camera car. It barely changes. > > > to align with a space in the lane to your left *behind* the > > motorcycle. > > He could have just let up on the accelerator and switched lanes behind. > It looks like he slowed down by at least 10 mph. Switched lanes behind whom? Wouldn't that have given the person in the other lane just as much reason to complain. No one is guaranteed a drive without the need to change speeds to adjust to traffic. The Silverado driver placed no one at risk -- never came close to the hyperbolic "clobbering" of the motorcycle that the OP claimed -- and didn't inconvenience anyone more than 5 seconds worth either. Normal city driving. -- Alan Baker Vancouver, British Columbia "If you raise the ceiling four feet, move the fireplace from that wall to that wall, you'll still only get the full stereophonic effect if you sit in the bottom of that cupboard." |
#4
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And Now For a Bad Lane Change
In article >,
Scott en Aztl?n > wrote: > Alan Baker > said in rec.autos.driving: > > >In article >, > > Scott en Aztl?n > wrote: > > > >> The other day I posted video of a proper lane change. Here's an > >> example of a bad one: > >> > >> http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=23ww6sk > >> > >> Keep an eye on the silver Durango in the lane to my right. He wants to > >> turn left at the next block, but like many drivers he failed to plan > >> ahead and was four lanes to the right of the lane he wanted to be in. > >> So of course he panics and starts changing lanes, nearly clobbering a > >> motorcyclist in the process (and, of course, slowing down in my lane, > >> forcing me and everyone behind me to slow down needlessly also. > > > >He doesn't "nearly clobber" anyone. > > > >He makes a perfectly normal change into your lane and then slows > >slightly to align with a space in the lane to your left *behind* the > >motorcycle. > > Interesting how you missed his little "wiggle" - he fully intended to > cross all 4 lanes in one motion, but when he realized the motorcyclist > wasn't a JLEDI he swerved back into his lane, slowed down, and waited > for it to pass. For him to have "swerved back into his lane" he would have to have left it first. He didn't. -- Alan Baker Vancouver, British Columbia "If you raise the ceiling four feet, move the fireplace from that wall to that wall, you'll still only get the full stereophonic effect if you sit in the bottom of that cupboard." |
#5
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And Now For a Bad Lane Change
In article >,
Scott en Aztl?n > wrote: > Alan Baker > said in rec.autos.driving: > > >> He could have just let up on the accelerator and switched lanes behind. > >> It looks like he slowed down by at least 10 mph. > > > >Switched lanes behind whom? Wouldn't that have given the person in the > >other lane just as much reason to complain. > > > >No one is guaranteed a drive without the need to change speeds to adjust > >to traffic. > > > >The Silverado driver > > It was not a Silverado - it was a Durango with silver paint. > > Your lack of attention to detail is shocking - no wonder you missed > the Durango driver's "wiggle" as he aborted his lane change that would > have clobbered the motorcyclist. You call it an aborted change and so what if it is? He aborted it and with time to spare. The motorcyclist didn't so much as blink so *he/she* clearly didn't feel very threatened. > > >and didn't inconvenience anyone more than 5 seconds worth either. > > It wasn't necessary to inconvenience anyone at all. <yawn> > > >Normal city driving. > > Normal IBJAM thinking - I can inconvenice everyone else to suit MY OWN > convenience as long as the duration of the inconvenience is "short > enough" (and, of course, *I* get to define what "short enough" is). <yawn> Cry me a river and claim you've never done similar. Then start posting *all* your cameras coverage. -- Alan Baker Vancouver, British Columbia "If you raise the ceiling four feet, move the fireplace from that wall to that wall, you'll still only get the full stereophonic effect if you sit in the bottom of that cupboard." |
#6
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And Now For a Bad Lane Change
Scott en Aztlán wrote: <brevity snip>
> Alan Baker > said in rec.autos.driving: > >He doesn't "nearly clobber" anyone. > > > >He makes a perfectly normal change into your lane and then slows > >slightly to align with a space in the lane to your left *behind* the > >motorcycle. > > Interesting how you missed his little "wiggle" - he fully intended to > cross all 4 lanes in one motion, Spurious conclusion. You have not this slightest clue of another driver's intent. > but when he realized the motorcyclist > wasn't a JLEDI he swerved back into his lane, slowed down, and waited > for it to pass. As I mentioned before, that very slight "wiggle" may be attributable to a reluctance to change lanes in an intersection... or, it may be a reaction to mere oversteering an unfamiliar vehicle... or, maybe the MC was in the driver's blind spot... or maybe the driver was drunk, you don't know. ----- - gpsman |
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