ed_m wrote:
i dont think anyone here would condone flashing & bullying tactics, especially when another lane IS available to pass in without issue.
but really it has feck all to do with the legality of it.. its just plain courteous.
sure if you have a reason to be out in L2 stick with it and shrug your shoulders if someone has a problem with it.
if you're there just to obstruct them then you're just rude.
do you let people out of side roads when traffic is heavy ?
do you flash trucks out or in when they're clearly making progress on a slower vehicle ?
do you wave pedestrians across where safe & convenient to do so ?
none of these actions are scribed in law but they are all common courtesy.
without cooperation & courtesy between all road user groups our roads just wouldnt work.
ed,
Given the nature of traffic today it is not uncommom to find the slow lane (L1) interspersed with lorries. It is reasonable to anticipate that a lorry in the distance in L1 will soon become a problem if we are travelling at 70mph. So, I think there is a judgment to be made about whether I want the inconvenience of having to slow down quite soon, or carry on in L2 and let the flasher overtake me.
One way of getting out of the way of flashers is to speed up in L2 (which of course I would never do at 70mph). I do know someone who did this and he found that the flasher followed him up the speedo until they were both white knuckling on a fairly clear motorway. This of course is madness, because now he is speeding and has been pushed into it by a flasher.
My thought here is that the flasher was not so much concerned about overtaking as making some kind of ego point, possibly related to the fact that he was in a sports car and my friend was in a Citroen saloon. I have noticed myself that flashers are almost always in performance or executive cars of some kind, which does seem to fit the story.
C.
PS - I take your courtesy point. Yes, I do let cars out of side roads. No, I never give headlamp or hand signals intended to influence the behaviour of other road users or pedestrians.