Brookwood wrote:
I thought it was agreed elsewhere on this forum that everybody travelling at the same speed was actually quicker because of the 'wave effect'.
True. On second thoughts, we have two different scenarios; one where there's bunching due to sheer traffic volume, the other bunching caused by a clearly identifiable moving obstacle (the police car). The latter is more frustrating because you can see what's causing it but dare not do anything about it.
In those conditions, same-speed is worrying, especially when you know many others will have their eyes on the speedo instead of the road ahead.
(EDIT: Smeggy, you beat me to it!)
In contrast there's a stretch of A1 between Cambridge and Peterborough, four very wide lanes, dead straight, and rarely running to capacity or even close to it. Quite often you'll find the entire block of traffic travelling at 85-90mph but if feels like the safest place on earth. With so much space around, no-one is tailgating or jockeying for position. Everything just glides along smooth as silk. It's how long-distance driving should be. I don't know what the accident rate is on this stretch but there's a noticeable lack of those tell-tale rubber scorch marks showing near-misses (or hits) of the past.
On wave theory, I wonder if there is more to it than the author (can't find the original paper just now) made out. He drew some natty animations showing how the wave effect causes traffic to slow or stop in a bottleneck. Something bothered me - the net throughput of traffic was the same. In reality it probably isn't. I guess it's because the cars at the front do not clear as quickly as his animation showed.