weepej wrote:
Nos4r2 wrote:
Nah, let me take you for a hypothetical drive through London in an artic. You can carry a slate to tally up how many cyclists try and undertake while we're turning left or on a right hand bend and having to hug the kerb to stop the trailer moving out into oncoming traffic. You can count how many stop in the blind spot under the nearside mirror too-or ride into any of the many blind spots and sit there...
London cyclists are by and large a danger to themselves as much as car drivers are to them. There are exceptions however and it's very nice to come across them!
Well, you won't catch me going near large vehicles, sometimes its not possible though as they come near me and there are several examples of people on cycles getting killed by large vehicles who OVERTOOK THEM and then turned, or obviously didn't check their mirrors at all before manouvering.
Well....it sounds like you're pretty sensible on a bicycle.
I suspect the cases you speak of involve rigid HGVs rather than artics-either that or the cyclists have got themselves into a blind spot and didn't realise it.
You really do need to drive one to understand but as soon as an artic isn't in line with the trailer then the opposite side of the trailer to the direction of turn is completely blind-and after about 30 degrees bend then you can see very little of the side you're turning to either.
It's actually very difficult to drive an artic without using the mirrors properly-they 'force' you to look as you need to know where the trailer is all the time-as much as is possible with the limited visibility anyway.
weepej wrote:
What's more, I know large vehicles are hard to see out of, which is why I despair when I see so many of them driven like rally cars; I think many HGV drivers in London need to take a leaf out of the book of the bendy bus driver, who are pretty damn good IMO.
Bendy buses rear axle actually follows far better than an artic trailer-it nearly follows the path of the driven axle and as such makes them very easy to drive in comparison. They've got far more visibilty in their mirrors too. Saying that, the standard of driving from the great majority of London bus drivers is abysmal. I suspect the only reason that you can single out the bendy buses as better is because they physically can't drive as agressively as the red bus drivers as they are bigger and simply won't fit.
You're talking about a couple of paticularly visible tipper companies aren't you. I have problems with them a lot in London. They don't drive, they aim. I suspect they have overstretched their targets (though that's not an excuse for the way their drivers act).
FWIW though, you have to put yourself in our shoes to understand. Going into London isn't something most of us do by choice but there's no option in most cases as Londoners have to be supplied or London grinds to a halt.
There isn't enough road in London to allow it all to be brought in by transit vans.
London roads weren't built for vehicles as big as we take in there-where there's 2 lanes in one direction the lanes are mostly too narrow for us to fit in one so we have to take both and single lanes often aren't wide enough for us to take corners without crossing the white lines.
If we don't drive 'too fast' (certainly faster than I'm comfortable with a lot of the time but it's unfortunately the lesser of 2 evils and it equates to keeping up with the flow of the traffic) then we get cars swarming round us like (scuse the language) flies round shit in the most dangerous situations imaginable. They see nothing apart from 'MUST GET INTO GAP'-never mind if there's even enough room,it's closing and in a blind spot. Cyclists often do the same. As an example I've actually had someone drive the nose of their car under my trailer because his lane was merging with mine in a queue.He was only 10 feet from the back of my 45' trailer.
It's not helped by the local councils deciding that green policy overrules common sense.Painting cycle lanes on roads that are so narrow that we can't fit down without using all of the cycle lane or driving 3 feet out into oncoming traffic really isn't good for anyone. It's safer for a cyclist to be in the middle of the road.
FWIW I wouldn't want to cycle round London either!