SafeSpeed wrote:
samcro wrote:
Has anyone noticed this before...
On 4 lane roads (2 in either direction) and travelling at good speed in the RH lane you approach a lorry in the LH lane with a car following it. The car stays behind the lorry as you the distance between you and them closes. As you approach the car following the lorry they suddenly pull out in front of you to pass the lorry as well. This usually calls for a spot of braking as they are travelling slower than you.
I think they see you coming and planning an easy pass which wakes them up to the idea of an easy pass. They are following your example, but in a 'jumping in first' kind of way.
On occasion I'm sure there's an element of 'me first' too, but in my personal estimation that's probably less than 10% of cases.
I see this sort of thing time and again when out and about on the A roads round here. I travel across to Harrogate on the A65 / A59 a fair bit, and the typical pattern is bunches of traffic held up by HGVs / Caravans etc.
Typically, you catch a car up and see him completely ignore 2 or 3 prime overtaking opportunities, so on the third you go yourself. If you clearly indicate your intentions I would say there is as much as a 50% chance you'll wake him up and - as others have said earlier - he'll "barge out" then cruise past in 5th gear, taking all of the safe opportunity and half of the next corner to complete the maneoeuvre. The only silver lining on the cloud is that at least you move one step closer to the front of the blockage.
Worse still is when they barge out, you brake, then they decide against it and pull back in, so you end up back where you started!
After many such incidents, my tactics now are to observe the behaviour of the vehicles in front for a bit, then do a "stealth" overtake, ie...
1. DON'T indicate
2. DON'T close to a 1 second gap beforehand and wake him up
3. DON'T offside so much for observation, but move around a bit more from a bit further back to get your checks in from a wider variety of more subtle angles
4. aim to pass through his blind spot as you start the manoeuvre, then slant diagonally away.
Ideally, the first he catches wind of your manoeuvre is when you are alongside, by which time you have the maximum possible lateral separation, so that even if he does "instinctively" jink out you still have time to get past him before he can hit you.
This also has a spin-off advantage that the slightly "longer than optimum" following distance means you move out from a huge gap if another vehicle is behind you both. This gives you a much bigger breathing space to prevent the "transit situation" should you still end up baulked by the car in front.