mrtd wrote:
As in any other situation is is preferable to avoid having to keep starting and stopping if you can. Leaving a big gap may allow you to smooth out the variations in speed of the traffic ahead, and keep the traffic behind you moving too.
This doesn't work in practice.
Every day I travel along a road with a wide, sweeping bend where I can see all the traffic for at least half a mile ahead. When the traffic's crawling along you can see someone's opened up a large gap a long way ahead, and they're consequently travelling at a steady very low speed. But five or six cars back, they're stopping and starting again, and so someone else opens up a large gap and the process just repeats itself.
All that that's achieved is to push the tail-end of the queue much further back, where it's likely to block junctions needlessly.
The only time it helps to open up a larger than necessary gap is if the traffic ahead slows to a short stop and starts moving again - but then your timing must be such that you catch up with the traffic just as it starts moving.
Quote:
It may also allow you do drive with the engine at idling speed, in one of the lower 3 gears, particularly with a diesel.
Trouble is, particularly with a high-geared car, driving at idling speed may be too slow for the driver behind to be able to get their foot off the clutch.