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On 1/12/2025 11:38 PM, John B. wrote:On 12 Jan 2025 21:30:00 GMT, Roger Merriman <roger@sarlet.com> wrote:The fearful skeptics here are, first, ignoring the traffic laws. Those
Im bit baffled personally that this is an issue? Its even in the uk
Highway Code Im not aware of it being changed ie the advice has always
been to ride in the center of the lane, moving left to allow other vehicles
to pass if safe to do so.
>
You mean in traffic traveling as much as 90 kmh the bicycle traveling,
an average speed of 3o kmh should travel in the middle of the lane?
laws absolutely allow what Roger claims. And second, the fearful
skeptics are imagining Worst Case Scenarios to justify their paranoia.
>
"Traffic traveling as much as 90 kph" is usually much less problem for
me than John pretends, in part because most of the roads I ride have
slower speeds, chosen because of aesthetics. Less traffic and less road
noise is more pleasant.
>
And even those with 55 mph cars seldom have continuous platoons. One or
two motorists at a time are easy to deal with. In either case, when
motorists see me at lane center, they seem to realize right away that
they will have to adjust their speed, their lane choice or whatever.
It's rare to even get a horn honk.
>
The guy who rides only a tricycle only on a bike path can stop reading
now, but: I remember one solo bike tour probably 20 years ago. I wanted
to spend the night camping in a state park I'd never seen in
Pennsylvania. Navigating by paper maps, I got myself into the situation
that strikes terror into some hearts here: With no warning, the highway
I was riding turned into four narrow lanes with rush hour traffic and a
wall at my right. There was literally nowhere to go.
>
Yes, it was unpleasant. Yes, motorists behind me were angry. But I did
the only thing I could do: I rode in the center of the right lane until
I could exit. I suffered no attacks, no crashes, no damage.
>
What would you have done?
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