Giving cyclists too...
 

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[Closed] Giving cyclists too much room (wouldn't waiting be better)?

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Are too many motorists misinterpreting the idea of giving us (cyclists) plenty of room on the road? On recent road rides and when driving I have witnessed several instances on people overtaking cyclists with lots of room but seemingly ignoring the fact that other cars are coming in the opposite direction. On my last road ride, I was scared several times by really close misses right in front of me caused by this. I struggle to imagine what would happen if the two cars collided right in front of me. And then yesterday, driving back from a ride, several cars overtook riders but came right into my lane causing me to brake/swerve.

Can they simply not wait until the road is clear and then overtake?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:03 am
 Moe
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Yep, noticed the same, we're not horses!


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:06 am
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I am. 🙁


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:08 am
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My feeling is that drivers often misjudge the cyclists' speed (a lot more than horses!) and/or the speed of the oncoming traffic. But I have had far too many close shaves recently.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:08 am
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They have a 3ft rule in California now - it's illegal not to give 3ft of clear space when overtaking a cyclist.

If there isn't that much room then you shouldn't overtake into oncoming traffic, as you say.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:09 am
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Guy did it this morning. I heard him approaching from behind, I knew he must be moving right out to overtake me but there's a van coming the other way. I had a voice in my head screaming, 'he's got to realise he needs to pull back' but no, I could still hear him accelerating to overtake.

At the last minute and what sounded inches behind me, he suddenly braked hard and presumably pulled back in.

He then floored it past, no doubt slagging me off.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:16 am
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samuri - Member
He then floored it past, no doubt slagging me off.

Sadly, probably very true.

My MIL was complaining the other day about a cyclist (on the ToB route as it happens) swerving to avoid a pothole in front of her. I tried politely....... 😉


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:23 am
 D0NK
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can't say this is a common occurence for me. Dickhead beeped at me yesterday coz he couldn't overtake due to one oncoming car and had to brake (the horror) before overtaking me. Had loads overtaking too close whilst passing a traffic island or oncoming traffic then once the obstacle as passed (and they are already ahead of me) pulling wayyyyyy out into the other side of the road "to give me room"

****s


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:24 am
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I've noticed this a lot - I don't think its getting more prevalent though. I think sometimes perspective (being on the opposite side of the road, looking 'through' the car overtaking you) sometimes makes these look like closer misses than they are, but there are some that are undeniable close - oncoming traffic having to take avoiding action.

At the end of the day I'd rather they squeeze oncoming traffic in a protective metal box than me protected by an inch of polystyrene, but thats the lesser of two evils...


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:25 am
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if you're worried about it, you could try looking back at the driver, and mouth something to them - doesn't really matter what.
drivers are a bit more likely to play nice if they see a face and that you're a human rather than just a bicycle.

straight out of my house on my morning commute there's a sharp hill with a blind summit and the number of cars that try and blast past despite it being a 20 zone is alarming. using the above tactic sometimes works.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:31 am
 Moe
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Sods law dictates that even at five in the morning with next to no traffic on the road a car will always approach from behind just as another is coming toward you! Same goes for traffic islands, just as you grt to one there'll always be a car catching you up! And even though it's quiet they still have to get past you straight away, there seems to be a reluctance to change gear as the number that chug by on the brink of stalling is horrific!


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:41 am
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I had a genius idea the other day.

Every time a motorist injures a cyclist, then the same injuries get inflicted on the motorist.

Infliction specialist volunteers to be recruited from STW 🙂

Or on a kinder vein, automatic ban when injuries inflicted and made to ride a bicycle for commuting etc.

Nah, not so genius, I'll stick those ideas in my shed with my daft bike collection...


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:41 am
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I had a genius idea the other day.

Ooh, me too!

In this cycling friendly days, what we really need are...
.
.
.
.
.
.
thinner cars.

* waits for applause *


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:44 am
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The lack of tollerance of some people to be delayed by 10s continues to astound me. Its not just tossers in white vans either, several people I know, who are otherwise lovely unpstanding people, get irationally angry when they encounter a cyclist and have to wait for a space to get past.

A group of cyclists riding 2 up and there is steam coming out of their ears.

They act very sheepishly when I remind them that I do a lot of cycling.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:46 am
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There's a corner near my house on my commute where this used to happen a couple of times a week. Going round a tight 90-degree right-hand blind bend, the centre line widens to about 600mm of hatching around the curve. If drivers overtake on the bend, which they frequently do, they tend to give so much room that half their vehicle is in the oncoming lane, and they have about 10m of visibility ahead...

While they may, on the face of it, be doing me a favour by giving me 1.5 - 2m of space, any car coming round the bend the other way is going to hit them and drive them backwards and sideways directly into me... So now I just take the lane, but even then I have to pretty much ride on the inside of the hatching to stop drivers attempting the overtake.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 8:46 am
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That's not "giving cyclists too much room", that's giving cyclists a totally appropriate amount of room, while doing something else incredibly stupid and dangerous.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:05 am
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I also get some people clip my handlebars, but then swerve out into the road overtaking an imaginary cyclist 3 metres in front of me. Clearly mis-timing everything.

People aren't very good at driving.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:07 am
 DezB
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Newsflash! There are morons on the road!

Why can't people wipe the damn condensation off their windows before they drive away? MORONS!


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:07 am
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In this cycling friendly days, what we really need are...
.
.
thinner cars.

well, cars have got massively bigger over the past 20 years, mainly in order to incorporate better safety features, but also to give the impression of superiority/ safety (BMW X5, Range Rover, Audi Q7, Volvo XC90, etc.). Even smaller cars like the Mini and Polo are now twice the size of their ancestors.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:13 am
 mrmo
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camo16 - Member

I had a genius idea the other day.

Ooh, me too!

In this cycling friendly days, what we really need are...
.
.
.
.
.
.
thinner cars.

* waits for applause *

thinner cars,... maybe if we remove two wheels. and maybe remove a few surplus seats, afterall there is usually only one person in the car. Maybe because of all the weight saving we can get rid of the engine...

sorry, never catch on....


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:18 am
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At the end of the day I'd rather they squeeze oncoming traffic in a protective metal box than me protected by an inch of polystyrene, but thats the lesser of two evils...

you wear a polystyrene onesie ? 😯


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:21 am
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I had a cyclist bunny hop off the pavement into my rear passenger door today. He then just jumped up and buggered off.

Dammit! I have only had that fixed for about 5 months. I had a van drive out from a t junction into the same door in April! Also had a 17 year old girl who reversed into me at traffic lights a few years ago. I think I need to get a non magnetic car!


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:22 am
 DezB
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[i]people overtaking cyclists with lots of room but seemingly ignoring the fact that other cars are coming in the opposite direction.[/i]

Hmm, bit like this copper... (except it was a bike coming in the opposite direction (ie. me) )


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:28 am
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Half a dozen near misses when out on Sunday, people just overtaking and forcing the oncoming traffic to swerve or brake sharply. And this was just two of us in single file. Probably better to ride two abreast and force them to wait.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:31 am
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Yep, noticed the same, we're not horses!

Yes we are!

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:39 am
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This weekend was beautiful.
Cue packs of roadies prowling the lanes or rogue rides on their own.
Also cue the arrival of knobs in tin boxes.
The insane overtaking antics were legion:

Overtaking a cyclist because he/she is in front and slower
Overtaking irrespective of oncoming traffic
Overtaking regardless of visibility ahead or road width
Accelerating to overtake and then braking hard to tuck back in behind the cyclist in front of the one overtaken

Unfortunately quite a bit of this was done by cars with MTBs on the back/roof!

If I'm in the car I take perverse delight in waiting until I have room, visibility and the opportunity to overtake safely for the cyclist and for me, but sometimes those behind have tried to overtake me and the pack of riders in one go, or they get all sweary and cross over a 5 min delay.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 9:40 am
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Overtaking without checking there's space to do so seems to be on the increase.
Number of times when I'm driving I've found myself head on to another car which has pulled out past a bus or line of parked cars into my lane... I'm in big silver box, did you not see me?

Happens all the time on club rides - cars nearly driving into traffic calming measures, nearly having head-on collisions... God only knows quite what's going on in their heads!

My very favourite was a car overtaking us on a country lane last year, pulled out and had to stop dead so they'd didn't have a head-on with the car coming the other way. Cue two drivers staring at each other on one side of the road while we just carried on and the overtaker was back where they started...


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:15 am
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Cue two drivers staring at each other on one side of the road while we just carried on and the overtaker was back where they started...

Chances are that both drivers then blamed you silly cyclists 👿

Its not just tossers in white vans either, several people I know, who are otherwise lovely unpstanding people, get irationally angry when they encounter a cyclist and have to wait for a space to get past.

I've had my own mum shouting in my passenger seat that I should [i]"Go go go, overtake them here!"[/i] (winding hedged road with very little viz) and how they're not allowed to ride two abreast (they were quite sensibly taking the lane through the dangerous bit) - we were "stuck" behind them for all of a minute. 😯

Thing is, she knows I ride those same roads and if she saw a car pass me like that she'd go mental at them.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:33 am
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Had this a couple of weeks ago on a club ride, the motorist over-took on the blind brow of a hill, then just pulled into the line of cyclists to avoid a head-on crash. Knocked a girl off her bike and then sped off blaring his horn. What a tosser!

Some motorists forget the basic rule that you should only over-take when the road is clear and it's safe to do so.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:34 am
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Knocked a girl off her bike and then sped off blaring his horn. What a tosser!

Hit and run. Hope you reported him!


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:35 am
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What Northwind said.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:40 am
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A cyclist gets the full lane when I overtake. If there's oncoming cars, I wait. Don't give a toss about the car(s) behind. Simple, innit?

Cyclists riding two abreast get overtaken in the same way, but obviously because one is closer to the middle of the road there's slightly less room, but that's their decision. The whole two-abreast thing doesn't bother me, 'cos my reasoning says that if I can't get past two safely, I can't really get past one without infringing their safety in the same way.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:44 am
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The whole two-abreast thing doesn't bother me, 'cos my reasoning says that if I can't get past two safely, I can't really get past one without infringing their safety in the same way.

I'd argue that two abreast just gives car drivers more ammunition...


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:47 am
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I see the overtake in to oncoming traffic a lot 🙄

Was it safe to overtake?
No,then don't you muppet.

I also get quite a few cautious overtakers,they go past at 2mph more than I am doing and take what seems like forever to get past,usually just in time to meet some oncoming traffic 😐

I'd argue that two abreast just gives car drivers more ammunition.

Only bad car drivers.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:52 am
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The number of people who plainly dont have enough vision due to bends or hills, yet insist on overtaking, based on the logic that there will "probably" nothing coming scares me.
The thing is I know most of the roads to drive on as well as to ride and I KNOW that they can't see enough.
All it takes is someone having a spirited drive toward them and there will be a two car and bike (me) pile up.
Its this obsession with getting past the "slow" bike the instant they can, regardless of the consequences, that scares me.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 10:55 am
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Only bad car drivers.

Or maybe bad cyclists... two abreast is contrary to the Highway Code, no?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:01 am
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To be fair, I don't think it is [i]just[/i] bikes.

I drive the A68 from Northumberland to Edinburgh pretty regularly. A lot of that is single lane so folk get frustrated when they inevitably get stuck behind a tractor, lorry or grandad. Some of the resulting overtakes are just insane.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:09 am
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Or maybe bad cyclists... two abreast is contrary to the Highway Code, no?

Depends on the road. The unhelpfully vague [b][i]advice[/i][/b] in [url= https://www.gov.uk/rules-for-cyclists-59-to-82/overview-59-to-71 ]Rule #66[/url] is to ride [i]"single file on narrow or busy roads and when riding round bends"[/i].

But for anyone overtaking in accordance with the Highway Code, two-abreast is substantially easier as it takes far less time to pass them.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:13 am
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camo16 - Member

Or maybe bad cyclists... two abreast is contrary to the Highway Code, no?

No it isn't! HTH.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:13 am
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"single file on narrow or busy roads and when riding round bends".

Single file on busy roads... which is pretty much all my commute, and I'm guessing the same goes for most other commuters on here.

HTH

🙄

Bless.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:16 am
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camo16 - Member
"We're not horses"
I am. 🙁

Why the long face?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:20 am
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😆


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:21 am
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Single file on busy roads... which is pretty much all my commute, and I'm guessing the same goes for most other commuters on here.

That's why it is unhelpfully vague. What is a "busy road"? Are we talking rush hour in London or just a road with some traffic on it? Does it not matter if there is one or more other lanes for cars to safely overtake on? Are we allowed to overtake other cyclists or is that two-abreast?

And why does this advice seem to directly contradict government backed cycle training which talks about taking the lane in such circumstances?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:29 am
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That's why it is unhelpfully vague. What is a "busy road"? Are we talking rush hour in London or just a road with some traffic on it? Does it not matter if there is one or more other lanes for cars to safely overtake on? Are we allowed to overtake other cyclists or is that two-abreast?

It is vague, no doubt.

My thinking is that most 'main' roads, especially urban roads, can adequately be classified as busy roads. From a cyclist's perspective I can see how drivers consider two abreast on these roads to be antagonistic to other road users.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:34 am
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From a cyclist's perspective I can see how drivers consider two abreast on these roads to be antagonistic to other road users.

Of course, but realistically would those drivers find two cyclists riding single file in the primary any less antagonistic?

What they really want is cyclists to be in the gutter, out the way, ideally off the road entirely.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:43 am
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What they really want is cyclists to be in the gutter, out the way, ideally off the road entirely.

I agree with that.

I've heard drivers ending bike-related stories with 'and those idiots were riding two-abreast!!!!' on several occasions (this mostly being in Cornwall).

My opinion? If I want drivers to consider me and not behave like bellends then I should try to reciprocate... which is why I don't do two-abreast when riding with mates...


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:47 am
 D0NK
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and those idiots were riding two-abreast!!!!
if the riders weren't two abreast wouldn't they just find something else to end their rant with?
No helmet/hi-viz/bell/roadtax/insurance/licence plate etc etc!!!!!1!!1!

Not saying you should ride 2 abreast, I'm just not sure you pandering to their [i]current[/i] whim will necessarily help.

if these are the same people who want cyclists off the road entirely than they need re-educating* not placating.

*or if that fails possibly a punch** in the face
**not by me, I'm not even a keyboard warrior let alone a real life one.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:53 am
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The main problem I have when driving is two-breast on narrow country lanes HTF am i supposed to get past?

I do a lot of road riding (on the MTB) but even with friends we stay single file I'm sorry but two-breast on narrow country lanes is just being a bloody pain in the back side 👿


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:57 am
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Haven't you seen the price of fuel now? No-one can afford to slow down then accelerate again anymore. Momentum is everything. What we really need is bigger wheels for cars.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 11:57 am
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Two abreast bikes is about the same width as one horse.

Funny how a motorist will wait for ages behind a horse, give it a wide, slow overtake but get the same "obstruction" caused by cyclists and they HAVE to get passed NOW and if they can't they'll give a good old blast of the horn and some abuse.

🙄


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:02 pm
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Two abreast bikes is about the same width as one horse.

From my experience, that's only the case if the horse is really, really fat.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:03 pm
 DT78
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I've only been road riding for a year or so but I do seem to get regularly 'buzzed' by motorists. Interestingly it tends to be in the same spots where cars try to overtake too close to me or the other car.

I've learnt now on those spots I pull out further into the carriageway, basically to make it bloody obvious there isn't space to attempt a silly overtake. 99% of the time this works, get the occasionally toot or gesture when I pull back in, but I would rather that than get squashed.

Riding in the gutter makes it more likely drivers will try to get past, whether there is space or not


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:05 pm
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The main problem I have when driving is two-breast on narrow country lanes HTF am i supposed to get past?

Because you can't physically fit past? In which case the only way to get past a single cyclist would be to pass unsafely close.

Cyclists are traffic too you know. If you want to get somewhere fast why don't you try a motorway instead?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:08 pm
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which is why I don't do two-abreast when riding with mates...

So you go out with five mates. You're all on normal bikes, about 1.8 metres long:

[img] [/img]

Say, what 50cm between you if you are riding in a fairly tight group?

So (6x1.8) + (5x0.5) = 13.3 metre long obstacle to overtake.

If you all rode two abreast it'd be (3x1.8) + (2x0.5) = 6.4 metres

Which one is easier for them to overtake and less likely to result in them swinging into the middle of the group when they realise they haven't got room?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:09 pm
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99% of the time this works, get the occasionally toot or gesture when I pull back in

Preempt that by doing a "thankyou" wave or thumbs up as you pull back in.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:11 pm
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Which one is easier for them to overtake and less likely to result in them swinging into the middle of the group when they realise they haven't got room?

Interesting take, GS.

I'm thinking that single line is more likely to enable cars to pass without having to push seriously into the oncoming lane (mostly wide roads in my area), so the length might be an issue, but the breadth is more so.

Plus, two-abreast is a de facto statement of intent - 'Our position on this road is as valid as yours' - which might be true, but nurtures antagonism IMO.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:26 pm
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Yeah and if the road is wide enough that a car can pass a single file rider [b]safely[/b] without having to leave the lane then yeah I'd completely agree in those circumstances it makes sense to ride single file (or move to single file when you hear a car behind).

But that brings up my earlier point of vagueness in the HC: if there are two or more lanes then shouldn't riding two abreast be actively encouraged?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 12:31 pm
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Because you can't physically fit past? In which case the only way to get past a single cyclist would be to pass unsafely close.

You must live in a different part of the country to me; there's lots of roads I ride on where cars pass me safely on my own but would be blocked by 2 abreast.

That or me and my riding buddies are much fatter than you....ah, yes, that'll be it. 😀


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:01 pm
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This ^^^^.

Presuming that two-abreasters are (a) as focused as pro cyclists and (b) totally able to keep in tight formation without chatting and getting distracted, the obstacle might not be over wide.

But the reality is many two-abreasters are all over de place.

Single makes sense, people.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:07 pm
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I genuinely think that in most cases passing a moving cyclist doesn't actually register as an [i]overtaking[/i] manoeuvre to motorists. Subconsciously they're merely driving past in the same way they drive past another parked vehicle. That, to me, is where most of the daft stuff comes from - they've largely 'zoned out' and haven't realised what they're actually doing. It's only when confronted by a group riding two-abreast (hopefully in good order) that the [i]overtaking[/i] aspect registers. I know this is a generalisation and it's obviously not true in all instances, but that's the way things appear to me.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:10 pm
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About a month ago I was on a stretch of road that goes from 30 to NSL back to 30 again in a very short distance. When driving I never accelerate up to 60 as it's pointless. It's perhaps 600m.

Anyway - coming towards me is a couple of cyclists riding abreast being overtaken by a small Vauxhall combi van. The bloke driving was leaning across during the (slow) overtake hurling profanities at the cyclists and shaking his fist. He remained on the wrong side of the road for ages so he could have a proper rant and I'd started slowing as I wasn't sure he'd move in before I got to him.
He did eventually speed up and move in, but not before I'd crawled almost to a stop to give him room for his rant.
There was no signage on his van, otherwise I would have been ringing the number up and giving him a rant of my own....

Lately I've found the worst overtakers are older drivers (perhaps 55+) who barely move over and narrowly avoid hitting me.
The majority though are patient and overtake with plenty of room - they always get a wave & thumbs up as they pass, particularly if they have waited behind me due to traffic islands or oncoming cars.
Perhaps you shouldn't have to thank people for not crashing into you, but if it make that person feel that their consideration has been recognised, then hopefully they will be equally patient with the next cyclist they come across.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:11 pm
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I always leave a metre of space because [url= http://www.amygillett.org.au/ ]A Metre Matters[/url]


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:14 pm
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Yep - see also the 3 feet please campaign.

Original US version which got the rule passed as law in several states:
http://www.3feetplease.com/

UK version:
http://3feetplease.org.uk/

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:24 pm
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I wonder whether the reason that people on forums have so many bad experiences with drivers ma be to do with speed. Most people on bikes are pootling at 5-10mph and, in steadily-moving traffic, are basically the same as stationary obstacle (relative to a car at 30-40mph). Whereas people who frequent forums are likely to ride a lot* and can clip along at 20mph and as a result are much harder to overtake safely.

Which one is easier for them to overtake and less likely to result in them swinging into the middle of the group when they realise they haven't got room?

Yep, definitely agree with this. Trying to get past a single-file line of 6 or 7 riders is sometimes impossible on narrow roads. If they're 2 or even 3-abreast then they take up no more space than a slow-moving car. Of course, the drivers just think you're being inconsiderate riding 2-abreast but in reality the opposite is true.

*OK, maybe not 😆


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:33 pm
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But the reality is many two-abreasters are all over de place

I doubt even the wobbliest of two-abreasters are significantly wider then say a big tractor and thresher, or a caravan.

IME many motorists will patiently sit behind a tractor till they can pass, but want past cyclists immediately.

Asking cyclists to be considerate and let cars past when they are safely able to do so is a perfectly reasonable request.

Asking cyclists to put their own safety at risk just so they don't hold up a car for twenty seconds isn't.

That's why blanket rules about this make no sense. Sometimes it is safer to ride two-abreast, sometimes it might be better to ride single file but take the primary, sometimes keeping hard left and letting them pass is best.

Above all safety should be the primary consideration, not convenience or "politeness".


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:34 pm
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My usual response to local-newspaper-types, when they start on about [i]"riding two-abreast is illegal in the highway code"[/i] is to say:

"Cyclists will only follow the ADVICE in rule 66 when they can rely on motorists following the advice in rule 163"

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:43 pm
 dazh
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Whereas people who frequent forums are likely to ride a lot* and can clip along at 20mph and as a result are much harder to overtake safely.

How did it take 2 pages to get to the 'cyclists go too fast' excuse for crap overtaking?


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:43 pm
 D0NK
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Single makes sense, people.
except where it doesn't, I think there's valid reasons for both and the HC's vagueness doesn't really help. We're possibly looking for hard and fast rules where they don't apply, common sense presumably is the key but this seems to be in short supply. <edit> graham did a better job of this while I was typing

and can clip along at 20mph and as a result are much harder to overtake safely.
thing is, we're not more difficult to overtake it just requires a little more thought and care by the driver which is of course where the problems begin.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 1:47 pm
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The biggest problem I find when riding around on rural roads is blind bends. People do it all the time. There are occasions when I can't see round, so the driver behind me, sitting further back and to the right of the lane hasn't a hope in hell of seeing traffic approaching from the right hand bend in the other direction. But it seems they're happy to risk it because they MUST pass. It's like watching crack addicts search out their next hit.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 2:06 pm
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GrahamS - I have seen that picture on here lots of times and still find it a bit confusing.

If, as it seems to show, cars need to give me that much room to overtake, and I am riding 2 abreast, then the road in the pic would not be wide enough to ever overtake giving the outside cyclist that much room.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 2:21 pm
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Wish they would show a version of these Public Safety films nationally, ideally as compulsory viewing Clockwork Orange style:

(Not perfect but one of the best I've seen)


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 2:22 pm
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IME many motorists will patiently sit behind a tractor till they can pass, but want past cyclists immediately.

A tractor can't just get out of the way. A cyclist can easily get out of the way, which is exactly what I do. It's rude not to, and that's what upsets people.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 2:32 pm
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FFS, you are not 'in the way' you are using the road just like everyone else, you can't just expect cyclists to jump off the road just every time a car comes up behind them, and moving into the gutter just makes everything worse and less safe as well as perpetuating the idea that that's where cyclists should be


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 2:40 pm
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GrahamS - I have seen that picture on here lots of times and still find it a bit confusing.

Yep - another fine example of the Highway Code being to vague to be useful.

riding 2 abreast, then the road in the pic would not be wide enough to ever overtake giving the outside cyclist that much room.

Agreed.

I think a more reasonable proposition is to say that if cyclists are riding two abreast then the outside cyclist should ride where the outside wheels of a car would be.

Overtaking cars would need to give them "as much space as you would a car" (e.g. overtake by completely entering the next/opposite lane).

But sadly it is all too vague (deliberately so IMO) to decide what they actually mean.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 2:56 pm
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There's a common sense angle though, surely?

Seems to me there's some righteous cyclists out there, who prefer to feel indignant about car drivers' behaviour than to ride in a way that's harmonious with other road users. The harmonious bit is hugely vague, of course. But IMO it involves (a) no shooting red lights or pavement jumping to avoid a 15 second delay, (b) no two-abreasting when the road is evidently busy and (c) no ****ing texting whilst in the saddle. 😯


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 3:09 pm
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The Sanity Assassin - Member

I genuinely think that in most cases passing a moving cyclist doesn't actually register as an overtaking manoeuvre to motorists.

This seems to nail it for me in much the same way as cars overtake parked cars irrespective of whether there is room without hitting oncoming traffic.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 3:21 pm
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Seems to me there's some righteous cyclists out there

IMO there are two types of "righteous cyclist":

1: the one drivers [i]think[/i] we all are: who smugly regards every road user as wrong, who delights in winding up "cagers", and who will ride on a dangerous road or in the primary with 50 cars queued behind him/her just to "make a point".

2: the one that is actually much more common, who gets "righteous" about their right to use the public road safely without feeling bullied or threatened by other road users.

Actual 1's are quite rare.

The trouble is that drivers see someone in the primary and automatically think they are 1, when actually most of the time they are 2. And cyclists who are actually a 2 fear that they might look like a 1.


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 3:26 pm
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You must live in a different part of the country to me; there's lots of roads I ride on where cars pass me safely on my own but would be blocked by 2 abreast.

Well if that's the case, then singling out is reasonable, and actually safer as the road will be wide enough that a car can squeeze past 2 abreast if it decides to. The tone of the post I responded to suggested he was talking about narrower roads where he couldn't physically fit past 2 cyclists. And no, if you can't physically fit past 2 abreast cyclists then it's not safe to pass one.

I'm far from being a militant cyclist and will single out or give way to cars where it is safe and will help their progress, but a lot of drivers (and people on here 🙄 ) seem to think singling out will help them, where it won't or will make it more dangerous for the cyclists. One example I can think of where I wouldn't ride 2 abreast is a very wide road near me where a driver can safely overtake a single cyclist without crossing the central white line (to be honest the vast majority do actually cross the line as there is plenty of space for them to do so even with oncoming traffic, and I don't think I've ever actually had a close pass on that road which tells a tale for those who suggest restricting space helps).

I should point out as part of this discussion that once when riding 2 abreast with my sister we got stopped by the police who suggested we should single up. My sister explained carefully to the policeman why 2 abreast was actually safer on that road (where a driver couldn't pass a single cyclist safely with oncoming traffic, but could pass one dangerously) and the policeman went away agreeing with her - she can be very persuasive!


 
Posted : 24/09/2013 4:31 pm
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In the first post, the OP struggles to imagine what would happen if the two cars collide, my experience is there's a hell of a crunch, the overtaker swerving then going up the right hand banking, then 50ft down into the woods. The innocent motorist(in his car he's only owned for 2 days)get's thrown sideways across the road and into the opposite banking, and I get to brake so hard that I "stoppy" an inch from his front wheel, and gently topple onto his bonnet on my hands and knees. Innocent driver was a bit shaken, whilst we had to rescue a confused old chap because nobody else at the scene had headtorches to see in the darkness.An eventful evening, all up.


 
Posted : 25/09/2013 6:32 am
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[img] [/img]
There was a recent case I think in NZ where someone overtook a line of cyclists - single file seems to have become a convention for avoiding too much conflict/annoyance. Half way past a car came round the corner and he pulled into the line of cyclists 🙁 groups are easier to pass like tractors lines on narrow/country roads are plane dangerous (cyclists, motorist & former driver of large agricultural vehicles) pulling in when you can is courteous hopping off into every gateway to let a car past is pointless.


 
Posted : 25/09/2013 6:48 am
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