Forced habits
Author
Discussion

bergclimber34

Original Poster:

2,098 posts

12 months

Monday 27th October
quotequote all
While reading the bad driving thread I realised I have started doing a thing after having a near miss a few years ago.

On a left-hand turn onto a busy road or off a roundabout I used to look right always regardless of who was in front or my position in the queue to see gaps.

I made the mistake of pre-empting others and nearly hitting someone up the back end years ago so now I simply do not look right at all until I am at the front of the queue or see the other car pretty much onto the busy road!!

FiF

47,448 posts

270 months

Monday 27th October
quotequote all
Can understand that. In that situation I still keep a lookout to the right to keep an updated picture of what's happening but my forced habit in that case is last look is always ahead before moving, ie is there space to move into.

lost in espace

6,434 posts

226 months

Monday 27th October
quotequote all
I learnt this the hard way in the dark, thought I saw a motorbike coming to my right but it was a car with both its sidelight and headlight out, just a momentary distraction but enough for me to hit the back of a new Vectra in my Defender 90. A Defender has no crumple zones and the Vectra took the brunt of the blow, wrote it off. Defender just needed a new wing. I told my kids to try not to look right until the time comes.

DaveH23

3,341 posts

189 months

Monday 27th October
quotequote all
Instead of mirror, signal and maneuver I'm mirror, signal, mirror, manoeuvre, mirror.

As cars have become more bloated over the years, their blind spots have become even worse.

Rotary Potato

518 posts

115 months

Tuesday 28th October
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Another one who learnt this the hard way. I punted a Polo out into a roundabout in my new (to me - it was a 10 year old car) M5.

The Polo started moving, I looked over my shoulder thought there was enough of a gap for 2 cars to pull out, pulled away sharply to find that the Polo had aborted and was now about 3 inches shorter thanks to my carelessness!

That was over 15 years ago now, and while it was an expensive lesson everyone walked away.

mac96

5,462 posts

162 months

Friday 14th November
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I was lucky because I learned the lesson young- my Dad punted the car in front forwards when its driver failed to move off after taking his change from a motorway tollbooth.
I was 15 at the time, and never let him forget. Therefore I have always had to be very careful not to do it myself!

ScoobyChris

2,213 posts

221 months

Friday 14th November
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DaveH23 said:
Instead of mirror, signal and maneuver I'm mirror, signal, mirror, manoeuvre, mirror.

As cars have become more bloated over the years, their blind spots have become even worse.
This is something that’s reinforced on advanced courses. The signal is initiating a conversation so you are explicitly telling someone of your intention and looking for a reaction. If they don’t acknowledge it, you are in a similar position to not having given any signal and gave to plan accordingly.

Chris

havoc

32,309 posts

254 months

Saturday 15th November
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Rotary Potato said:
Another one who learnt this the hard way. I punted a Polo out into a roundabout in my new (to me - it was a 10 year old car) M5.

The Polo started moving, I looked over my shoulder thought there was enough of a gap for 2 cars to pull out, pulled away sharply to find that the Polo had aborted and was now about 3 inches shorter thanks to my carelessness!

That was over 15 years ago now, and while it was an expensive lesson everyone walked away.
Very similar here, and again about 15-20 years ago - following a Corsa up an urban 40mph DC with multiple r'bouts. He was driving very positively/decisively, I was following. Got to the M6 junction, I'm looking right, the r'bout is clear...look ahead and he's stopped dead for some reason.

Punted him and his shopping into the middle of the r'bout, and ruined my trip to Silverstone.

BertBert

20,631 posts

230 months

Saturday 15th November
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ScoobyChris said:
This is something that s reinforced on advanced courses. The signal is initiating a conversation so you are explicitly telling someone of your intention and looking for a reaction. If they don t acknowledge it, you are in a similar position to not having given any signal and gave to plan accordingly.

Chris
This concept is new to me. Can you elucidate on this conversation and what the reply might be please.

Pica-Pica

15,656 posts

103 months

Saturday 15th November
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BertBert said:
ScoobyChris said:
This is something that s reinforced on advanced courses. The signal is initiating a conversation so you are explicitly telling someone of your intention and looking for a reaction. If they don t acknowledge it, you are in a similar position to not having given any signal and gave to plan accordingly.

Chris
This concept is new to me. Can you elucidate on this conversation and what the reply might be please.
Sounds reasonable to me. You signal; there is no reaction (not 'no reply'), so you have to assume that the signal was not received. I can think of plenty of examples.
The converse is also true, if you are making a move and no reaction would be involved, then there is no need to signal (lights blue touch paper and retires)