sburns
Well-known member
Lol, whats the mileage on your bike??no thanks. double yellow all day long!
I got places to be.
Lol, whats the mileage on your bike??no thanks. double yellow all day long!
I got places to be.
I'll pass on dashes where possible. If someone has proven to be an idiot, I will pass when safe. The other upside to passing in corners is they continue plodding along at well below the limit and you gain lots of space from the moron. If passing on solids, it's also a drop gears, full throttle maneuver. No screwing around, get it done asap.So is the general consensus here that it makes more sense to overtake on double yellows and most are employing this habit? Obviously when safe to do so.
I pass on single / double yellow as long as I can see far enough ahead, am not going up toward a crest of a hill, and am 100% sure I can clear the car in very short order.So is the general consensus here that it makes more sense to overtake on double yellows and most are employing this habit? Obviously when safe to do so.
Sort of. The lines roughly assume a brain dead driver attempts a pass with 10 km/h closing speed and no situational awareness. Basically lowest common denominator.The lines are there for a reason.
almost 3k!Lol, whats the mileage on your bike??
Well kudos to you sir for clarifying the basic speed law.
I'm sure that some members were confused.
The cops wait at the end of the passing zones to pick off the cars that are sick of being stuck behind an idiot.
As I have a lot of experience recently, on 118, many many drivers are braking for every corner and 10-30 under the limit through the corners and as fast as necessary to block passes in the dashes (up to 172 speeds). The stretch is an hour if you are stuck behind a moron. If someone wants to pass me and keep going at a speed that doesn't impede my progress, I am happy to see them go. For most roads, most of the time, I set cruise to 20 over and try not to touch gas or brakes. If someone is on cruise at 10 over, I won't bother passing. The brakes in every corner (which is both entirely unnecessary and worse for traction as most brake after entering the corner) are what drives me nuts. I don't like being behind them as you can't leave enough gap to mitigate their stupidity impacting you.Is the “idiot” the one just doing the speed limit (or something close) though, or are the “idiots” the ones who are losing their minds and risking dangerous passes because someone’s doing only 90 in an 80 and they feel somehow wronged because of their seemingly pathological need to do at least 30-40 over at all times?
Most of 118 has no reasonable alternates. It is being used by people getting places. Access to an alternate is an hour detour or more. Similar to 533 or QC 819 or any other number of roads previously known as highways. A great road but once you picked it as your route, you need to stick with it for an hour plus. The problem with your break idea is it isn't a singular idiot. It is 5+ people in every one hour run. Difference in average speed is complicated but 20 km/h is probably in the ballpark. So that's one vehicle every ~4 km that is afraid of corners on a clear sunny day. Back to handing out licenses like candy.^^ that’s different, and I agree, just annoying, and if being done intentionally, ignorant.
However if I get stuck behind someone like this instead of sitting behind them fuming or risking a dangerous pass to get around them if they’re intentionally (or unintentionally, as often seems to be the case now where people will drive the limit in two lane sections but then suddenly speed up to 130 in a passing zone), I often opt for a third option: Stop, take a 10-15 minute break somewhere, and continue on. Or option D, turn off and take another route if possible.
All I was stating was it makes more sense for the laws to match what is already happening 90% of elsewhere for simplification of the law and people's understanding of it matches across Canada.What a nightmare. We would also need to change the laws so it's legal to run people off the road that go slow through corners and give it the beans in every passing zone if we do that. That seems to encompass the majority of drivers in Ontario. Technically they could get a 172 ticket for that but I have never heard of it happening even once. The cops wait at the end of the passing zones to pick off the cars that are sick of being stuck behind an idiot. On many long somewhat interesting roads (like 118), it is often safer to pass on the double yellows as speeds are half of the passing zones and therefore time (and especially distance) in oncoming lanes is greatly reduced.
Uh oh is that getting close to sell time?almost 3k!
almost time to **** or get off the pot.Uh oh is that getting close to sell time?
It would seem Ontario should follow the lead of the other provinces and stats so it's more universal instead of being an outlier.
The link to the official Highway Traffic Act and the section on "Overtaking and passing rules" is in post #3: Law Document English ViewLet's see some actual law. Quoted statues and facts. The MOT/DOT handbooks are not laws. Their websites offer do and do not, but it's not legal "prohibited by this law" in its wording.
I've looked at legal websites and the ones I've come across so far don't offer laws, either.
I like looking through obscure crap, but that is too much for me. Someone with a lot of time on their hands would have to go through each state and province's highway legislation and provide references to the relevant listed offence. And in cases where it's not an explicit offence in the state/province, potentially tracking down the associated case law (which are precedents set by the courts in individual cases after interpreting the literal law when it's not clear).I'm also talking about other jurisdictions, too. Not just Ontario. If almost all of the US prohibits it, we should be able to find something definitive.
Wasn't the original question about all if NA?
Kawartha Lakes has these new 40kph speed "area" signs, never seen them before. Everywhere is 80k unless signed, so they USED to put up speed limit signs on streets. Now they throw a speed "area" sign... it's legal, it's on the books. What AREA? They're usually in small hamlets, in subdivisions off the main drag... BUT where does it END?Only if it came along with a "thou shalt" to municipalities