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Well, "Rear end me!" there's some driving Goddery in this thread!![]()
No.. it's a fact. Use your handbrake, and stop blinding the people behind you when you're sat in a stationary queue of traffic at night.
You really are a silly billy. The `handbrake` as you call it (when some vehicles don't actually have a `hand`brake) is really a `parking` brake.
I've never had an issue with anyone, or vehicle stopped in front of me with their brake lights on.Dazzled????
You really are a silly billy.
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Thats probably the best bet Eh?time to move on I think.
At least she has cracked the arm on the door bitFi can't reach the foot brake![]()
It's a parking brake, so you only use it when you're parked? You're an idiot. Which, is not entirely different from a silly bill as I see it, so suspend me, and suspend him also Mods. Not that I actually give a s***.. the levels of idiots in here is quickly outweighing the non-idiots.. time to move on I think.
Now the red lights in Amsterdam they are truly smashing.
Sounds like the start of a TP Letchers Meet in the makingNow the red lights in Amsterdam they are truly smashing.
Best not to park there though. Low range gearbox crawl.
I wonder if you could have a sensor that detects the vehicle is stationary.
If vehicle is moving and foot brake is applied - rear brake light comes on.
If vehicle is stationary and foot brake is applied - rear brake light doesn't come on.
If vehicle brakes to a halt - rear brake light goes out once vehicle becomes stationary.
The bottom line here, regarding sitting in queue with your foot on the brake pedal, is a simple matter of courtesy.
Whilst brake lights can cause dazzle in some circumstances and be annoying in others, they are there simply to tell folk behind that you are slowing down and/or stopping.
Once you have stopped, with vehicles behind you, surely there is no need to continue to tell others you have stopped?
Why not be polite and apply the handbrake?
I had never owned an automatic car until recently, although I have driven for 50 odd years, this thread made me think about N and P in queues and I will never use P again in that situation.
I do not however understand why selecting N can cause any damage, to the gearbox, whilst in a queue?
Please don't think I am anything other than a normal motorist, learning something new most days, although I was a Driving Instructor for 20 years and an IAM member since the 1970's.

I wonder if you could have a sensor that detects the vehicle is stationary.
If vehicle is moving and foot brake is applied - rear brake light comes on.
If vehicle is stationary and foot brake is applied - rear brake light doesn't come on.
If vehicle brakes to a halt - rear brake light goes out once vehicle becomes stationary.
You already had. Obviously your memory is not as good as your eyesight.Not that I actually give a s***.. the levels of idiots in here is quickly outweighing the non-idiots.. time to move on I think.
I'm out.
Isn't that called a brake pedal? The good thing about one of those is that it can also stay on whilst stationary or go off when you let it goI wonder if you could have a sensor that detects the vehicle is stationary.
If vehicle is moving and foot brake is applied - rear brake light comes on.
If vehicle is stationary and foot brake is applied - rear brake light doesn't come on.
If vehicle brakes to a halt - rear brake light goes out once vehicle becomes stationary.
Isn't that called a brake pedal? The good thing about one of those is that it can also stay on whilst stationary or go off when you let it go![]()
I know nearly everything you post, you think is fact,when actually it isn't always the case. It's your opinion......FACT!
The handbook of my vehicle says when stopping for short periods to leave it in D (so obviously need keep my foot on the brake pedal) & only need to move the shift into N for longer periods. P is for parking.
The `handbrake` as you call it (when some vehicles don't actually have a `hand`brake) is really a `parking` brake.
I've never had an issue with anyone, or vehicle stopped in front of me with their brake lights on.Dazzled????
You really are a silly billy.
![]()
I used to have some issues with dazzling especially from Bentleys where the brake strip was the full width of the car. But following an opticians visit and minor corrective glasses it is all well and no more glare.
I can see why they are 'dazzling', modern bulbs and safety demands/wants/designer trends meaning that your average brake light today is usually considerably bigger and brighter than ever and frequently higher up the car [and I am not just talking about high-level additional lights in the back windows]. Still, probably better then the Audi we drove home behind the other night, who at a guess had a jammed/shorted brake light switch [or was a total muppet and was constantly resting left foot on the brake pedal, but I prefer to give him the benefit of the doubt] so was toddling along in front of us like a flipping christmas tree. People that crawl along slower than than my car can cope with in first gear at stops...Just pull up to the car in front of you and bloody stop! I normally hang back when I come across one of those cretins.
I don't mind that, it's when people go too slow for their own cars in first gear and constantly slipping it to stay moving, even if it means 1inch per hour lol. I worded it badly sorry.I must be a cretin then as i do that in slow moving traffic (not at stops), i slip the car into 1st gear and let it crawl under its own steam whilst maintaining a good gap between me and the car front and gradually speed up if the traffic flow increases. I try my damnest not to stop start.
Aye I do a lot of driving in snow, so don't know why I bought a BMW lol, but driven properly it's actually pretty good in the snow considering it can loose traction in 4th in the dry. I'll have to get out for a test drive for an auto or take one of works cars out for a spin. The only auto I've driven was an old jag, and that was just used to rag round the fields.
The crawling along slowly actually reduces jams. There was some very interesting research about removing jams by slowing down and making sure you reached the back as everyone started to move off. Doing this reduced jams massively.
The crawling along slowly actually reduces jams. There was some very interesting research about removing jams by slowing down and making sure you reached the back as everyone started to move off. Doing this reduced jams massively.
http://trafficwaves.org/trafexp.html
That's not the way it reads to me. It says to focus on the white line, or kerb, to your right as it's American. In this country we would obviously focus to the left. Basically it's concurring what myself and others have already said, don't stare at the light, it's still possible to see where you are going. If someone drives towards me with badly adjusted lights or high beam, I just watch the road directly in front of the car for that very brief short time until the cars lights are no longer directed straight into my eyes. But the most important part from the link is to ensure the windscreen is cleaned properly and regularly, inside and out and people who wear glasses should ensure their glasses are clean and preferably with coated lens.Unfortunately that link advises looking away from where you're going if/when you get dazzled. Since the dazzling is mainly an in town phenomenon, I'm not sure how safe that is as a strategy.