omg what a muppet lolwatch this one then its in belgium but amazingly the driver is still alive
what part of "miss" are yuo not getting. Pretty sure, was contact!
Miss with the grim reaper.
The truck driver should be commended for remaining calm. If they'd slammed on the brakes, that car could have gone anywhere!!
If ever there is a vehicle I'm surprised people fail to see, it is an articulated lorry.
Fortunate outcome, good job the lorry driver reacted calmly and didn't anchor up!
Yes, that lorry driver controlled his braking and lane change remarkably well. He kept the car in the one place where the occupant(s) would be protected.
omg what a muppet lol
A near miss is a hit.what part of "miss" are yuo not getting. Pretty sure, was contact!
The thing is, there are numerous cars overtaking 2 lanes over, so I would suppose that the immediate lane to the lorry's right is occupied by one of the many numpties that chose to just cruise alongside vehicles or take 10 miles to overtake.Throughout the entire clip, there is not a single vehicle in the lane to the right of the truck.
With anticipation and forward thinking, the truck driver might have been able to move over a lane, allowing the car to enter the motorway unimpeded. (Obviously we don't see behind or alongside the truck).
You say what a Muppet - but that is easily done in the split second of "OOps my junction and see a clear lane then realise its full of traffic" once the truck reveals it....inexperienced drivers make mistakes all the time, people with so much more on their minds make mistakes all the time none of us are immune to error...
The thing is, there are numerous cars overtaking 2 lanes over, so I would suppose that the immediate lane to the lorry's right is occupied by one of the many numpties that chose to just cruise alongside vehicles or take 10 miles to overtake.
Yep... More than likely there was.... But that slip road with cars joining should not have come as a surprise to the truck driver.
With all the benefit of their extra tests and training, not to mention probable experience, its not unreasonable to expect them to have done more to anticipate and avoid the incident.
Not saying it's their fault, or they are to blame, just that they should have "seen" it and been able to attempt to avoid it.
You say what a Muppet - but that is easily done in the split second of "OOps my junction and see a clear lane then realise its full of traffic" once the truck reveals it....inexperienced drivers make mistakes all the time, people with so much more on their minds make mistakes all the time none of us are immune to error....I wonder how there are not more accidents like these depicted in the thread since the roads are getting more and more congested with lorries......without a doubt though you are right its a poor choice late dicing with 40 tonnes of HGV is never a good idea even if you are in a 40 tonne HGV .
I was behind a small fiat 500 yesterday joining the M6 northbound and the fiat was doing little more than 20mph as I passed her I joined at 60 ish mph as I watched in the rvm the hassle she caused to the flat out 60 mph HGV's in lane 1 and 2 and the slowing up of the whole northbound carriageway within seconds...I have resigned myself to expect anything and IF blind to anything expect the worst will be. So IF I cant see the exit assume its not free and cluttered with a breakdown dont take chances or trust other road users - This driving style causes problems of its own though as you become far more cautious than most other road users that inevitably want you to move it and take the gap - dropping back when someone else "takes the gap" annoys the driver behind you!! who did NOT want you to allow someone who has just undertaken them to "get in" in front of you!
Todays Driving ACE is tomorrows Muppet - given the ideal setting IYSWIM........
I assume the Ford Focus in the Belgium clip is LHD? - Its the reason the driver is still alive....
+1.The truck driver should be commended for remaining calm. If they'd slammed on the brakes, that car could have gone anywhere!!
I think the problem lies in most motorists assuming that the inside lane of the motorway should give way to those joining from the slip lane. They don't seem to appreciate that if you're on a slip lane, you have to give way to traffic already on the motorway - even if this means having to stop. Slip lane motorists should also be looking for a suitable gap and plan to engage into that gap without impeding other motorists. It's definitely something that needs reinforcing to ensure motorists are aware of this. You wouldn't pull out of a side road into a main road without making sure it's safe to proceed.t the car would be required to give way to the truck here
I've been doing this more and more given that inside lane motorists are increasingly pulling out into the middle lane without checking their blind spot.I overtook in the 3rd lane...
Yeah I watched that elsewhere. The woman was in a coma for a while after but made a full recovery.watch this one then its in belgium but amazingly the driver is still alive
You say what a Muppet - but that is easily done in the split second of "OOps my junction and see a clear lane then realise its full of traffic" once the truck reveals it....inexperienced drivers make mistakes all the time, people with so much more on their minds make mistakes all the time none of us are immune to error....I wonder how there are not more accidents like these depicted in the thread since the roads are getting more and more congested with lorries......without a doubt though you are right its a poor choice late dicing with 40 tonnes of HGV is never a good idea even if you are in a 40 tonne HGV .
I was behind a small fiat 500 yesterday joining the M6 northbound and the fiat was doing little more than 20mph as I passed her I joined at 60 ish mph as I watched in the rvm the hassle she caused to the flat out 60 mph HGV's in lane 1 and 2 and the slowing up of the whole northbound carriageway within seconds...I have resigned myself to expect anything and IF blind to anything expect the worst will be. So IF I cant see the exit assume its not free and cluttered with a breakdown dont take chances or trust other road users - This driving style causes problems of its own though as you become far more cautious than most other road users that inevitably want you to move it and take the gap - dropping back when someone else "takes the gap" annoys the driver behind you!! who did NOT want you to allow someone who has just undertaken them to "get in" in front of you!
Todays Driving ACE is tomorrows Muppet - given the ideal setting IYSWIM........
I assume the Ford Focus in the Belgium clip is LHD? - Its the reason the driver is still alive....
The lines the car driver was crossing is give way lines - these markings mean that. The lorry has right of way. It is soley the car drivers responsibility to merge safely with other traffic - the lorry has no onus to do anything other than drive
The other clip - the OP shows is a foolish incident again no fault of the HGV driver and was unavoidable from the POV of the HGV
Unavoidable?
Surely a slight lift off the throttle would have been enough to drop them back enough to allow the car onto the motorway without making contact with it.
watch this one then its in belgium but amazingly the driver is still alive
Good spot on the date. Any evidence that this was an attempted scam?Hold on, this was back in 2012 and I'm sure it was later reported as the car driver trying an insurance scam?
TBH it looks to me like the HGV driver does brake and start to slow down just before the impact.
Speed readout in the lower centre of the video puts speed at a pretty constant 82km/h actually jumping to 83 at the moment of impact.
And IMO he was still far too close to the truck in front.