Al1944
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I think the driver of the grey car might be to blame ,oops
I think the driver of the grey car might be to blame ,oops
Looks like te grey car was making a legal overtake to me, the white car pulled out without indicating (or looking it would seem)
Anyone who thinks otherwise is no better than the person who caused the accident.....
Overtaking is a lost art, the majority of car drivers have no clue. Many have NO IDEA of what is around them.
Most people who use the roads are only interested in one thing - Their Right of Way - that exists in their own mind.
I'll play this game of "lay blame without knowing the facts!"
There is no reason to think the van wasn't going at 60. The grey car should therefor not be overtaking. When do we find out the winner?
without a doubt the white car shouldn't have pulled out like that, but would the police look at the speed of the grey car and put equal blame on them if they were proven to be over the speed limit?
Irrespective of the speeds involved, the only person at fault here is the driver of the white car.
Not only did the white car driver fail to look behind prior to pulling out, but they were also too close to the van to conduct a safe overtake.
The white car in my opinion and based purely on the video footage is too close to the van. It has no forward view. The driver as a result is edging out to see if it’s clear to overtake. I’m guessing they were so preoccupied with sneaking a peak that that failed to look behind.
Correct positioning would have been to have sat further back affording a view on both sides of the van and therefore making the move a lot safer/easier.
As mentioned above, we can all speculate all day, but that’s my take on it.
I'll play this game of "lay blame without knowing the facts!"
There is no reason to think the van wasn't going at 60. The grey car should therefor not be overtaking. When do we find out the winner?
Why? Do vans not break the speed limit? The car would need to break the speed limit to overtake the van if it is doing 60, which it shouldn't be doing. As others stated earlier, we do not have all the facts.Unless you know the law on vans Pierre, in which case you'd re-word that to "There is no reason to think the van wasn't going at 50"
Why would continue to signal once you have moved in to position to overtake. Using that premise, any vehicle on a motorway other than the last lane would need to be constantly signalling. You signal to show your intent to move, once you have done so it isn’t necessary surely.The white car driver certainly seems to be the prime offender. Nevertheless speed cannot be dismissed without knowing the details (for any of the vehicles). Basic principle - Is it safe and is it legal.
Also, I don't see any sign that the grey car was signalling. If he was intent on overtaking any vehicle ahead he should have been signalling right until intending to move in to the left. (A flashing light may just have caught the white car driver's eye and stopped him making a dreadful mistake) Grey car driver had overtaken the camera car was intent on overtaking the white car then the van (got to wonder (and we can only wonder) if he had just been charging on intent of passing everything. If he was speeding then he could be in bother.
I didn't know that so open road with a 60 limit then a van max speed is 50mph.
that covers any LCV thanks for that really good to know.
Why would continue to signal once you have moved in to position to overtake. Using that premise, any vehicle on a motorway other than the last lane would need to be constantly signalling. You signal to show your intent to move, once you have done so it isn’t necessary surely.
There are lots of maybes in this scenario, the one thing that is clear is that the white car moved into the path of the other vehicle. We don’t actually know if they looked or not, but if they did, it wasn’t a proper look.
Motorways are an entirely different scenario. Drivers signal to change lanes and can cancel the signal when the lane change is complete. On a single carriageway road drivers signal to indicate an intention to move out and pass.
Looks like the white car had got too close to the van which could result in the driver only being able to very briefly glance in his mirrors because he would be absorbed with the vehicle ahead. If the grey car was catching up at high speed then visual warning time all round would be perilously low.
This type of incident is not at all unusal. It would be very interesting to read the traffic police report.
Its a rubbish accident and the guy in the grey car was probably legal but I would have not done that overtake in a car.
I would have at least pulled in behind the whit car first before moving on.
but hey ho
I actually don't think the white car was SO close to the van as people would make out.
You raise a fair point, but in my opinion, by moving back in behind the white car and van you lose situational awareness as your oncoming view is then hindered by two cars. Plus if you then went to move out again, it raises the prospect of whether or not the white car will then try and pull out in front of you.
Best practice is to stay out, indicator on and as long as the oncoming lane is clear overtake as many as you want. Always cover the brake in case the white car pulls out on you (won’t always save the day, but it may give you that split second difference). The only downside is that you have to be very aware of any side roads joining on the offside!
Slow? My guess is 70-80kmh with the overtaking car at 90-100kmh. The inertia and the flipping 1,5 times suggest quite some speed. The thing that freaks me out is there is no telltales the white car will make that manouvre. Im pretty good at reading drivers in traffic and here i see no signs that overtaking will be made. When the lanechanging starts he would be out of my field of viewExactly this, if that had been a motorcycle overtaking it could well have been a fatality. The drover of the white car would be charged with driving without due care and attention at least. Looking at the road involved, there is a long straight and no oncoming vehicles, I fail to see how anyone could think that was the grey car drivers fault. And I also don't understand the comment about being impatient, it was clearly safe to overtake, and why should you sit behind the other vehicles if it is safe and legal to overtake. Unfortunately you can't see the vehicle speeds, but from the vehicle with the camera on board it looked pretty slow. No doubt those who like to dawdle about at 40 mph on a NSL road will be outraged that someone wants to overtake another vehicle... how irresponsible of them!
Slow? My guess is 70-80kmh with the overtaking car at 90-100kmh. The inertia and the flipping 1,5 times suggest quite some speed. The thing that freaks me out is there is no telltales the white car will make that manouvre. Im pretty good at reading drivers in traffic and here i see no signs that overtaking will be made. When the lanechanging starts he would be out of my field of view