How would re-testing drivers compensate for out-dated laws? Are out-dated laws responsible for a poor standard of driving? Are the "new age road users" the cause of the laws being out-dated or is it a change in the vehicles and the roads? Are the laws really so out-dated?Seeing as a lot of road laws have not been updated for the "new age" of road users maybe this would improve the standard of driving.![]()
Should be compulsory. The standard of driving on the roads is shockingly poor.
It makes you wonder how some people passed in the first place!
And herein lies the problem, nobody lets me pass if anything it seems that many are as intended to enforce the law themselves.No, you wouldnt really want to do this, however it is ridiculous that you can pass a test at 17 and drive for ever. BUT, the current laws do allow for a licence to be taken away and a retest sat.
Some might say this should be enforced more rigidly, but under the current levels of policing, do you really want your licence to drive decided by a camera, no options, no human judgement, just right and wrong - send the letter, have points.
What's really causing bad driving is impatience, the roads being busier and how you react? Someones being a knob, slow down let them past, add 15 secs to your journey and they are gone.
And some of that is best taught with a little experience under the belt. Perhaps the focus on repeated driving tests should be different? And it should be mandatory for all to do it in London and Hemel HempsteadPointless until the way people are taught to drive and what they are taught is improved upon dramatically. Not having a go at driving instructors, this is about learners being taught to pass a test to set of laws with precious little about broader awareness, conditions, car handling, etc. They are then let loose and develop their own habits and faults based on a what I think is [and always has been btw, same when I was learning] a very shaky foundation. Every new driver [and indeed most existing ones] should have to do a handling course for a start, should know what it feels like when you have to react, at speed, to a sudden event, and what it feels like to do the same on a wet surface. More simple stuff, how many people do you see daily that turn right from the left hand side of the road and vice versa? How many simply have no concept of the size of their vehicle? [I know some people have limited spacial awareness, but it can't be as many as you see that apparently have none]
But the confines of the work premises are much easier to oversee than the national roadwork. As said by others, road users are taught to pass a test and learn to drive with relatively little policing.I'm a fork lift truck instructor so i see firms wanting regular training/re-test and medicals, not just for health and safety but insurance companies want to see that some sort of "skill" level is maintained.
And some of that is best taught with a little experience under the belt. Perhaps the focus on repeated driving tests should be different? And it should be mandatory for all to do it in London and Hemel Hempstead
But the confines of the work premises are much easier to oversee than the national roadwork. As said by others, road users are taught to pass a test and learn to drive with relatively little policing.

I was actually referring to being able to pass a medical and drive to a required standard, surprises me that insurance companies don't request this and offer a discount to anyone who bothered doing it.
Some used to offer a discount for drivers taking the Advanced motorist test![]()
quite a bit of that would be reduced if all road users had some awareness of other road users
I was actually referring to being able to pass a medical and drive to a required standard
I don't subscribe to rights versus privileges
Possibly, and in some ways I agree, but it also scares me that a learner can pass the test, leave the test centre and jump straight in a motorway with absolutely no experience. We put my daughter onto pass plus a few weeks after passing her test, which helped, but still wasn't really perfect. In fact, you could say there is an argument for 'staged testing' perhaps? So perhaps you can pass your test initially and drive on 'normal' roads, with further lessons and tests on car handling [at centres that can teach in safety] and followed by speed driving? or something of that ilk.
....I go back to my original post, quite a bit of that would be reduced if all road users had some awareness of other road users and drove in a way that created less frustration in the first place, it's a two way thing. I guess what I am saying is that there is a lot of 'selfish' driving around, sometimes deliberate, but my general impression is that too many are totally unaware they are doing it.
But - it's interesting again. It's always someone else that's the problem - everyone is always a great driver, it's everyone else thats to blame.
Pointless until the way people are taught to drive and what they are taught is improved upon dramatically. Not having a go at driving instructors, this is about learners being taught to pass a test to set of laws with precious little about broader awareness, conditions, car handling, etc.
It is now much easier to get away with bad driving as there are less police patrol cars on the roads now. Even in a largish city like Birmingham you can go days without seeing a single police car out on the roads.
In theory I think some form of retest would be good, but not sure it would work. It would need to be different to the standard test, the fact I cross my hands for example should not be a fail.
Why not? If it's part of the original test, it should be part of any subsequent test.
And before you ask, no, I don't cross my hands on the wheel. It's much better to refine how you do it properly after passing your test rather than just ignoring it.
If you are right handed and turning the wheel clockwise (for example). If you have the wheel with your left hand at the four or five o'clock position and you let go with your your right hand to get a grip somewhere else on the wheel, you are now not in control. If you pass the wheel through your hands you always have control.
Also, when manoeuvring, you can count the number of times you turned then the same number of times back again, you will know that your wheels are pointing straight.
I bet you don't put the handbrake on and take the car out of gear at junctions and red lights too. That should also be a fail in a subsequent test.
Steve.