top | item 46956402

(no title)

adw | 19 days ago

American road laws are insane here. The law should be simple; you must be in the outside lane at all times unless you are overtaking, and once you're done overtaking, you should merge back into the outside lane.

https://www.highwaycodeuk.co.uk/overtaking.html

discuss

order

throwup238|19 days ago

As far as I know that’s the law in every state I’ve driven in, but enforcement is pretty much nonexistent. Some states like Texas or Louisiana might have signs reminding people to stay out of the inner lanes except for passing but I’ve never heard of anyone getting a ticket over it. What’s enforcement like in the UK?

For example, the specific law in California: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySectio...

adw|19 days ago

Vigorous.

HPsquared|19 days ago

Confusingly, the slow lane is called the "inside lane" in the UK, even though it's on the edge of the road and the fast lanes are in the middle.

closewith|19 days ago

That used to be the case in Ireland too, but confusion due to cultural contamination means pretty much everyone moved to numbering lanes (from the "outside"/"slow"/leftmost lane).

boisterousness|19 days ago

That's fine when traffic is light. At rush hour, all lanes are full and nobody is overtaking.

direwolf20|19 days ago

That seems rather inefficient on an 8– or 16–lane road.

StillBored|19 days ago

Why? If everyone followed the rules the lanes would segment into slowest on the right, with gradually increasing speed to the left and people moving between the lanes as needed to overtake. It would be far far far better than the chaos of having to move across all the lanes of traffic all the time because there are random campers driving below the speed limit in every single lane.