Home Forums Bike Forum Institute of Advanced Motorists – cycling poll

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  • Institute of Advanced Motorists – cycling poll
  • DezB
    Free Member

    What a dull poll! (accessed it on another PC). The pdf doc was far more interesting.

    aracer
    Free Member

    far safer than other roads.

    due to lack of bicycles competign for space, perhaps?
    Given the number of drivers who manage to kill themselves or others on non-motorways without any cyclist interaction, that would seem unlikely to be a major factor.

    druidh
    Free Member

    TandemJeremy – Member
    Druidh – you simply are not noticing the bad driving as it is "normal". As said above – lack of space between cars, on the phone, bad parking, cutting corners, running red lights, poor lane discipline, steamed up windows, passing too close to bikes, lack of indicators and observation etc etc.

    Great – that's at least 3 folk on this thread who must be following me when I cycle to and from work every day. Tell me what you're riding so I know who too look for on Monday. I've been driving or 30 years – I think I can recognise bad driving when I see it.

    scu98rkr
    Free Member

    I dont see why your all arguing with DruidH there is lots of bad cycling around.

    I would imagine that per hour traveled there is far far more bad cycling than driving however as people have pointed out there are ALOT less fatal accidents from cycling. Basically because cyclists cant go as fast as cars ie cycling is safer so to me its seems less important that there is bad cycling than driving.

    Hence why we have a driving test but not a cycling test.

    However in some incidences bad cycling can cause an accident involving a car this is bad.

    The only thing I'd question is riding on the pavement always bad cycling ?

    On dual carriage ways in towns (not inner city ie about reading size) often cycling on the pavement is safer as they are completely empty. So personally in some instances I will do this and maintain it is good cycling.

    RichPenny
    Free Member

    I've been driving or 30 years – I think I can recognise bad driving when I see it.

    Thus speaks the voice of experience 😉

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Druidh – have a look. See how many drivers indicate properly ( mirror indicate manouver) and how many leave a two second gap let alone keep to the speed limit.

    We both cycle round the same city and I see the majority of cars driving badly. Its about where you draw the line and what you notice.

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    "as people have pointed out there are ALOT less fatal accidents from cycling"

    but only because there's a lot less cycling not because it's safe (as we have seen – there is 15 times more deaths/mile covered cyclign than driving).

    njee20
    Free Member

    What a cracking circular argument this is!

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    perhaps we should all just agree that cycling is safer than driving (regardless of the evidence available to the contrary), that bad drivers cause all the accidents and that cyclists are paragons of virtue at all times and leave it at that?

    cookeaa
    Full Member

    What a cracking circular argument this is!

    +1 I do love a bit of curmudgeonly interweb shouting on a Friday afternoon…

    aracer
    Free Member

    but only because there's a lot less cycling

    Well that rather depends on how you define "less". If you want to use time spent doing it, which is actually a better measure then I'd suggest that like for like (ie excluding motorways and similar roads) there's little difference.

    You're missing the point anyway – remember that 79% of the cyclist deaths are due to drivers. Now explain to me how less miles covered cycling distorts that one? If you look at the number of deaths of 3rd partys caused by cars and cyclists per mile covered I think you'll find the cars are way, way ahead.

    joemarshall
    Free Member

    but only because there's a lot less cycling not because it's safe (as we have seen – there is 15 times more deaths/mile covered cyclign than driving).

    Although those statistics apparently look a lot better for cyclists if you ignore motorway driving. Motorways are jolly safe, and people drive massive distances on them, thus making a large proportion of the miles covered in those statistics (whereas on that sort of long trip most cyclists will drive or take the train or something), so they have a disproportionate effect on the car statistics.

    So you could say, in the situations where driving and cycling are comparable (getting places in town, ignoring the use of cars as long distance travel, which is a different kettle of fish), there isn't a massive difference in safety.

    The obvious important difference anyway is that with a few very rare exceptions, cyclists typically only risk causing their own death. Car drivers very often cause the death of others. Hence the obvious need for regulation of car drivers, but no obvious need to regulate cyclists.

    Joe

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    I'm not in favour of regulation of cyclists but I do feel that;

    a) cyclists who jump red lights and generally ignore 'the rules' do themselves (and other cyclists) no favours.

    b) cyclists regularly perform manouevers on the road that seem (to my eyes) to be at odds with any sense of self preservation.

    c) cars can easily kill a pedestrian or cyclists – knowign how some peopel drive cyclists ought to cycle 'defensively' in the same way that people should drive on the motorway (ie. anticipate an accident, not just arrive at it in daze).

    The first two make a lot of drivers aggresive to all cyclists and probably increase the number of accidents.

    I'm not condonign bad driving but to imply cyclists are blameless in all of this is a bit rich…

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Ok – as a fully qualified sad geek I can see a traffic light controlled junction from my window, I watched 3 or 4 cycles of the lights and counted the cars who turned right or left.25 used indicators, 12 did not. So thats 1/3 of car drivers who turned didn't indicate.

    6 car drivers jumped the red lights. Probably 150 cars thru the junction ( only estimated) while I watched. 4% jumped a red light – not amber but red.

    The vast majority did not leave a 2 second gap between vehicles

    3 cyclists. 2 obeyed the road rules, one rode a bit of pavement then pushed his bike when meeting pedestrians.

    The point I was making ( and others I think) is that most car drivers do not notice the bad driving nor how common it is as it is "normal" to drive badly. Not that cyclist were paragons of virtue but that much of the poor car driving is not seen by car drivers.

    aracer
    Free Member

    I'm not condonign bad driving but to imply cyclists are blameless in all of this is a bit rich…

    I don't think anybody is implying that – simply that from a road safety perspective, bad driving is orders of magnitude more significant than bad cycling (hence policing resources should be allocated to reflect that).

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Druidh – next time you give me a lift somewhere I'll point out all the bad driving I see – that should drive you crackers quickly

    verses
    Full Member

    b) cyclists regularly perform

    This is what gets me; because SOME cyclists are idiots, lots of people refer to cyclists as a whole as being idiots. But with motorists it tends to be "Did you see what that idiot did", not "motorists are idiots.

    IMO, idiots are everywhere, but the idiocy of some is more likely to cause death than that of others.

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    verses – everyone does somethign silly soemthimes. In that respect we're all idiots. I wasn't trying to imply that all cyclists did stupid things all the time. In the same way that most drivers don't do stupid things all the time – just often enough to cause problems for cyclists.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    wwaswas – however IME good motorist is a tiny minority. The vast majority in towns drive too close together and exceed the speed limit. A large minority do not indicate properly if at all and most pass too close to cycles

    pixelmix
    Free Member

    I reckon verses has summed it up pretty nicely. I agree with druibdh too – there is some shocking cycling around, but equally there is some shocking driving.

    I get a bit annoyed when I see cyclists jumping reds, as it gives us all a bad reputation in the eyes of some drivers. As a pedestrian I had to stop crossing at a green man recently so a cyclist sailed through. I was quite pleased when the other cyclist sitting at the red shouted some abuse at him. If I stop at a red on my bike and some idiot on a bike sails through, I tend to mutter something about not saving any time when I inevitably catch up 200yds later.

    In my experience when driving, drivers either tend to accidentally sail through reds (seen that a few times really, and not exactly excusable, but mistakes CAN happen) or fail to stop as they are changing or just changed. Cyclists who blatantly jump reds when they have been red for several seconds are even more inexcusable.

    To cut a long story short, there are bad cyclists and bad drivers and I get annoyed when I see either!

    Anyway, back on subject… survey completed!

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    I don't disagree TJ, I think we see ourselves as 'cyclists' and take pride in what we do on a bike (like IAM members, I guess).

    The cyclists and motorists that cause problems are more likely to be seeign their mode of transport as a convenient way of getting from a to b as quickly as they can. It's probably true a car driver who makes a mistake is more likely to kill or injure someone else, though.

    muddydwarf
    Free Member

    Well from my experiences today i can surmise that :-

    A) Drivers in heavily-trafficked urban areas are more likely to make a dangerous manoevre – one flatbed wagon accelerated past me uphill and pulled in to turn left before his vehicle was past me, & one idiot overtook me as i was passing a parked transit van with another car coming the opposite way, he was speeding to get past me and the other car had to take avoiding action.

    B) Drivers on open moorland roads give plenty of room to this particular cyclist.

    Not exactly scientific i know.

    druidh
    Free Member

    TJ – when I'm driving you're usually asleep

    (Thank your chosen deity)

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    two second gap let alone keep to the speed limit.

    Is this recommended (by anyone other than TJ) or even practical in a city?

    druidh
    Free Member

    Recommended in the Highway Code IIRC.

    How long have you been driving Al?

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    A mere 23 years druidh – I must therefore be 77% as good as you 😛

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    or very, very tired?

    glenp
    Free Member

    Is this recommended (by anyone other than TJ) or even practical in a city?

    Fantastic illustration of my point. Driving far too close has become so normal that most people don't even know it is dangerous, or believe it is possible to drive without doing it (not picking on you cynic-al). I must admit that I am something of a born again driver in this regard, but once you start driving with the specific aim of keeping as much gap as possible to the car in front (four seconds is very nice) the whole experience of driving changes.

    antigee
    Free Member

    agree verses point good

    not looked at survey yet but very doubtful if a "cycling license" or having to be insured will make much difference to those cyclists that choose to ride busy pavements, ignore reds or ride without lights etc

    it will just be another hard to enforce pointless law after all makes very little difference to those that drive and choose to ignore what they are supposed to have learnt to get a license

    awareness campaigns make more sense and driving change in public opinion
    interestingly we may be seeing a shift in public opinion on speed with the objectors seeming more and more a ranting minority

    oh and as to motorways being safer because no cyclists – turn it around and give the cyclists a 100ft wide road costing Xmillion/mile and see how safe it would be – one of the problems in "the dangerous cycling debate" is that road users other than motorised are forced to the edges and forced to accept maximum inconvenience so commuters can get home to watch their favourite TV programs – big road programs are justified on economic benefit thru reduced congestion – but drive on those roads outside of peak hours and they are empty(ish) huge capacity for social convenience and the way we choose to live

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    I can see that glenp, my guessis rush hour would last about 3 times as long and few serious accidents would be averted.

    njee20
    Free Member

    big road programs are justified on economic benefit thru reduced congestion

    By and large, big road programmes are no longer justified at all, it's now about reducing traffic levels and increasing public transport use, walking and cycling. Good all round!

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    cynic-al – Member

    two second gap let alone keep to the speed limit.

    Is this recommended (by anyone other than TJ) or even practical in a city?

    My point made in one! Two second gap is the recomended – by highway code, IAM etc etc. No one does – just try counting it. Most of the time you re lucky if you get 1 second.

    Al – actually average speeds rise if people do this as you don't get the speed up and slow down concertina effect – same as a 20 mph limit around town increases average speeds on congested roads

    Druidh – YGM about hillwalking. I'll be driving

    DezB
    Free Member

    No one does – just try counting it. Most of the time you re lucky if you get 1 second.

    I try to do it on the way home when I take the m-way. Usually get 3 or 4 cars jumping into the gap just before their junction 🙁

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    Oh dear…..*TJ FAIL ALERT*

    WOOP WOOP WOOP!!!

    126
    Stopping Distances. Drive at a speed that will allow you to stop well within the distance you can see to be clear. You should

    leave enough space between you and the vehicle in front so that you can pull up safely if it suddenly slows down or stops. The safe rule is never to get closer than the overall stopping distance (see Typical Stopping Distances PDF below)*
    allow at least a two-second gap between you and the vehicle in front on roads carrying faster-moving traffic[/u] and in tunnels where visibility is reduced. The gap should be at least doubled on wet roads and increased still further on icy roads
    remember, large vehicles and motorcycles need a greater distance to stop. If driving a large vehicle in a tunnel, you should allow a four-second gap between you and the vehicle in front

    *12-23M at 20-30mph – fair enough, not generally complied with I'd say.

    EDIT:

    Al – actually average speeds rise if people do this as you don't get the speed up and slow down concertina effect – same as a 20 mph limit around town increases average speeds on congested roads

    WTF? In town?

    glenp
    Free Member

    I can see that glenp, my guess is rush hour would last about 3 times as long and few serious accidents would be averted.

    My point double-made! Of course congestion doesn't go up – you still get there at the same speed, probably faster because you don't have to brake when the car in front dabs his brakes (because the car in front of him…). The gap is in seconds remember – slow moving traffic means the distance is small.

    njee20
    Free Member

    Sadly congestion is getting worse, in the South East at least, so that's obviously not working!

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    My point double-made!

    Erm how does me disagreeing with you make you right?

    Sorry, I just don't see how bigger gaps in cities would improve traffic flow. Folk go from green light to red light at constant speeds.

    antigee
    Free Member

    By and large, big road programmes are no longer justified at all

    not big but £11m pounds to change a couple of junctions/provide some bus lanes on A61 in to Sheffield will reduce journey times at peak times by 3 minutes over 4 miles
    no improvements for pedestrians (except narrower pavements due to bus lanes) and cyclists will be able to share the bus lanes – a useful breather since proposal also includes increasing speed limit on the narrow lane dual carriageway

    the proposal says that a future park n ride would find the bus lanes would help encourage switching but the site and costing for the park n ride isn't in the proposal

    lots of words about change but no action

    psling
    Free Member

    My take on this is that schools (at secondary level) should teach the Highway Code, road awareness, etc., leading to sitting the Theory part of the Driving Test at the end of the course.

    That way pedestrians and cyclists at least have an opportunity to familiarise themselves with the ways of the road even if they haven't taken a driving test.

    glenp
    Free Member

    If you know you are going to encounter a red light why drive so close? You are merely in a rush to join the queue.

    You made my point because my point was that most drivers are so oblivious to bad driving that they do it all the time, never understanding.

    When you drive too close to the car in front you relinquish control to the driver in front – he brakes and you have no choice but to do the same. He also masks the road ahead so you drive by his eyes.

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