Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I only tailgate in the left lane. If you're questioning why someone is tailgating you in the left lane, the problem is you.
If the person you are tailgating is actively passing the person to his right then you should not expect the person in front of you to match your desired speed even if you tailgate. The left lane is for passing, not driving at the exact speed you want
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
So pull around me into the passing lane and PASS me!
Why are you tailgating me in the RIGHT lane? You can go around! Why stay behind me? The passing lane’s next to you! Use it!
Why don’t you?
OMG, THIS!!!!!
I can be somewhat sympathetic to someone tailgating on a single lane road.
But a road/highway with multiple lanes? Why????? It makes ZERO sense. They can just go around you. Why do they sit there behind you????
Weird. I’ve only seen tailgating in the left lane. And only when there wasn’t a way around a slow POS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
So pull around me into the passing lane and PASS me!
Why are you tailgating me in the RIGHT lane? You can go around! Why stay behind me? The passing lane’s next to you! Use it!
Why don’t you?
OMG, THIS!!!!!
I can be somewhat sympathetic to someone tailgating on a single lane road.
But a road/highway with multiple lanes? Why????? It makes ZERO sense. They can just go around you. Why do they sit there behind you????
Weird. I’ve only seen tailgating in the left lane. And only when there wasn’t a way around a slow POS.
You don’t live around here then.
I live in the DC area and drive often. No tailgating in the right lane if the left is clear.
Anonymous wrote:I only tailgate in the left lane. If you're questioning why someone is tailgating you in the left lane, the problem is you.
Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
Anonymous wrote:DW is a lifelong tailgater and genuinely believes it is a generous educational gift to her fellow drivers. There's no convincing her otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
So pull around me into the passing lane and PASS me!
Why are you tailgating me in the RIGHT lane? You can go around! Why stay behind me? The passing lane’s next to you! Use it!
Why don’t you?
OMG, THIS!!!!!
I can be somewhat sympathetic to someone tailgating on a single lane road.
But a road/highway with multiple lanes? Why????? It makes ZERO sense. They can just go around you. Why do they sit there behind you????
Weird. I’ve only seen tailgating in the left lane. And only when there wasn’t a way around a slow POS.
You don’t live around here then.
I live in the DC area and drive often. No tailgating in the right lane if the left is clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
So pull around me into the passing lane and PASS me!
Why are you tailgating me in the RIGHT lane? You can go around! Why stay behind me? The passing lane’s next to you! Use it!
Why don’t you?
OMG, THIS!!!!!
I can be somewhat sympathetic to someone tailgating on a single lane road.
But a road/highway with multiple lanes? Why????? It makes ZERO sense. They can just go around you. Why do they sit there behind you????
Weird. I’ve only seen tailgating in the left lane. And only when there wasn’t a way around a slow POS.
You don’t live around here then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
So pull around me into the passing lane and PASS me!
Why are you tailgating me in the RIGHT lane? You can go around! Why stay behind me? The passing lane’s next to you! Use it!
Why don’t you?
OMG, THIS!!!!!
I can be somewhat sympathetic to someone tailgating on a single lane road.
But a road/highway with multiple lanes? Why????? It makes ZERO sense. They can just go around you. Why do they sit there behind you????
Weird. I’ve only seen tailgating in the left lane. And only when there wasn’t a way around a slow POS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better question: what do you do to piss off the tailgater? I sometimes turn on my lights. Or slow down more.
I have off-road floodlights on the back of my Jeep.
If you tailgate me, I’ll give you some warning with a couple flickers of brake lights over a minute or two, and if you’re still back there after that, I’ll hit the switch for the lights and your pupils will instantly contract to the size of pinheads and then you’ll back off because you’ll be blinded!
Anonymous wrote:DW is a lifelong tailgater and genuinely believes it is a generous educational gift to her fellow drivers. There's no convincing her otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To communicate I would like to go faster.
I very rarely tailgate now, kids are teenagers so I try to emulate good driving, but I spent 4 years in Germany and this nit so subtle ‘communication’ took a while to integrate back into the terrible US driving norms.
If I am being tailgated, I will gradually slow down to accomplish 2 things:
1. Hopefully give me enough reaction time that I won’t need to slam on brakes if something unexpected happens, in which case I would almost certainly get hit by the tailgater
2. Add extra distance between me and the car in front so that not only do I have room to safely stop suddenly, if necessary, without hitting the car in front of me, but also to allow extra space if I do so that hopefully if I get rear-ended, it won’t domino and push me into the car in front.
My only concern as a driver is to be safe. I would much rather you be in front of me where I can keep an eye on your reckless driving and adjust accordingly, but if you insist on staying behind me and tailgating, the safest thing I can do is give myself more time and space to react safely, and that is accomplished by slowing down.
Anonymous wrote:There’s only one scenario where I tailgate: if I’m driving the speed limit or just barely over it, and someone rushes to pull out in front of me from a side street, necessitating hitting my brakes to avoid a collision, but then they drive below the speed limit. In other words, if you were in a huge hurry to cut me off, but as soon as you’re in front of me, you have all the time in the world, I’m going to give you the tailgating you wanted so badly when you put your rear bumper thisclose to my front bumper.