Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many drivers think that the speed limit is the 'lower' speed which you should drive. In fact, it is the maximum speed limit. They must have gotten that question wrong on the driver's test.
And yet you can do 150MPH on the Autobahn and people move over just fine. But every single day on 495 there are people camping in the left lane in their cars refusing to move.
Anonymous wrote:Many drivers think that the speed limit is the 'lower' speed which you should drive. In fact, it is the maximum speed limit. They must have gotten that question wrong on the driver's test.
Anonymous wrote:Many drivers think that the speed limit is the 'lower' speed which you should drive. In fact, it is the maximum speed limit. They must have gotten that question wrong on the driver's test.
Anonymous wrote:It's too many cars for the amount of road capacity and/or poor road planning, along with the combo of cars playing Frogger, racing, and weaving through traffic at high speeds and the high/hungover/distracted/new drivers (who are not necessarily teenagers) in both the left and right lanes going 20 mph under the limit. Both of those extremes piss off the majority who are otherwise safe, normal drivers and are just trying to get from point A to point B in peace. So no one is happy and it shows.
Anonymous wrote:They're all on their phones. All. the. time. Literally ppl are texting and driving constantly. I've seen ppl facetiming and driving (not looking @ the actual road of course).
And then there are just really bad drivers who lack any idea.
I was almost run into a few weeks ago by someone literally merging into traffic on Viers Mill Rd from the R without even looking!!! Then she did it again onto 355. I considered reporting her to the police but ppl are so crazy didn't want anyone to potentially target me.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s only going to get worse. The bar to getting a drivers license is so low. Most parents don’t actually do the “required” hours of observed driving with their kids because no one actually checks. And the behind-the-wheel portion is a joke (at least where I live). The DMV says you’re supposed to have 8 sessions, I think, but most will do it all in a single session just to check the box.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're all on their phones. All. the. time. Literally ppl are texting and driving constantly. I've seen ppl facetiming and driving (not looking @ the actual road of course).
And then there are just really bad drivers who lack any idea.
I was almost run into a few weeks ago by someone literally merging into traffic on Viers Mill Rd from the R without even looking!!! Then she did it again onto 355. I considered reporting her to the police but ppl are so crazy didn't want anyone to potentially target me.
Cellphones are a massive part of it, but a lot of people are just clueless. They leave absurd amounts of spaces between their cars, they park terribly, they make turns like a truck, they don't know how to stop for school buses (either don't stop, or stop when it's on the other side of the median), clog the left lane, take forever to switch lanes or get in the turn lane, and are utterly mindless about simple driving tasks.
I grew up learning to drive in this area, in the 90s. It's not hard. It just takes paying attention and watching your surroundings. Some are on their phones. A lot of people are just spaced out and stupid.
Space between cars (following distance) is extremely important and following too closely a major cause of collisions, especially when distracted.
Distractions are a huge problem. So is the “me first, everybody else is just a hologram” mindset that seems to have become the norm. But too many cars and not enough road is also a root cause.
PP here - I'm not necessarily talking about while driving, but stopped at a light. You do not (and should not) leave an entire car's length between the vehicle in front of you. You are wasting road space and creating needless traffic. It doesn't mean 6" from their bumper, but a couple of feet is plenty. Not 15 feet.
THANK YOU, this drives me bananas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're all on their phones. All. the. time. Literally ppl are texting and driving constantly. I've seen ppl facetiming and driving (not looking @ the actual road of course).
And then there are just really bad drivers who lack any idea.
I was almost run into a few weeks ago by someone literally merging into traffic on Viers Mill Rd from the R without even looking!!! Then she did it again onto 355. I considered reporting her to the police but ppl are so crazy didn't want anyone to potentially target me.
Cellphones are a massive part of it, but a lot of people are just clueless. They leave absurd amounts of spaces between their cars, they park terribly, they make turns like a truck, they don't know how to stop for school buses (either don't stop, or stop when it's on the other side of the median), clog the left lane, take forever to switch lanes or get in the turn lane, and are utterly mindless about simple driving tasks.
I grew up learning to drive in this area, in the 90s. It's not hard. It just takes paying attention and watching your surroundings. Some are on their phones. A lot of people are just spaced out and stupid.
Space between cars (following distance) is extremely important and following too closely a major cause of collisions, especially when distracted.
Distractions are a huge problem. So is the “me first, everybody else is just a hologram” mindset that seems to have become the norm. But too many cars and not enough road is also a root cause.
PP here - I'm not necessarily talking about while driving, but stopped at a light. You do not (and should not) leave an entire car's length between the vehicle in front of you. You are wasting road space and creating needless traffic. It doesn't mean 6" from their bumper, but a couple of feet is plenty. Not 15 feet.
My dream is to get a mini cooper and squeeze right in front of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're all on their phones. All. the. time. Literally ppl are texting and driving constantly. I've seen ppl facetiming and driving (not looking @ the actual road of course).
And then there are just really bad drivers who lack any idea.
I was almost run into a few weeks ago by someone literally merging into traffic on Viers Mill Rd from the R without even looking!!! Then she did it again onto 355. I considered reporting her to the police but ppl are so crazy didn't want anyone to potentially target me.
Cellphones are a massive part of it, but a lot of people are just clueless. They leave absurd amounts of spaces between their cars, they park terribly, they make turns like a truck, they don't know how to stop for school buses (either don't stop, or stop when it's on the other side of the median), clog the left lane, take forever to switch lanes or get in the turn lane, and are utterly mindless about simple driving tasks.
I grew up learning to drive in this area, in the 90s. It's not hard. It just takes paying attention and watching your surroundings. Some are on their phones. A lot of people are just spaced out and stupid.
Space between cars (following distance) is extremely important and following too closely a major cause of collisions, especially when distracted.
Distractions are a huge problem. So is the “me first, everybody else is just a hologram” mindset that seems to have become the norm. But too many cars and not enough road is also a root cause.
PP here - I'm not necessarily talking about while driving, but stopped at a light. You do not (and should not) leave an entire car's length between the vehicle in front of you. You are wasting road space and creating needless traffic. It doesn't mean 6" from their bumper, but a couple of feet is plenty. Not 15 feet.