9 thoughts on “Large Format Vehicles, Moving Violations, and How To Survive Them

  1. The level of stupidity and careless driving has accelerated in the recent years. I don’t know if it’s cell phones, a general drop in skill level, or something else.Report

  2. Passing trucks on the right can be dangerous, but if you have ever driven I-81 through Pennsylvania, there is no way around it. I don’t know what it is about Penn, but the truckers passing through that state chronically sit in the left lanes of 2-lane highways. It is absolutely maddening.

    Say what you will about Robert Moses, I truly appreciate his “parkways” that prohibit truck traffic.Report

    1. Here, on long rural stretches, it’s occasionally mandated. Since essentially all of the surface wear on our rural interstates is caused by the big trucks, the state sometimes puts them in the left lane to even out the wear on the two lanes.Report

      1. Right? One of the best arguments for supporting self-driving trucks on the interstates is the opportunity to force the trucks to communicate and settle on both a single speed, and spacing that allows cars to get through the 50-truck convoys that result to get to an exit.Report

      2. I’ve gone miles and miles bottlenecked behind these guys. They are the worst.

        And if you have ever traveled I-68 (western Maryland/West Virginia) the highway expands from 2 to 3 lanes up several inclines, which is helpful. But I find it strange that the 3rd lane is for trucks to move right – instead of having the new lane open to the left so that cars can just pass as need be. Seems like a backwards, inefficient and more dangerous way to do it. (Dangerous because trucks have to merge back to the left when the lane ends).Report

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