It’s coz people don’t count the actually second exit as it doesn’t go all the way through so they count that one as the second exit instead of 3rd exit, it can become complicated if you don’t know ashington area but very easy to use once you understand the logic behind it
It is actually straight on making it the left lane even though it is past 12 and 3rd exit doesn't nessarilly make it a right turn. On this roundabout the 4th exit is right. To take 3rd its left lane despite being past 12 you can use the right lane to go straight but have to be aware of traffic in the left lane. I would personally use the left lane ae the first 2 exits are so far left making the 3rd exit straight on despite being past 12 and the 4th exit is further around making it the right. Its a roundabout where the rule bool gets thrown out of the window
This always annoyed me, I think it counts as straight ahead because technically the right exit road bends right. So that's why I think they put it past 12 on the sign. But in my opinion, it should still be at 12 on the sign even though the actual road bends slightly.
And the annoying bit isn't just having to learn individual weird junctions to pass the test, it's how I'm supposed to deal with roundabouts in an unknown area when driving there for the first time.
@@FLASH24x it's a tough one. Often signage is not reflective if what is actually there. A little bit of improvisation and practice on regular roundabouts should set you up nicely for the complex ones. Or so you would think.
It’s coz people don’t count the actually second exit as it doesn’t go all the way through so they count that one as the second exit instead of 3rd exit, it can become complicated if you don’t know ashington area but very easy to use once you understand the logic behind it
It is actually straight on making it the left lane even though it is past 12 and 3rd exit doesn't nessarilly make it a right turn. On this roundabout the 4th exit is right. To take 3rd its left lane despite being past 12 you can use the right lane to go straight but have to be aware of traffic in the left lane. I would personally use the left lane ae the first 2 exits are so far left making the 3rd exit straight on despite being past 12 and the 4th exit is further around making it the right. Its a roundabout where the rule bool gets thrown out of the window
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This always annoyed me, I think it counts as straight ahead because technically the right exit road bends right. So that's why I think they put it past 12 on the sign.
But in my opinion, it should still be at 12 on the sign even though the actual road bends slightly.
And the annoying bit isn't just having to learn individual weird junctions to pass the test, it's how I'm supposed to deal with roundabouts in an unknown area when driving there for the first time.
@@FLASH24x it's a tough one. Often signage is not reflective if what is actually there. A little bit of improvisation and practice on regular roundabouts should set you up nicely for the complex ones. Or so you would think.