@@notgonnagetanyt No you cant lol 😂 you will never find a UK roundabout built like that, car next to exit (left for us) (right for diagram) nearly always exits. The type of roundabout in the diagram we can see is one where the green car should always exit since theres clearly 2 defined exit lanes. Red cars lane splits into 2 so he can choose either, green car lane turns right so green car has to turn right. Usually in the UK the roundabout in the diagram will have cross hatching painted on the surface to indicate you cant travel there to the green car, so in the UK context the green car is wrong
Wdym "the red car did not have to switch lanes to exit the roundabout"? The red car didn't switch lanes at all, they exited the roundabout in the left lane from the lane lane. No lane change. The green car switched to the left lane to continue in the roundabout. The right lane is for exiting only. Look at the lines, the green car had to cross over the lines to continue in the roundabout. The right lane only goes to the exit, it does not continue. After the exit, the right lane reappears for drivers entering the roundabout. So in short, left lane can continue or exit, right lane must exit. Green car is at fault. There's also no road signs or pavement marking indicating which lane can exit, so it's a terrible example in general, but based on the lines, that is what it looks like.
Shit diagram, the green car went over his line whereas the red car stays in its lane throughout meaning the left most lane had the ability to leave the roundabout OR stay whereas the right most lane was an exit only lane.
As a french this explanation feel very wrong. Because in France, u should switch to the right lane before exiting if it’s safe to do so or u can exit from the 2nd lane if there r 2 lanes at the exit. But because u should use the rightmost lane to go straight on a roundabout and the red car is considered to be changing direction, the red car should have waited for the green car before exiting onto the left lane according to French road rules. So in France the red car would be at fault.
@@astromec6303 Yh it would IF the green car wasnt crossing over into the red cars lane. The green car side swiped the red car you need to show me exactly what rule says the red car is at fault or i wont believe you
@@vadwvea7153 Yes in this specific case the marking clearly shows that the green car’s lane is meant to exit. But what I meant is that in France this configuration of roundabouts doesn’t exist. Most of them have no lane marking and the lane rules stay the same in every roundabout. Namely, u should use the right lane to go straight or right in a roundabout. That’s why it’s weird to me. However, I do know that this configuration does indeed exist in the uk for e.g. (spiral roundabouts) but even there it’s rare. But technically speaking, of course the green car shouldn’t have crossed lanes, but this is similar to a lane switching situation as there is no solid white line so that means that the green car was allowed to do this maneuver and the red car could have avoided this situation altogether and therefore has some partial responsibility.
I don't know which "rules of the road" you are referring to, but you got it all wrong based on EU rules. 1- if this is a roundabout, your road markings are all wrong, as the line is following the circle of the roundabout. And why do they use warning lights rather than turn signals? 2- Exiting a roundabout is always done *FROM THE RIGHT LANE* . If a car is standing in the left lane, it needs to transition back to the right lane *before the exit it intends to turn into.* 3- Using the left lane is not mandatory, unless you are making more than half a turn around the roundabout. Per road regulation, making a quarter or a half of a turn around the roundabout means you are to use the right lane only! Depending where the green car is coming from, it did not necessarily have to switch to the left lane. Conclusion: Judging by the displayed situation, the red car makes an incorrect maneuver while the green car appears to be well in its right to continue on its trajectory. Thumb down given that, for a driving instructor, your knowledge of the road regulations are very poor.
in the UK you can exit from the ‘middle lane’ (left lane in this case) if the exit has 2 lanes but theres always road marking telling you what you can and cant do. Right car (green) can never stay on the roundabout though
You need to show enough of the roads that you can actually tell what is going on. This appears to be a roundabout in a country that drives on the left, with the red car staying on the roundabout and the green car exiting. In the case, the green car is clearly the one at fault - if you are going to exit from the right lane, you have to give way to anyone in the left lane. Your description makes no sense. The road going to the left certainly isn't the roundabout, since the road markings are going to the right.
I rated this with a thumbs down as I do with every video with an AI voice, but give that your conclusion is demonstrably incorrect then this video really needs two thumbs down. Only the green car is at fault. You seem to be ignoring the fact that the exit road has two lanes and therefore can be entered from either lane of the roundabout. The fact that you have used an extremely zoomed in view throughout the video also makes the context difficult to understand. Very rarely do I criticize anyone's video, but this one is bad.
As a Brit I felt a need to know the roundabout layout and where both cars entered.
green car at fault in all scenarios lets keep it real
@@vadwvea7153 Nope. green couldve been going straight from the right lane which is legal (atleast in the uk but on the left lane)
@@notgonnagetanyt No you cant lol 😂 you will never find a UK roundabout built like that, car next to exit (left for us) (right for diagram) nearly always exits. The type of roundabout in the diagram we can see is one where the green car should always exit since theres clearly 2 defined exit lanes. Red cars lane splits into 2 so he can choose either, green car lane turns right so green car has to turn right. Usually in the UK the roundabout in the diagram will have cross hatching painted on the surface to indicate you cant travel there to the green car, so in the UK context the green car is wrong
Wdym "the red car did not have to switch lanes to exit the roundabout"? The red car didn't switch lanes at all, they exited the roundabout in the left lane from the lane lane. No lane change. The green car switched to the left lane to continue in the roundabout. The right lane is for exiting only. Look at the lines, the green car had to cross over the lines to continue in the roundabout. The right lane only goes to the exit, it does not continue. After the exit, the right lane reappears for drivers entering the roundabout. So in short, left lane can continue or exit, right lane must exit. Green car is at fault. There's also no road signs or pavement marking indicating which lane can exit, so it's a terrible example in general, but based on the lines, that is what it looks like.
Also both cars, had both of their indicators on, which would just be confusing to other drivers.
god I hate AI generated videos
Shit diagram, the green car went over his line whereas the red car stays in its lane throughout meaning the left most lane had the ability to leave the roundabout OR stay whereas the right most lane was an exit only lane.
Option 4. Image intentionally zoomed in to create confusion amongst the people that didn't listen to it saying it's a roundabout.
As a french this explanation feel very wrong. Because in France, u should switch to the right lane before exiting if it’s safe to do so or u can exit from the 2nd lane if there r 2 lanes at the exit. But because u should use the rightmost lane to go straight on a roundabout and the red car is considered to be changing direction, the red car should have waited for the green car before exiting onto the left lane according to French road rules. So in France the red car would be at fault.
red car at fault in what universe 😂 he just followed his lane and green car crashed into him
@@vadwvea7153 Because in France this would be considered as cutting off. But the rules r different.
@@astromec6303 Yh it would IF the green car wasnt crossing over into the red cars lane. The green car side swiped the red car you need to show me exactly what rule says the red car is at fault or i wont believe you
@@vadwvea7153 Yes in this specific case the marking clearly shows that the green car’s lane is meant to exit. But what I meant is that in France this configuration of roundabouts doesn’t exist. Most of them have no lane marking and the lane rules stay the same in every roundabout. Namely, u should use the right lane to go straight or right in a roundabout. That’s why it’s weird to me. However, I do know that this configuration does indeed exist in the uk for e.g. (spiral roundabouts) but even there it’s rare.
But technically speaking, of course the green car shouldn’t have crossed lanes, but this is similar to a lane switching situation as there is no solid white line so that means that the green car was allowed to do this maneuver and the red car could have avoided this situation altogether and therefore has some partial responsibility.
Green car
I don't know which "rules of the road" you are referring to, but you got it all wrong based on EU rules.
1- if this is a roundabout, your road markings are all wrong, as the line is following the circle of the roundabout. And why do they use warning lights rather than turn signals?
2- Exiting a roundabout is always done *FROM THE RIGHT LANE* . If a car is standing in the left lane, it needs to transition back to the right lane *before the exit it intends to turn into.*
3- Using the left lane is not mandatory, unless you are making more than half a turn around the roundabout. Per road regulation, making a quarter or a half of a turn around the roundabout means you are to use the right lane only! Depending where the green car is coming from, it did not necessarily have to switch to the left lane.
Conclusion: Judging by the displayed situation, the red car makes an incorrect maneuver while the green car appears to be well in its right to continue on its trajectory.
Thumb down given that, for a driving instructor, your knowledge of the road regulations are very poor.
in the UK you can exit from the ‘middle lane’ (left lane in this case) if the exit has 2 lanes but theres always road marking telling you what you can and cant do. Right car (green) can never stay on the roundabout though
Bad example, but I still managed to get ti right
You need to show enough of the roads that you can actually tell what is going on. This appears to be a roundabout in a country that drives on the left, with the red car staying on the roundabout and the green car exiting. In the case, the green car is clearly the one at fault - if you are going to exit from the right lane, you have to give way to anyone in the left lane.
Your description makes no sense. The road going to the left certainly isn't the roundabout, since the road markings are going to the right.
3
I rated this with a thumbs down as I do with every video with an AI voice, but give that your conclusion is demonstrably incorrect then this video really needs two thumbs down. Only the green car is at fault. You seem to be ignoring the fact that the exit road has two lanes and therefore can be entered from either lane of the roundabout. The fact that you have used an extremely zoomed in view throughout the video also makes the context difficult to understand. Very rarely do I criticize anyone's video, but this one is bad.
Red car