Like the video if you hate lane hogs. It's ok if you're guilty of these wrong lane sins...Just do better and tell your friends. Highways can be more open, safe, and relaxing if we use the correct lanes. Edit: My blinker was used on EVERY lane change. Shocking for a BMW driver yes. But please look closely before commenting that "he didn't use his blinker."
I think the biggest thing behind the poor highway driving because nobody is ever really taught these things. This coming from a relatively new driver (3 years).
I am not from the US. I have been to the US and have driven in the US though. I did use observation as my teacher when using the highways, unfortunately lol...now I know the right way to use highways and will apply the knowledge if I visit the US again.
In Germany we have the "Rechtsfahrgebot" or "commandment to drive on the rightmost lane" for exactly that reason. It also is ignored often but the left lane is almost only being used for overtaking and people move at least into the middle lane after that in 95% of cases. Also overtaking on the right is not allowed here except in cities but I do overtake mid lane hoggers occasionally just to remind them of their mistake, often enough they move to the rightmost lane after that. However the right lane is often full with trucks and people tend to stay in the middle lane because of that which is allowed because that negates the commendment to drive on the rightmost lane. I drive a lot because of work and drove the A2 to Berlin the other week, if you are lucky and people keep moving to the right like they are supposed to you can easily drive over 200kmh on the left lane without much problem. Top speed from Berlin to my hometown was 231kmh on the Autobahn, but those high speeds are often interrupted by drivers that don't use their mirrors properly and thus you have to use the brakes.
German here: Never thought I'd see the day an American BMW driver would correctly explain lane etiquette and use their turn signals. Amazing times we're living in
EU driver here, i don't know wtf are they doing on the left lane, if you pass you move right, we have 2 lane highways and yes i am a fellow bmw driver, but still, wtf murrica
@@theslobotfather it is like this everywhere though, people do cruise in the middle lane because often the slower lane is used by slow trucks and all so instead of switching lanes all the time, you keep in the middle lane, it is safer than overtaking all the time.
Bro comparing Germany to America we have bigger population, more cars. Also switching lanes repeatedly is one of the highest reasons accidents happen. If you want to pass people use the passing lane. If somebody is going the speed limit you can’t get mad at them they are following the law.
Only haters that can’t afford expensive cars say that. The brand does not make the driver. I drive a van at work, a BMW and a Honda motorcycle at home. So i give signals when I’m at work and on my motorcycle but not when im in the BMW??? 🤨 If i don’t regardless, then your logic makes even less seance. The funny thing is that you are probably one of the people that, that video is targeting. 🤣
Here’s the irony. Since these incorrect lane use practices are so ubiquitous, using the lanes correctly is unpredictable and confusing to those around you.
Omg just pass the guy on the right if he's going a reasonable speed in the middle lane. You're being dangerous as fuck dude. There is no 'losing' on the highway. It's not a fucking race. Holy fuck I hate this guy so much.
I passed my Kentucky drivers test with 10 hours of driving experience with zero highway driving experience. Our tests in my city were taken in downtown, idiots were more concerned about parallel parking than anything else lmao
I had to log 50 hours of driving with 10 being at night in Montana. And 6 more hours with a driving instructor, who had us drive in all kinds of situations. It’s kinda crazy the difference between state requirements.
As a german I really can’t imagine how it feels like to feel unsave on the highway. I mean we’re driving 130mph and have less accidents than in america. I think Rechtfahrgebot should be mandatory everywhere
@Yoo Wat nope Germany has the lowest rate at car accidents World Wide and that with higher speedlimit (normal roads its ~60 mph… thats almost the max speed the US can drive on their Highways)
There's a reason why there's no American drivers in f1 and never a legit winner. Mario Andretti was born in Italy. Never had a competitive manufacturer either.
@@acerusea5156 Phil Hill won the championship with a lead of one point. His opponent died during the second last race. If the season would have had no dramatic accident and if Wolfgang Graf Berghe von Trips would have had the chance to participate at the last race, Phil Hill would not have won the the F1 championship.
It's also road design. Having exits on the left means that slow drivers need to move into fast lanes just to make their exit. Having exits only on the right removes this element and increases flow.
Exits on the left is very rare though... you only see that in a few cities where they don't have room to exit on the other side and in those cases its often in an area where the traffic is always relatively slow.
Autobahn is fantastic if you do not mind a road system that is paid for by high taxes and less freedoms. Having a nicer home, better finances and living in a country that is willing do defend itself is far more important.
as a 16 year old new driver they don't teach us any of this when getting our permit or our license, they actually teach us something completely different. so to be fair those cars are only doing what they were taught to do but this was extremely helpful information and I'll definitely keep this in mind while on the roads!
This was absolutely taught in American drivers Ed. Quit making excuses. Left lane: pass. Right lane: slower traffic Sincerely, An American that got 100% on his license test
Idk what school you go to but im in Utah and for my school they taught us almost everything to know about driving enough to where I was confident to drive with only 4 hours of driving
This is the only YT video that's ever made a notable difference in my day-to-day life. Watched this two years ago, and I've been driving in a safer manner ever since. Feels good to be part of the solution rather than the problem. Thanks for making a difference, Ted 👍
Germany: This lane is for this, that lane is for that. You pass there, then go back here... SoCal (in any lane): You either let me merge or we both die.
In large Italian cities we mostly use indicators to mean "I am gonna go this way, yes I know I'll be cutting you off and no I don't care, see to it that we don't crash."
Problem seems to be driver's ed and even the license test doesn't cover this, seems like the knowledge is just not there amongst all the driver's and that's a huge problem that'll hopefully start to be fixed
@@just_Lee2 This. The feeling of there's ME and then there's everybody else. But I also think there's a second thing in play here: "everybody has the right to be an asshole." There simply are people who will deliberately do things like blocking and/or annoying others "just because they can."
I gave the German method of driving a shot earlier this week up and down the Mass Pike, and I was pleasantly surprised at how much safer I felt on the highways! Not to mention how efficiently I was moving through traffic! We really need to teach people that this is the most optimal way to drive.
You felt safer because you actually had an escape route to your right by keeping in the right lane. If you cruise down the center lane, you have no escape route to either side, but in the right lane, you can at least go to the break-down lane if you need to avoid something.
@@paubayes2002 Yeah, Europeans are actually taught how to drive. Americans don't really learn from qualified instructors, but are taught by, and pick up all the bad habits of, their parents. Most driving schools in the US don't even offer to teach driving on a manual car, for example. Just a few basic lessons in an automatic before sending you off to learn with your parents.
There is a recent book called "confessions of a recovering engineer" that mentions some inherent problems with US highway design and differences in speed and time savings between our cities. Highways with frequent onramps and exit points are part of a larger design philosophy that is relatively new (1950's onwards) and for several years now has been showing its problems. Your video and the book I referenced both have some excellent insights for small, practical changes that might help to change our roads for the better.
I have also read this book and am a big fan of strong towns. I appreciate the pointers outlined in the video but a lot of people want to translate this to urban highways where there are many conflict points and entries from multiple points on the corridor, not just the right. When you take these rules outside of a limited access highway with high soeeds and no local destinations, all the rules laid oit above should go out the window. In places where you can turn left to access a business, the correct lane to be in is the one that will actually get you to your intended destination, regardless of whether or not you are passing anyone.
@@Mdb8900 yeah you're right it's hard to follow good driving principles on "stroads" essentially. An urban highway where you can make an unprotected left turn against oncoming traffic, in order to access a business is rather dangerous and inefficienct. It does both jobs poorly. It can neither move cars efficiently at high volumes and high speeds, and it also doesn't provide safe access to local businesses. So to survive in a poorly-built stroad environment, I agree with you we have to use whatever lane gets us on the relevant side. Ideally, we'd build less stroads and make clearer delineations between local streets (designed to build wealth and provide access to shops and businesses) and roads (designed to move cars quickly over long distance). Skip the in-between portions of 55mph double lane + neutral turn lane setup that we see in the US everywhere. We are so used to them, even though they are inherently poor designs. If we could decrease conflict points on those corridors, it would help. But it's super hard to do retroactively! Until then, we will drive inefficiently and hog the left lane, in anticipation of our upcoming left turn, even if we're not passing slower traffic and the right lane is open... Darn stroads.
As a Highway Patrol officer and driver enthusiast, I appreciate your video. But in states with 5-7 lane highways there’s no hope for lane courtesy haha.
Well here's the thing, if you actually WORKED if you actually DID YOU JOB and enforced proper lane use, we could. Everyonesays no one wants to work these days but post COVID the amount of cops and troopers I've seen has plummeted and the amount I see actually actively working is slimmer still. Get a move on pig
@@bananenmusli2769 This is becoming a big problem here in the UK, it's been getting worse and worse over the past several years, lane hogs are so bloody annoying!
@@roshawn1111 yea I was literally gonna say something about that. He is driving safe and that’s how people should drive but he’s crossing 2 lanes at a time literally most of the video which is illegal. I know it’s a stupid law but you can get a ticket if you jump 2 lanes without stopping to check the lanes. The way you change lanes going from the lane you’re in the the farthest lane is to look in your blind spot then go into the next lane, stop in that lane and keep your signal on, then check you’re blind spot again for someone speeding up trying to pass you on the right or left, then go to the final or next lane.
Apparently Tedward is unaware that it is legal to pass on the right on a multi-lane highway in the United States. It makes no sense to move from the far right lane to the far left lane in order to pass a driver in the middle lane and then move back to the right lane.
@@pcs5852 passing on the right is illegal depending on the state you are traveling in, and it's considered poor etiquette and can be argued as a mitigating factor for insurance/court claims, once again, depending on the state. In many cars the blindspot on the right is larger than the blindspot on the left. Don't be a douchebag and don't pass on the right if you can avoid it.
@@gavin9088:Actually, it has less to do with the state in which you are travelling and more to do with road conditions. If you are travelling on a road with 2, or more lanes in one direction (which is why I stipulated "interstate"), and it is safe to pass, passing on the right is allowed. There are many times when passing on the right is NOT legal, but interstate travel isn't one of them.
It's exactly the same in the UK. Hogging in the middle lane is a plaque. Some people are completely clueless about driving. Sometimes two right lanes are completely congested and the left lane free from traffic for miles.
I am German, but I lived in the UK for a few years. I have also driven in Italy a lot. There is a clear hierarchy of driving proficiency, and a clear hierarchy of driving proficiency. Brits drive like Germans on their first day after they got their licence. Germans drive like Italians on the first day after they got their licence. I haven't spent a lot of time on British motorways, but I actually don't remember lane hogging as that much of a problem. My main issue with other drivers was lack of experience with difficult situations and/or lack of concentration. On the plus side, British drivers tend to be more polite and more relaxed than German drivers. On the other hand, most Italian drivers seem to be constantly under tension, and breeze through the craziest situations as a matter of fact, as if they were all stunt drivers. They have to, because of a handful of Italian drivers who do crazy stuff like going 30 km/h on the motorway without any regard to what's going on around them. And some crazy scary roads like that super busy motorway in the Po plane that has two extremely narrow lanes, no emergency lane whatsoever, and claustrophobia-inducing concrete walls on the side (if I remember correctly). (Driving habits in France are somewhere between German and Italian, varying by region.)
American logic: speed is dangerous, lets make it slow, call it job done. German logic: slow moving obstacles are dangerous, lets manage the way they position themselve, no obstacles no speed limit required.
@TheNitroG1 slow moving objects are not dangerous by itself, in Germany the trucks are driving maximum 90km/h (56 mph) at all times next to other cars that have no speed limit. But slow moving OBSTACLES are dangerous, please don't be an obstacles and stay on the maximum far right lane when possible.
Except that the speed limit in the US is one of the highest among countries with speed limits. Heck, even the German autobahn has an advisory speed limit of 80.8 mph, which is not far from the usual 70-80 mph we see in most US states. In practice, most drivers often drive 5-10 over the speed limit. The speed limit will usually lower inside cities mostly for safety reasons. Yes, safety reasons. There may be sharp turns, many freeway exits/entrances, minor hills that obstruct the traffic ahead, etc. It is absolutely wise to lower the speed limit in these areas. You also cannot compare Germany with the US. The US is in charge of a much larger population and also diverse population. Yeah, we might very well have more knuckleheads over here. To protect lives and prevent future lawsuits, we need to put “reasonable” speed limits in place. People need to stop seeing freeways as race tracks.
We have more "knuckleheads" because "we" have removed so much decision making from driving. Drivers don't pay attention anymore, which causes issues when oblivious / aggressive drivers do something unexpected. If we allowed uncertainty back into driving (removing speed limits would be a good start), drivers would be forced to pay more attention and work together, leading to a safer and more pleasant driving experience for everyone.
I had this amazing moment driving on the German Autobahn where I was overtaking someone and he was also coming up on someone slower than him. So what happened is that he signalled left, I signalled left, and the guy on my left also signalled left. So basically 3 lanes of cars simultaneously changed lanes to help one person. I just fell completely in love with driving in Germany after that experience. And it was not even a one time thing. It happened many times that people took advantage of the multiple lanes to avoid braking while also improving road capacity.
I've done this many times before to help other drivers, especially semi-trucks on American Roadways. I'm using the middle lane to pass someone on the right, see a slow car ahead on the right, and move to the left lane to make space in the middle. Sometimes people don't expect this and they still end up getting stuck behind the car on the right, but the people who do notice and move over will usually give you a thank-you flash.
Yup. In Poland many people have the good habit of changing to the left lane when driving by an entry to let the ones joining the highway have a safe and efficient way of joining its traffic. Not everyone does that but it isn't a rare sight. Sometimes I was even meet with the "thank you" dubble hazard light flash as we do it here. We are taught to drive on highways the same way as Germans so yeah, and I think as most if not all Europeans. Its really efficient when you have only 2 lanes. The traffic flows without any problems. (And in advance I'm sorry if I made any mistakes regarding my English, its almost almost 1AM here and my brain may not be as well working as it it during the day. 😅😁)
One of the things you taught in driving lessons is to always observe traffic and anticipate situations. What you are describing is an exemple of this. Of course, you'll always find pricks that just don't care and don't move away, but as a general rule people do this in European roads.
and if you come to Saudi Arabia, rules for you as a Saudi, 1- full speed 2- don't care about your and others safety 3- don't wear seatbelt 4- 1.hand on steering wheel 5- hajawalah 6- remove speed sensor 7- remove numberplate 8- blast music's 9- snap chat it 10- sit with your cars seat as back and lower as possible
@@kevinmorelikekevout3639 the one thing I miss about driving a shitbox car was that, if anyone ever hit the car it was expendable and I didn't get brake checked much cause I think they knew this.
This simply doesn't work on the highways I drive on in New York. You can't cruise in the right lane when there is 25 cars all merging in, and by the time the right lane has started to speed up there is another entrance lane and the cycle repeats. You have to use the middle lane to cruise and left to pass else you are just making it more dangerous for yourself and the others trying to get on. And most of the time there's enough traffic where there is no such thing as cruising lol.
It does work; it's just situationally you are moving to the center to allow people on. It's exactly what the video is saying. In a situation with 0 cars merging, you can move right. -- Fellow New Yorker
@@icallhax8304but to truly follow the hard line rule you should be changing lanes more often, not less. isn't a lane change the most unsafe thing you can do on the highway? The idea should be to reduce kane changes.
@@teagancombest6049 Oversimplified. When you follow lane discipline, you are reducing the number of NET lane changes across ALL vehicles, and you are reducing conflict points as traffic is separated by speed. Also know that you are required in all 50 states in some capacity to follow lane discipline.
I don't live in the US, but man just watching this video raises my blood pressure like nothing else. I truly feel for you guys, I'm so sorry you have to deal with this.
Thanks your sympathy is well appreciated. Born and raised American, and love to just drive, cruise or whatever we may choose to call it. Living in Houston the past decade, has taking away the fun of just driving. So many people abuse these simple rules. Driving now gives me a lot of anxiety, I just want to get home and get out of my car. Traffic is horrible. You have to be an aggressive driver at times as well, which I will do, but rather not have to. I still go for drives, but it is usually about 1 or 2 in the morning and on the back roads, if you want to call them that. There is always traffic, but it's a more tolerable driving experience.
At least where i live in California, its mainly the truckers that are the issue, they fully hog the right and middle lanes of the highway which means in order for some people to get anywhere faster than 55mph you tend to favor the fast lane which isnt ideal at all. if you get behind a big rig, you will for certain get rocks in your windshield and mess up your paint big time, so yeah it freakin SUCKS!!!
Yeah i never realized I was doing it wrong until I saw this video. I instantly realized how much better AND faster this way of driving is. However, since im in NJ absolutely NO ONE follows this.
Its funny too because those same people who denounce speeding will say; "Plan properly and leave on time so you don't have to speed". Yet, these same people when asked why they won't sit in the right lane is; "Its too slow". They don't want to be burdened by the inconvenience of braking, letting cars in, driving behind slow cars or switching lanes. Yet, the people who are complaining about them sitting in the left lane who they tell to "plan properly" share the exact same sentiment, its just different lanes and different speeds. Same issues. So you can't 'plan properly' to leave on time to accept the rules of the road that are proven to work, but you want others to 'plan properly' and accept your speed and your rules which are proven to not work. Although, if you just look at the division within our country, and the huge entitlement, this issue won't be fixed anytime soon. Honestly, I think self-driving cars will be the closest thing to a solution, with proper programming, it will remove the stress of driving and set the rules up correctly. Win win.
@@ViolentMLG The other solution we already have is mass transit. Bus, tram, train, metro, etc. It is a matter of improvement and expansion. In both cases the goal have similarities: prevent stupid people from driving the car themselves.
While I understand that is a very popular opinion in the enthusiast community, I don't think that is true. That is only something that people who like to speed tell themselves.
It's actually an unconscious response people have. I've learned a few things to do in different situations. 1 - They speed up as you pass beside them - In this situation, if you pin it and speed up 10km/h for a few seconds they usually end up returning to their original speed and you pass them nicely 2 - In situations where people have decided to speed up and then sit in your blind spot - A nice swerve that looks as though you're about to change lanes and sideswipe them without exiting your lane will usually make them brake and stay back a little 3 - Your looking to pass and the car beside you speeds up to block you in - This is truly annoying but I've learned that if you are getting close to the car in front as you get ready to pass often the drivers beside speed up. The solution is to actually stay a fair bit back and once adequate room has opened to pass do so quickly, passing with high throttle to avoid letting them speed up enough to box you in again. In nicer areas drivers will alow you to pass if you signal and give them a few seconds but thats not the reality for where I live
German here, the german word Rechtsfahrgebot stands for driving on the right and is translated: Rechts(Right)-fahr(driving)-gebot(command). The instruction to always drive on the right side. In germany, switzerland and austria you will get pulled over for being a lane hog. Absolutely enjoyed this video of yours Tedward
In Ostdeutschland, Berlin, Hamburg, Niedersachsen oder Schleswig Holstein kapieren die meisten Leute das Rechtsfahrgebot. Baden Württemberg oder Bayern ist das Gegenteil da benutzt niemand die rechte Spur. Hast du auch die Erfahrung gemacht?
I just took a driver safety course, to reduce my insurance cost, and the instructor went over this. Many of the older drivers said the drive in any lane they want because they pay taxes and they don’t care that others want to go faster, there going the speed limit and no one should be going faster! Someone like me who commutes 35 miles each way, it gets me crazy.
Legal wise in the State of Washington, it's legal to go 100 over the speed limit or even faster to pass, recommended that you go 15, cops might try and get you if they think you are being unreasonable though.
@@wigglytuffgaming traffic engineering studies this, they say varying speeds cause the best traffic flow, if everyone did 55 there would be massive traffic jams. Obviously your the guy in the left lane being oblivious to the line behind you.
As an American this is one of the main reasons why I felt unsafe driving on our highways which I couldn't quite explain... among other things like distracted and reckless drivers. Proper lane etiquette is taught in Europe but not America for some reason. I hate to say but a lot of fellow America drivers are really dangerous drivers- on and off highways. We need to do better.
I feel unsafe while driving in America because 99% of drivers are too obsessed with the car behind them (most times I see people adjusting their mirrors) or their phones, once I see brake lights, it doesn't matter if it's a double lane and clear for me to pass, I'm passing the danger. It ain't my fault you decided to brake check and I am able to act accordingly because I am a safe and reasonable distance, SEE YA that's all you
In my area idiots decide to feed the horses on the highway drawing them to... you guessed it THE ROAD and blame the drivers like it's their fault for going the speed limit, NO it's theirs for feeding the horses on the main highway with no care for anyone's safety
Because the US has no public transportation so it has to give out licenses like candy w/o too strict standards. Because of this our speed limits have to be slow. 🐌
@@Stonerolog1st I have the opposite issue. People never look behind them, and they end up parking their car right in front of 20 other cars and creating a traffic jam.
Drivers course I took (online, authorized for Florida) taught students to: -coast in the middle lane -use left lane for passing -use right lane to enter and exit highway ramps
@@aido2824 In America in many areas a license to drive is almost a requirement to live. The US is a SIGNIFICANTLY larger country than the UK, and has many areas with zero public transport.
@@aido2824 Lol, try driving across your entire country going 85 MPH. In the time it takes you to do that, that's the amount of time it takes some people to get to work. It makes a huge difference. It is IMPOSSIBLE to live outside of a big city with no car. Some of our states are bigger than the vast majority of countries. Not a few, but a good amount of people live in a different state than they work. My family for instance.
people in my area don't travel in the right lane because often the right lane dissappears into an exit ramp that'd be unavoidable,and good luck on those exits where the 2 rightmost lanes turn into exits
Yeah. This sounds like it makes sense but it doesn’t work in America and having two passing lanes is pointless(I think it’s pointless anyway?). Staying in the far right lane on I5 is a total nightmare. Honestly the way he’s driving in the video feels kinda dangerous and unrealistic for those driving hours each day. It may be different in Germany but in America 3+ lane highways have been designed with the intent for the far right lane to only be used for merging in and out of the highway. The far right lane disappears at every single exit in some areas and if you are in that lane you typically (in larger areas anyways) will not be able to switch to the middle lane and avoid disappearing into an exit. I agree with the whole left lane passing lane thing but not this, it just doesn’t work with our road design. There aught to be a lane where you don’t have to worry about constantly merging with dreadful city traffic or having your lane disappear and not having the space to turn into another lane.
And the example country quoted in the vid is also a country with pretty decent passenger rail. That's why Germany is able to afford having the standards be so high to begin with
This a problem of improper following distance. If vehicles were using adequate following distance, merging over from an exit only lane would not be a concern, no matter how congested it is. I'm a truck driver and even when at a complete standstill I try to leave plenty of space ahead of me. Some assume it is so I can get rolling faster... or that I'm being a nice guy so they can cut in front of me to gain two inches... -it is niether. Its just in case EMS/fire has to get through quickly to the scene of a crash. Too many drivers are inconsiderate of the fact that their life and the world in which they live it is not always about them.
In the US, those lanes are marked differently than through-lanes that continue on the freeway. There is usually plenty of time to notice the lane is becoming an exit-only lane and merge over to the normal through-lanes to the left. Lanes that are on the right and designed for entering or exiting the freeway are called auxiliary lanes. Instead of the normal long white dashes separating the lanes, they have much shorter and usually wider white dashes to let drivers know the intended purpose of these lanes. If you're cruising along in the right lane and the dashes change from the normal long narrow dashes to short wide dashes, that's a sign that you should merge left unless you intend on exiting the freeway. This change is also accompanied by a large green exit sign with the name of the exit that also contains a white arrow pointing down at the dedicated lane with the word "ONLY" highlighted within a yellow box to let you know the right lane (or lanes) are going to exit the freeway. If a driver does not notice either of these obvious clues in order to move into the left lane to stay on the freeway before they reach the exit, they are clearly not paying enough attention and probably have no business driving a car.
In German Fahrschule I was always annoyed when my driving instructor told I need to go back onto the right lane whenever I passed someone. But now I understand, and I’m happy that a lot of people in Germany understand it. It’s nice
Im currently in Driving school, and boy oh boy my instructor would be mad if he saw this.
3 года назад+7
It`s not so many nowdays. More and more people want to drive as prices of cars are very low compared to the past. And major part of that people dont use their brain while driving. They know the speed limits, they know the rules, but they dont understand them.
I have literally had to correct my sister-in-law who was sitting in the left lane on a 2 lane highway doing 10 over with 5, or so, cars lining up behind her waiting to pass her. She was doing, like, 10 over and basically just assumed that she was entitled to the left lane because of her speed.
Laughs in german Edit: I actually have to correct myself a little bit, where I live in Germany on 3 lane highways in the right lane you have the people that drive the suggested speed of 80mph then in the middle lane you have the people that just drive faster like 90-95 ish and the left lane is for 125+ even tho everyone can still overtake in the left lane when there are some a little slower vehicles in the middle lane, when faster cars come from behind they flash their high beams in good time to kinda say hey lookout I’m coming and you have time to get out of the lane, if not they will obviously slow down and wait until you moved out of the lane.
"Speeding is dangerous!!!" Yet the highway fatality rate in the US is double that of Germany, despite the fact that there are no speed limits at all on half the autobahn...
Ted touched on this in a previous video, but in germany its a lot harder to get your full unrestricted license than it is here in the states, and so you get morons who dont deserve a license who think they can handle more than 65 mph , eat shit for lane hogging, and then say speeding kills. Cars dont kill people, idiots do.
when people have to pay a couple grand for just the privilege of being able to drive + immense amount of hours to drive with instructors + hard tests it equals better drivers.. All I had to do in florida was a 15 minute online test, where you can just look up the answers and a drivers test in a parking lot lol
@@Anon_Fox Wow that explaines a lot. I live in Europe and even 20 years ago it took about 3000 dollars, 25 hours driving with an instructor and two exams (1 on the road and 1 theoretical) But our roads are small, busy and we drive faster. Also back then 90% of cars was stick shift. We only now started adopting automatic transmissions as standard. Cheaper cars are still all stick. Being close to Germany my father took me over there after I got my license because the autobahn was intense, nowadays its much more regulated but still can be dangerous. Once had an American friend over, he couldn't believe his eyes when I overtook a police car at 220km/h and they didn't start a chase...Come to think of it, I let him drive for 10 km but pulled him from behind the wheel because he kept cruising in left lane... String of very angry Germans behind us, almost caused WW3 🤣
@@Anon_Fox in Canada or atleast Ontario, we have g1, which is basically a permit so there restrictions like you need a older driver with u and can’t drive past 12 and can’t drive on major highways, which is fair, but the g1 test is a written/online test. 0 actual driving done. Then a year later or 10 months if you took drivers Ed, you can get your g2. Which takes away the time restrictions, and the experienced driver with you. It’s a like 10 min driving test on city streets. Now the problem is that your g2 also lets you drive on major highways, thing is tho, you don’t do your drivers test on a highway at all, so now your allowed to go on highways magically but wasn’t given a test there. Then a year after that you can get for full G license, only then do you do a test on the highway, a year after your legally allowed to go on them. In conclusion North America sucks cock at driving’s tests. And half of it doesn’t make sense.
There's two reasons that people hang out in the middle lane. 1. Cities have way to many ramps, so yes, avoiding the merging traffic. 2. Slow passers. If you are in the right lane, you might be blocked by a slow passer and the left lane is empty and unused, while meanwhile you can't get over because you're blocked in. So better stay in the middle so you always have 2 places to pass. Totally agree with you on speed limits. I hate them!
want to move to the left to overtake but are blocked by someone in pacing you in the middle lane? slow down a touch let the block car get in front then move into the middle lane behind them, now you can use the left lane to overtake both vehicles. remembering to move back to the right lane after.
@@laineotto1376 most busses and trucks are limited to 68-70 mph. Now civilian trucks can hit about 90 safely as most vehicles can. Outside sport vehicles anyways. Also no one should be driving in the right lane unless you're exiting or entering. The more left you go thats the lanes you should be in and then slowly move over per mile you have left until your exit on that final Mile either sit in the right most lane or the second lane and move over as needed. And when people in the left most lane drive 60mph on the freeway there is something wrong with you. That lane is not for you to sit In going 60.
@@TheJ2941 mate you drive here in Texas like that you're gonna be ran off the road. It's not 3 lanes here it's 5 or 6 lanes. There is too much traffic to even be in the right lane especially when people are going 40 mph. You'd never get anywhere and considering the amount of 18 wheelers and the massive multi lane custom house whatever they call them. Not the big trailers or vehicles. It's a literal house that's being moved. And you sure as hell ain't going anywhere when they are doing road maintenance to keep the roads in great condition at least where I'm at. Also exits and entrance ramps are almost always on the right hand side.
I bet a lot of the people you passed who were hogging the middle lane thought it was reckless of you moving back over to the far right lane even though what they were doing was illegal and dangerous
Americans seem to be plagued by road rage, because of a lack of education on laws and practices on the road. Too many people have personal opinions on how things should be done, instead of sharing a common understanding.
After many years of dealing with a plethora of oblivious, entitled, inconsiderate, and retarded drivers on US roads, sometimes you need to let off some steam. Some people are more easily triggered than others, but nobody can tell me they never nearly blew their top behind the wheel. Even if you're one of the bad drivers I mentioned at the beginning, who is hated by everybody else, you've probably been extremely pissed at one time or another.
I remember when I originally saw this video when you released it 3 years ago. Sad to report that three years later, people still don't understand lane etiquette
Its saved me from multiple accidents 😭 from dumbasss deciding to turn left on a 2 lane street from the right lane, a dumbasss merging but hitting the breaks as they do it etc
Yeah, these days defensive driving takes more and more effort and energy. I love driving and road trips, but they do drain you mentally (and physically if you got the wrong vehicle).
Having driven in central London for the last few years, I have learned to assume that everyone is in the wrong lane, including myself. Has saved me a lot of aggravation
@@Majima_Nowhere he does use the turning signal. After the sentence that ends with "... exactly the same speed as me", he moves his left hand and activates the signal.
I learned how to drive (unofficially) in Germany. I’m frustrated driving on American highways based on each point you’ve mentioned. Well done - pass this on!
What about the guys in lifted trucks who forget the left and middle lane exist and follow less than 1 car length behind you even though you’re already going 10 over the speed limit.
Who cares, if they will bump into you, you just got yourself a free repair by them. Unless usa doesn't have mandatory insurance for car owners, then fuck that country, it should burn to the ground.
@@DenvilX The States do require car insurance to drive, but whose fault the accident is changes from state to state. In many states, it doesn't matter how it happened, if you rear-end someone, it's your fault, but other states may not have the same traffic laws, and it can get very confusing very quickly.
@@TedwardDrives I wish this video had millions of views haha. Thanks for making this point. I still drive like I learned in Germany, but I honestly thought it was legal to overtake on the right in the U.S. because it happens all the time.
You’re not wrong, but this is essentially a 13 minute video of a man shouting at the ocean hoping it’ll stop the waves. Go with the flow, homie. It’s better for your blood pressure.
Same here LA, hahaha I wish I can do what he say, but 65 miles hour, well I try to drive faster, but especially going the 405 is like a parking lot, not really a Freeway.
@@YHH_579Y The issue in LA is the RIGHT 2 lanes are mostly flooded with Semi Trucks, and no one feels safe been sandwiched between semis. So I think in a 5 lane highway, the LEFT 3 lanes should indeed be applied with the same principle.
@@saman-iw9tx Doesn't matter how many lanes you have if you don't have drivers who know proper lane discipline then you'll still get idiot lane hoggers. In the UK our motorways can go from 3 to 6 lanes and you'll always get people sat in the middle or right lane (we drive on left so for anyone wondering same theory applies as America lane furthest to right is the furthest overtaking lane) who haven't figured out how to move over now they've finished overtaking. Unlike in say Germany where proper lane discipline is taught sometimes you literally have to flash drivers to get them to move over.
Years ago, I went on vacation in Ireland, driving about 2200 kilometres in a week. I've always been annoyed by lane hogs, but that trip truly blew my mind. People immediately got over after passing and highway traffic moved so much more fluidly than I'd ever experienced. I've never driven the same since and wish there was a way for Americans to understand and experience how much better highway driving could be without going to another country...
You can experience this on certain portions of American highways at certain times of the day. I live in the DC region and regularly drive hundreds of miles up North just to experience that feeling. It is truly blissful and surreal!
people complain about car guys bobbing and weaving or more commonly known now as “cutting up” or “swimming” through traffic but if people followed the road rules and actually used the lanes correctly, we wouldn’t have anybody doing that. but here we are.
Yep but it's really amazing driving on a european highway, everyone keeps right or moves over if they see you behind. I remember seeing some european dashcam videos and people post having to slow down when a car in the left lane didn't move over in time 😂. Here they wouldn't move over at all
In Portugal is mandatory to travel on the far right lane (no matter the number of lanes!), and only use the other lanes to pass as mention in the video, penalty is 300€ for the first time, following ones could lead you to lose your license). Civism are the result of somewhat a kind of penalty before we can appreciate it. This is EU future/ goal: "In order to ensure compliance with the law, persistent follow-up of road traffic offences and enforcement of sanctions are necessary. Controls should be systematic; sanctions should be effective and applied to all offenders that would help to move closer to the long-term goal of zero road fatalities in the EU by 2050." "Vision Zero" Safety Goal for Mobility and Transport
I think the problem is that mostly nobody knew this, myself included, and it makes sense but you can't apply it when the inefficient way is the way for most.
Well we in Germany do have other problems: aggressive drivers (some drivers Really mind being overtaken) and Speed differences from 80 km/h (big trucks over 7 tonnes) and up to 250 km/h, Some few Even faster:D
@@TheNirgo I mean if it’s legal then I guess it can’t really be a problem. Kinda hard to slow the car down from 250kmh to pass someone going 130 at a slower difference.
90% of Belgians love the middle lane. I always pass them on the right. Or I pass them on the left and go all the way right really quickly. Sometimes they see and then go right as well XD
Turkey’s just as bad, if not worse than the USA. But the problem here is that most of these rules aren’t even taught + much worse things are not penalised by the police.
Better yet, add this to the permit test. Force future drivers to understand what which highway driving lane is PROPERLY for. Then in Drivers Ed, and finally a warning from sheriff after they follow you in a unmarked sheriff’s vehicle. Of course I didn’t know about this till this video showed up in the algorithm (
My nephew got hes licens 2 years ago, he was told the right way, but I was out driving with him yesterday and he made many small misstakes, you can tell People the right way 1000 times, ones they get out on there own, they get the habbits, most of the People that HOG the lanes knows its wrong, they just dont care, like tedward say, they Are lasy and simply dont feel like moving over for the ramps on and off. My Sister do it, she knows its wrong, but she dont care, for reasons like tedward explain about being boxed in.
Chen Yu: "They should implement this RUclips video into driver's education". The only problem with that is that the right lane is NOT the travel lane on 3 lane highways in the United States. The middle lane is the travel lane, the left lane is the passing lane and the right lane is used, primarily, for entering & exiting the highway though it can also accommodate slow moving traffic (hence, it's nickname, the "granny lane"). Only a person completely unfamiliar with U.S. highway travel would travel in the granny lane, move two lanes to the left to pass a vehicle in the middle lane and then move two lanes to the right back to the granny lane. This isn't Europe; it doesn't matter how traffic flows on the autobahn.
Ah yes in Belgium we call them "middenvakrijders" when they keep cruising in the middle lane. Best of all is when you try to pass them on the left lane and they suddenly out of nowhere start accelerating 🙄 ...
@@yannickverstraete8784 en zeer irriteert. Zeker waneer je op de rechter rijstrook rijd En iemand in eens zijn afrit bijna mist en voor je neus in eens komt Van de 3de rijstrook.
Gelukkig hebben we een jaar of 2 geleden een campagne van de overheid rond middenvakrijders gehad plus meer controle door de politie waardoor ik persoonlijk wel heb gemerkt dat het nu beter is. Maar zelfs vroeger was dit niet te vergelijken met de verenigde staten. Daar was ik, als ervaren chauffeur, toch redelijk gestresst tijdens de eerste paar ritjes over de highway.
We have the same rule in France than in Germany. Everyone has to be on the right lane, regardless of the number of lanes available on the highway, and we overtake only from the left. Especially if you see that you drive at the same speed than someone in front of you or there is no traffic anymore (if you feel you are faster than cars in front of you, you can stay on the middle lane until you pass the cars you wanted to pass), go on the right lane and don't stay in the middle lane for nothing... Even worst on the left lane. And we have 130km/h speed limit on our highways. (80mph)
Because they’re going within or slightly above the speed limit and you passing them comes across you being impatient and not happy with their speed within legal limits
@@BRBallin1 Yeah, MOVE out of the fuckin way. Especially if you are in the FAST lane. Annoying ass humans. YOU are the problem. Not people trying to pass. Some states actually have laws against driving slow in the passing lane.
No doubt. I've actually had CHP pull over the car I moved over for in the left lane twice in the last month. It pays to have situational awareness and drive safely :)
You can't save the world, as long as you know what to do while driving, keep yourself safe. There's no need to have road rage and upset yourself every time you enter or exit the highway. Not everyone is going to follow the rules, it's life.
I did the same thing. I rewatch them from time to time in an attempt to keep myself above water as terrible driving etiquette seems to have become an epidemic alongside COVID, and I'd rather catch neither.
Agree with you. As a European that's lived in the US for almost 40 years, the majority of American drivers are terrible. I get sick of hearing the Transport Safety Board say that "speed kills". Yes, it can, but the major cause is stupid drivers that don't know how to handle a modern vehicle, or how to properly drive. The majority of American drivers wouldn't last 2 minutes in Europe, and if they did, they'd collect so many tickets they'd choke. As a side note - I think part of the reason that American drivers avoid the right lane is the condition of that lane - it's usually chewed up by heavy trucks. The reason for that is that the roads are made cheaply by German standards. The reason for that is, it keeps people employed in rebuilding/renovating infrastructure.
I think haning only automatics has a role in that, you control that kind of car with only two pedals and the steering wheel, it requires less attention from the driver and on top of that even the most unfit can drive that kind of car (I'm not referring to some type of handicap or amputees, it's great they can drive too, I mean unfit in the sense there are people that don't have a clue about how you should drive safely and correctly). In europe you must learn on a manual and if somebody doesn't have a clue of what he's doing he doesn't get the license
Nope u just dont have any idea of what terrible driving is lol go to asia or africa so u can truly see the chaos that is traffic. If u have never been outside of Europe or North America u have no right to comment
I wouldn’t say the majority of American drivers are terrible. I think you’re right about the right lane often being complete shit. No way I’m hanging in the shitty right lane
Watchting this video as a German pushes my heart rate and pressure to the maximum to see how they drive an America. You are absolutely right about the points you make. I think why the accident rate in Germany is lower then America’s is correlated to the fact that Germans know how to use the lanes, even though we don’t have everywhere speed limits. Furthermore, speeding is dangerous as your relative reaction time becomes longer due to the high speed, therefore its is taught that you have to drive predictably.
Yes! Being predictable is the most important thing when driving. Another issue we have here is that far too many people try to be considerate rather than predictable.
Where are you driving in Germany to think that things are even slightly better here? I have seen every issue mentioned in this video seen on german highways, and not as an exception, but the norm. Right lane is for trucks exclusively. And good luck trying to get room on the left lane if you drive a shitty car. If you drive an Audi, BMW or Mercedes, people make room, if you drive a shitty Opel Corsa, doing 160km/h while they do 120, they just ignore you.
I live in the US, and this wasn't one of the major things I was taught when learning to drive. The only thing I was taught concerning this was to go to the left lane if you were passing. A one-time mention, no further explanation, no examples, no question that I remember being tested on while doing the driver's test. Thanks for the lesson.
All my years of driving I never knew this. I genuinely thought it was only a slow, cursing and fast/passing lane. Now watching this video it the “correct” way just makes so much sense. I wish at some point of my education this was taught and beaten into me along with everyone else around me.
WELL NOW YOU KNOW WHY PEOPLE PASS YOU AND WANT TO KILL YOU. DO YOU LIKE NEVER LOOK AT YOUR REAR END MIRROR AND WONDER WHY YOU HAVE 40000 CARS BEHIND YOU WHILE NOBODY IS IN FRONT OF YOU? AND BC OF YOU LOL THAT IS WHY TRAFFIC HAPPENS? NEVER CROSSES YOUR MENTAL INTELLEGENCE?
Same, I thought that the right most lane was used for only exits for some stupid reason, I was taught this in drivers ed and I do believe that they should make this a law and start giving out tickets to people who hog the passing lanes and start teaching this in drivers ed classes
Preach dude! I've driven extensively in Europe (Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, Netherlands, and Germany), and in every single one of those countries, people understand this concept. Germans will not stay in the passing lane on the Autobahn for one second longer than necessary. Unfortunately, it's not a lot of these people's fault. Poor driver education in the US is to blame. Michigan's driver handbook even says that you may drive in any lane on a freeway with three or more lanes. Thankfully, I learned freeway driving from my dad, who understands how to drive on one.
If we keep our right in Europe, it is because it is mandatory. Especially in France where the penalty for overtaking on the right is strong with a fine and demerit points. It happens a few times that some stay on the left but it's totally forbidden (they risk a fine) and very frowned upon because it's dangerous because generally they don't go very fast when you come behind at high speed. The danger is that people change lanes when you are speeding, and to prevent this I generally make lights calls when I get to a speed at least more than 50 kmh (30mph) above the speed limit
I mean in germany its told by law that you always have to drive on the right lane unless u have to pass Called "rechtsfahrgebot" what roughly translates to right lane driving command
It's not just western Europe. As someone who's driven all across the Western Balkans, Hungary, Greece, etc... The etiquette is highly respected. A good chunk of people doesn't care about speed limits, but it's absolutely a big deal if you use the highway incorrectly. Since these countries are a little bit less developed, the road network is also smaller, but these regions I mentioned all are a part of one of the busiest Europe routes that go to Turkey and Middle East. So, everybody is aware of lane rules. I remember even back in the day in the driving classes, we used to talk a lot about that. You can only imagine what kind of chaos starts when these kinds of roads get congested. Since there is no alternative road, people from all across Europe are stuck and that creates anger. To make things worse, these countries are not all in the Schengen zone, so border controls are long and extensive. Couple that with road congestion and you just cost a lot of people, a lot of time, money, and nerves.
Add, some old ladies and completely distracted cell phone users. Oh! And remove the: I don't believe in going ONE Speed or speed limits like the author of the video. Seriously! Peace and harmony would be abound. 🕊️
You nailed it. When I visit NYC, Philly and other major cities, the MOST dangerous thing I often encounter is that people will use the middle lane as a cruising lane. It's "okay" if they are doing the speed limit but often times, they are doing 10-15 BELOW the speed limit and this causes a huge bottle neck with major braking. I mostly cruise in the right lane at the speed limit but this bottle neck screws everyone and infuriates me lol. GET OVER TO THE FAR RIGHT LANE DAMNIT!!!! The most mind blowing experience happened to me this week using the LIE. A women was doing about 40 in a 55 in the middle lane with NO traffic in front of her and she was living her best life chomping on an apple. No worries for her but everyone else was hard braking, doing rapid lane shifts and random lane changes to "beat" traffic and to just maintain the correct flow of traffic.
I see this way too often. I'd take a fast driver any day of the week. I'd even take a driver watching Netflix over these dunces camping in the middle lane.
Where I live in EU, if you were to cruise in middle or left lane like those guys, everyone would tailgate you, flash lights at you and generally get pissed untill you would move right. We even have a "traffic code law" that states you have to move to the right to let faster vehicles pass you. It doesn't even say at what speed. If he's faster, you MUSTN'T slow him down, obstruct...
This law also exists in the States. There are signs up and down the freeway that state either "Slower vehicles stay right" or Right lanes for passing only." Does anyone listen? Lol, no way.
The US definitely has those laws. Depending on what state you're in people follow them to an extent. Ome of the biggest problems is that American highways are often filled with semis. Depending on what highway you're on and all, but they all end up using the right lane. So you use the middle.
@@Tinfoil_Hardhat But in that case then it's the intended way to use the highway - you're in the middle because you're passing. The problem is when they stay in the middle even when there's like 800m of empty space in the right lane.
Ok, but there’s more to this. First of all consider trucks in Europe are speed limited, so when they occupy the right lane, it creates a 100 kph merging buffer. No matter the speed limit of the highway, trucks set a merging pace; predictable. So that’s simply not the case in America, trucks here are moving fast, overtaking, travelling at different speeds, making it unpredictable to merge; the American solution is to straddle the middle. Second, low American top speed limits are invariably why German style passing regiment will never be followed. On the Autobahn, Drivers have an incentive to move to the right, as there is always someone faster to overtake you, and travelling at +150 kph burns fuel fast. Most people Cruze at 140 kph. In America, occupying left is seen as a way of committing to going as fast as possible... despite an enforced limit everyone breaks to different thresholds. You get just one driver who feels he has hit a “maximum threshold” of speeding- boom the left lane is clogged and Americans commit to the usual behaviour of passing right, tailgating etc. Third, consider how American merging lanes / right lanes are designed. You will find right lanes are nowhere as nearly congruent as they are in Europe. Right lane driving in America is a constant hunt for which lane is the right lane, because some right lanes will merge into a double lane exit, or a turnpike turnoff... the right lanes they seem are designed to torture the driver who who dare to stay in their embrace for anything more that a few minutes. I provide three points as to why I think the tide will be against us in improving this driving etiquette. I don’t think all hope is lost, but it will definitely require the political will to: A) mandate truck speed limiters B) increase or remove speed limits C) re-reengineer the right lanes for better continuous lane occupancy.
Part of the problem is highway patrol rarely enforce the laws about the left lane is mainly used for passing. In Germany, they figured out that many auto accidents were caused by people trying to pass other people in right lane, so it was designated that the left lane was for passing on the Autobahn.
Biggest problems from my view on US highways (you basically said all the same points): - People don’t know how to merge. They do not accelerate enough, and they merge onto the highway at a significantly slower speed than traffic creating hazards. I see this constantly - people merging at 25 onto a 55. - Roads that could safely support higher speeds are capped very low, drivers who obey the limit are at risk because of the lack of lane etiquette - Speeding is dangerous is a bad take to make up for terrible distracted drivers. Modern vehicles can safely move at a high rate of speed when OPERATED BY AN ATTENTIVE DRIVER. The ultimate solution would be adopting German style drivers education and permitting. But then I think most Americans would loose their license to drive when such a high bar is applied.
Facts on point two live in CT and some of our highways speed limits are only 50 mph when they can easily be 60- 75 that’s the speed everyone is going on the highway anyway
Little problem with the merging onto the highway at the speed you want is that sometimes there are cops parked either right after the on ramp or prior so if your coming onto the highway at 50 or 60 you better believe your getting pulled over.
@@KonohazFinest Most cops don't know anything about the law, but the speed signs on most on-ramps are actually advisory and not limits. It's completely legal to come onto the highway at 55 or 65.
Its just occurred to me that maybe using signals and changing lanes so often is just too much work for them. Here in Canada we've got a similar problem but it extends to transport trucks too hogging the middle lane and then all cars just drive in the passing lane like its a one way highway. Even trucks pass in the left lane! (which is illegal for us here) and our governments idea to fix it isn't keeping an eye on road behavior but instead to just add more lanes. I'm afraid our problem is never gonna get fixed
[forgive me for bad grammar] last week I was driving the A4 highway in German and sadly there was similar problem with people. I heard that on Autobahn most of people know the rules.. On normal highways this problem occurs probably everywhere xD
Most likely people that watch these videos are (I'm guessing) driving enthusiasts or someone who has good habits already and are confirming or wanting to learn more. The "hogging-left-lane holding-phone-by-face-even-though-I-have-Bluetooth one-hand-driving" drivers will never watch this and quite frankly will never give a s*it
I’ve always been taught that the left lane is the passing lane, but my driving ed class instructed us to stay out of the right lane on three lane highways as it was the exit/entrance lane. Many of the highways in my state have the right lane suddenly end and merge left, or become exit only. I think what you are saying makes sense, but it’s hard to make that a standard practice when the right lane rarely ever designed to be cruised in. Further complicating things is that in many urban areas in and around Seattle, a third of the exits are in the left-most lane rather than the right lane, meaning the passing lane becomes the exit lane. I’m totally against cruising in the left, but I’m pointing out that sometimes the interstate itself was designed in such a way that following those "rules" is rather impossible, especially in urban areas.
@@PiotrT-ue1jw I agree that the aren't in conformance with highway engineering guidelines, and it would be much better if they were built 'correctly'. Although 'correct' might not be the right term, since sometimes engineering solutions involves a lot of compromises.
Man shut up if you’re living in seattle. you’re really over exaggerating it. You can definitely cruise in the right lane on I-5 for majority of it here but you’re definitely right about having left lane exits in some areas, but it’s really not that complicated to start merging to the left if you need to before hand…it’s all about setting yourself up and not waiting last second to merge into the exit lane if you know the roads here. And if you dont, then it’s really just a skill issue and you still have no excuse if you use a gps since it’ll literally tell you how far you are from the exit
Tl dr, I taught myself to drive "slow" in the right lane, and it is relieving to do so on long commutes. I used to drive fast 80mph+, usually passing left and crusing the middle to avoid the slower mergers, especially when I know the ramps are short and blind (if youre quite above the speed limit, crusing the right lane is asking for trouble). I had the mindset that i always had to be moving forward until i got to a group of cars traveling the same speed as me. My commute now is an hour, and i learned most cars are most efficient around 50-65mph (tested and saw a difference with my fuel economy). I first tried crusing right lane about 60-65. Even though the speed limit changes between 65 and 50 it felt dangerous because so many people were passing me, and I had to "trust" they would do it safely. Eventually I bumped my speed to 65-70 it was a good balance, less fuel efficient, but at least it didn't feel like everyone was passing me at double the speed. Anyway, i taught myself to drive slower, be far more accommodating, and always lean towards aself-defensee driving stance. On long commute, having to constantly pass peopl and check for cops, all while maintaining a higher speed is exhausting. Learning to drive "slow" in the right lets me be more at ease. I simply allow more space in front of me so its easy for people to pass or cut in if they missed their exit. If i have a choice to speed to pass or slow and let merging cars find their lanes, I choose to slow down. It requires less brain on my end. Also, my car is 15 years old, and it's on the slower end now. Trying to accelerate quickly above the speed limit will likely cause conjestion unless the left lanes are completely clear.
Well I'm guilty. You caught me, along with 95% of drivers in the US. You do make a lot of good points though we weren't taught any better in driving school, been driving for over 15 years. I75 is filled with semi tractor trailers hogging all lanes of the highway, the best part is they are most likely governed and can't go much faster than the other so it takes forever for them to pass each other lol
Yep… limited to 68 here 😒. Heres a great idea. Put tractors with trailers limited to 61-68 on a 80mph speed limit highway. That is not dangerous at all.
Limited to 70mph here myself. Nothing but hills will stop me passing someone going 69mph, only because in my 11hrs of legal driving time if I can I will so I can get 650+ mi per day it makes a huge difference on my paycheck if I can go my 70mph instead of staying stuck behind someone going 1mph slower than me. All interstates are like that too, take it from an OTR driver.
All good dudes, I've worked at FedEx Freight as a cdsa for the past 8 years now an OTR pulling double pups (23 ft) doesnt matter if I'm in on of their kenworths, volvo, peterbilt or international we are only limited to 65. If we do 70 all kinds of chimes and beeps start going on. Most of the roads are 65 to 70mph along i70 and i75 though where I travel.
I was just about to say semis completely ruin this system of lane etiquette. When you have truckers hogging all 4 lanes of traffic because they feel the need to take at least 30 minutes to pass another trucker all other drivers are screwed. What we truly need is a law banning semis from using designated passing lanes so they won't constantly turn themselves into 18 wheeler traffic jams.
@@JohnSmith-nj9qo When the truckers who stop cursing 65 in the middle lane stop doing that I will keep to the more right lanes. But until then I will continue to move over all the way left to pass if I’m faster. That being said only if the right lane is blocked. There is very few areas that say “no trucks left lanes” so there is no law saying I can’t either when that sign is not present.
I’ve gotten a reckless driving ticket doing this lol. I still don’t understand why I got that ticket, i used my turn signal the entire time and was only going 10 above the speed limit.
@@keithw8307 there is zero credible evidence to support it, but concrete evidence showing speeding doesn't correlate with more accidents. (More deaths yes, but cause accidents that would have occured anyway may be fatal). Either way most traffic laws are designed for extortion, not safety, and a few police captains have admitted this themselves.
As a new driver I’m so great full I came across this video because I’ve yet to go on the highway. I try to drive very safe, patient, and defensive, so it’s so frustrating how many freaking idiots are let on the road. There’s thousands of videos of people literally STOPPING in the middle of the highway because of road rage. I think people forget how dangerous driving a car can be
This makes perfect sense for highways with reasonable exits. At least where I am in Columbus, Ohio, the third right lane often turns into an exit-only lane. If you're going through an area with many exits, it's really more of a hazard to stay in the right and have to constantly lane change. Don't even get me started on on-ramps that double as exit lanes for what seems like only a few hundred feet.
@@kevindt100 i know thats why its even weirder that their highway speed is our country road speed. And our highway speed is obviously as fast as your car let you go
@@real.jeremy.clarkson Damn. The max speed on highways where I live is like 60. Everyone goes 55. The highway is also in the middle of nowhere, with no towns for like 4 hours, and it’s completely straight. Most highway are about 55mph and people still go 50, and then everyone hogs the left lane, on a two way highway. Any other road that isn’t a highway is 30-40mph. And people STILL go 25.
@@Chevsilverado lmao i can not imagine driving so slow on a highway, no wonder there are so many accidents cause u get bored and distracted so quickly... in Germany about 60% of the Autobahn have no speed limit but that doesnt mean everyone speeds. Most people drive about 130-160 kmh (80-100 mph)
it's not rocket science, if you wanna help people merge on, then move over, then move back. American roads are a dream to drive on, yet you guys have some of the highest fatality rates among developed nations per capita. Some of the slip roads (on-ramps) near my house in Europe are 150ft long at most, yet you don't hear us complaining, we make do. These particular on-ramps are so short you will often find people have to come to a complete halt and wait for a gap to merge with traffic going 80+, yet accidents rarely happen because European drivers are trained to MUCH higher standards. Much, MUCH higher standards.
I agree-obviously depending on the context. What some people might not realize is that there are freeways with two or more exits per mile-mostly in urban areas that had their freeways built so long ago that engineers didn’t know better, or had political pressure to add an excessive quantity of exits. It makes the right lane so chaotic that freeway engineers sometimes create dedicated “weave lanes” where the only people allowed in the right lane through the densest part of an urban area are those exiting or entering in the next 3-5 exits. Downtown seattle has 2-lanes dedicated to continuing south, and 3-lanes dedicated to weaving south.
Well yes, but at least 70% of Americans have high displacement, high horsepower vehicles. All you gotta do to merge at the right speed is put your foot down.
Yeah-unfortunately probably that same 70% of Americans leave a following distance the length of a popsicle stick between cars. Not only does this lead to a ton more traffic and rear-end-collisions, but it makes merging so much more challenging where there are no gaps between cars.@@GTDpowah
The thing is if you have a slower car every literal 60 feet on the right, I might as well stay in the middle. Because I'm constantly passing someone. It's another thing entirely if you're in a relatively empty highway and there's more room in the right lane so getting back over to the right makes plenty of sense. But with the way things usually are there isn't even room in the right hand lane between each slow guy. Your video looks great, there isn't too many cars. But so many people spend a lot of time driving in more congested highways and get trained to use the middle lane as the cruising lane, and sometimes even the left lane as the cruising lane. Because there's no extra spare room in the right hand lane to simply cruise in it at speed when you're done passing. You're literally always passing.
My grandma lives and drives in Jersey and she YELLS at my sister when she’s driving in the left or middle lane. It’s so funny to see her take driving so seriously as a 70 something year old woman in a big v8 e class Mercedes
@gedeon parker man let me tell you.. I have to drive from Grand Rapids to Brainerd and for years until about a year ago it was 55 max the whole way until the last 10 miles that was 60... it’s so shitty. Also no one knows about what lanes to use here
@gedeon parker I just drove to the cities and back last weekend and (Woodbury) and on the way back once I got on the highway I found a guy and we went 85-90 the whole way to moose lake and one other dude came and joined . Haven’t done that since I can remember. It was fun. Helped all the snow melted lol
Yep, most people think slow vehicles go right, normal in the middle and fast in the left regardless the traffic. This is a universal conception I believe. At least here also in Greece.
I'm behind you on this a hundred percent. I come from a country where this is taken for granted and taught to learners. While driving in Germany, I noticed another example of freeway etiquette (apart from giving room to merging traffic): temporarily slowing down in the leftmost lane when another vehicle ahead is going to need to use it to overtake a slower middle lane vehicle.
I think Jeremy Clarkson put it best. The outside (left for LHD countries) lane(s) are like the toilet. You go in, do what you need to do, and get out. You don’t stay there 24/7
When I was traveling in the US, didn't know drivers didn't know this, and I also didn't expect them to rage so easily. As a result, one time I was flashing my beams so the driver would move over to the right but no, he brake checked in the middle of the highway and chased me all the way to my exit.. Good stuff
If that is true, its kind of sad, we learn All that in Denmark, but People still dont know or care about those rules, for exsample in Finland, People learn to drive the cars from a really young age, learning licens driving with a licensed Co driver, the reason why Finland has some of the safest streets, so i have been told :)
When driving through a city with traffic and a lot of onramps, the middle lane usually becomes the commuter lane otherwise we'd be changing lanes every 5 seconds. Even when joining at the speed limit, most are going over. It's a multivariate issues and seems easy on paper. Constantly moving in and out of lanes moving at different speeds isn't safe either. Staying to the right applies well when traffic is low. I've driven in Europe, they're more stringent about the passing lane, but it often ends up being similar when traffic is high. They also have FAR fewer 3 lanes highways. That being said, people who live the far left lane are the absolute worst.
In Europe the rules are to put safety first, you are indeed allowed to stay in the middle lane if there is an on ramp very soon with traffic merging. Otherwise you should move over to the inside lane. It is also ok to move to the middle lane when approaching an on ramp to allow traffic space to merge safely when there is heavy traffic. Again it is safety that is important when making decisions so whilst this is not ideal it is an option that is available.
far right lane is for anyone doing the speed limit or going slower and for exiting for sure . far left lane is for passing only and does not allow tractor trailers. middle lane is generally for cruising.
It seems pretty simple to me. The far right lane is reserved for people who are about to SLOW down for exits in their lane. Middle is for cruising, left for passing. Treat it as a 2 lane highway with a turn lane or "merge lane" per say.
@@TedwardDrives It is much more efficient if you treat it this way. Do you really think on a 4-5 lane highway they want you changing 3-4 lanes just to pass somebody? That is way more dangerous
@@TedwardDrivesso it's safer to do 4 lane changes to pass on the left than do 0 lane changes to pass someone 2 lanes away from you on the right? Doesn't make sense unless you assume "passing on the right is always unsafe"
Probably my single biggest driving pet peeve. And so many people have no idea they're in the wrong. Even worse are the people who think they're doing a service by blocking traffic that wants to go faster than them.
@@cyuan1990 proper lane driving certainly won't stop rush hr, but it would immensely reduce traffic in literally every other situation. 90% of traffic where I live (south jersey) is because passing is impossible. Everyone here drives under the speed limit & hogs every lane all the time. Lines of cars all backed up, restricted because everyone is going 5mph under in the left & middle lanes. When I finally get to pass, I watch a mass of traffic grow in my rear view & I have an open road 90% of the time. It's out of control.
@@kona6732 thats just wrong lmao. Theres a differnce between a dense highway where all 3 lanes are using and an empty one. Also with all lanes being used you still can follow the principle that the lane to your left is faster, the one to your right is slower. So everybody can choose the speed he/she is comfortable with instead of having slow drivers in all 3 lanes.
This video has taught me a lot. I'm a relatively new driver (just turned 21), and the only rule that is touched upon in this video that I actually follow is using the left lane as a passing lane. I always move over to the left lane when passing someone (unless there's nobody around, admittedly), but I generally use the middle lane on 3-5 lane highways as the cruising lane. It's a bit harder on a 5 lane highway in a congested city to switch over to the right lane and stay there because I generally pass everyone in the right 2 lanes, but I will definitely start to try and practice staying in the rightmost/cruising lane. It's true, driver schools in the US (at least where I'm from) don't teach you anything about lane etiquette and it's sad to see.
You are doing it right. In the US, we don't feel a need to leave 2 or 3 or 4 lanes empty for the people who want to go 15,30,45mph over the speed limit. That is not the focus. On a 3+ lane road, it's basically seen as the left lane is for passing, the right lane if for merging on and off the highway, and the middle lanes are for normal drivers doing about the speed limit. So basically it's a 2-lane highway that has a permanent exit and entrance ramp on the right. And most drivers seem to get this. If you're lucky, those doing right at the speed limit will stay in the rightmost of the middle lanes on a 4+ lane road and you'll get something like our hero is looking for, but it's pretty rare--usually when there are 4 or 5 or 6 lanes going your way it's because there's crazy mad traffic with people coming on and going off the highway and drivers jockeying left and right like it's a NASCAR track.
To be honest, here in Spain driving schools teach you right in terms of how to use a highway, BUT some people are rucking retards. There's always someone with a Mercedes or a BMW thinking they are better than you (even if their car is some old crap 300k miles 2.0 diesel), and they just drive at the left lane the whole time, pushing everybody and screwing up people who drive alright. Maybe in USA driving schools need to improve, BUT people have to make their move too. People should want to drive correctly, and that's not going to be an easy task. Greetings from some random 20yo!
Nice! I'm glad to see people are willing to listen to others and how we all can improve our daily commute to and from places. Yes, driver education has to change. We gotta stop thinking about ourselves and think about others and how we can make their day better by simply eating our egos and letting faster traffic move forward.
Like the video if you hate lane hogs. It's ok if you're guilty of these wrong lane sins...Just do better and tell your friends. Highways can be more open, safe, and relaxing if we use the correct lanes. Edit: My blinker was used on EVERY lane change. Shocking for a BMW driver yes. But please look closely before commenting that "he didn't use his blinker."
I think the biggest thing behind the poor highway driving because nobody is ever really taught these things. This coming from a relatively new driver (3 years).
I invite you to visit Maryland for a good laugh, no situational awareness on our highways lol
I am not from the US. I have been to the US and have driven in the US though. I did use observation as my teacher when using the highways, unfortunately lol...now I know the right way to use highways and will apply the knowledge if I visit the US again.
Plase do more of these to spread awareness!
In Germany we have the "Rechtsfahrgebot" or "commandment to drive on the rightmost lane" for exactly that reason. It also is ignored often but the left lane is almost only being used for overtaking and people move at least into the middle lane after that in 95% of cases. Also overtaking on the right is not allowed here except in cities but I do overtake mid lane hoggers occasionally just to remind them of their mistake, often enough they move to the rightmost lane after that. However the right lane is often full with trucks and people tend to stay in the middle lane because of that which is allowed because that negates the commendment to drive on the rightmost lane.
I drive a lot because of work and drove the A2 to Berlin the other week, if you are lucky and people keep moving to the right like they are supposed to you can easily drive over 200kmh on the left lane without much problem. Top speed from Berlin to my hometown was 231kmh on the Autobahn, but those high speeds are often interrupted by drivers that don't use their mirrors properly and thus you have to use the brakes.
German here: Never thought I'd see the day an American BMW driver would correctly explain lane etiquette and use their turn signals.
Amazing times we're living in
EU driver here, i don't know wtf are they doing on the left lane, if you pass you move right, we have 2 lane highways and yes i am a fellow bmw driver, but still, wtf murrica
@@theslobotfather Nobody cares about the EU, you're irrelevant
@@theslobotfather it is like this everywhere though, people do cruise in the middle lane because often the slower lane is used by slow trucks and all so instead of switching lanes all the time, you keep in the middle lane, it is safer than overtaking all the time.
@@fs5866 it all depends, if everyone follows the pattern yes, else it's safer to stay right
Bro comparing Germany to America we have bigger population, more cars. Also switching lanes repeatedly is one of the highest reasons accidents happen. If you want to pass people use the passing lane. If somebody is going the speed limit you can’t get mad at them they are following the law.
This video actually has one the rarest occurrences in all of natural history...a BMW driver using turn signals.
the irony of this comment being the most common on every BMW post
😂😂😂
Haha original
Only haters that can’t afford expensive cars say that. The brand does not make the driver. I drive a van at work, a BMW and a Honda motorcycle at home. So i give signals when I’m at work and on my motorcycle but not when im in the BMW??? 🤨 If i don’t regardless, then your logic makes even less seance. The funny thing is that you are probably one of the people that, that video is targeting. 🤣
@@DirtyRaveMind its called a joke
Here’s the irony. Since these incorrect lane use practices are so ubiquitous, using the lanes correctly is unpredictable and confusing to those around you.
He already said that
it's like changes in language, basically enough people have to speak it incorrectly that it becomes part of the language and is now correct
@@zhawk18she likely made the comment before hearing him say that.
He's a douche who is clearly going like 10 over the speed limit.
Omg just pass the guy on the right if he's going a reasonable speed in the middle lane. You're being dangerous as fuck dude.
There is no 'losing' on the highway. It's not a fucking race.
Holy fuck I hate this guy so much.
I passed my Kentucky drivers test with 10 hours of driving experience with zero highway driving experience. Our tests in my city were taken in downtown, idiots were more concerned about parallel parking than anything else lmao
That explains a lot. I learned to drive in VA, and moved to KY at one point. The drivers there were abysmal.
Same here! 10 hours was all I needed to learn how to drive. Parallel parking isn't even that hard.
Same in georgia
I had to log 50 hours of driving with 10 being at night in Montana. And 6 more hours with a driving instructor, who had us drive in all kinds of situations. It’s kinda crazy the difference between state requirements.
if you use your cell phone while you drive, you are an idiot too
As a german I really can’t imagine how it feels like to feel unsave on the highway. I mean we’re driving 130mph and have less accidents than in america. I think Rechtfahrgebot should be mandatory everywhere
hab jetzt erst verstanden dass er Rechtsfahrgebot sagt XD Danke
@Yoo Wat No the american highways are way mor dangerous than the german autobahn
@Yoo Wat nope Germany has the lowest rate at car accidents World Wide and that with higher speedlimit (normal roads its ~60 mph… thats almost the max speed the US can drive on their Highways)
@Yoo Wat wrong
@@blackchecker2009 not the lowest, but yea it's pretty low,(3.7/100 000 inhabitants) swiss for example (2.2/100 000 inhabitants)
In Slovakia, we use lane with least amount of potholes. So basically it seems like everyone is drunk as we are going from side to side
I heard that in Slovakia you get pulled over for driving straight because you must be either drunk or crazy
Here in Brazil too lmao
@@monke7156 yes. That is popular joke. Sadly, based on true story :D
I like your system of driving
🤣🤣🤣
As a German driving in the U.S I'm surprised I'm not dead yet.
Go drive in Florida for a little while.
There's a reason why there's no American drivers in f1 and never a legit winner. Mario Andretti was born in Italy. Never had a competitive manufacturer either.
@@annunakian8054 Phil Hill?
@@Redslayer86 worst drivers and heaviest enforcement of all traffic rules. If a cop stops you he'll literally scream at you!
@@acerusea5156 Phil Hill won the championship with a lead of one point. His opponent died during the second last race. If the season would have had no dramatic accident and if Wolfgang Graf Berghe von Trips would have had the chance to participate at the last race, Phil Hill would not have won the the F1 championship.
It's also road design. Having exits on the left means that slow drivers need to move into fast lanes just to make their exit.
Having exits only on the right removes this element and increases flow.
WHAT!? thats so silly
Exits on the left is very rare though... you only see that in a few cities where they don't have room to exit on the other side and in those cases its often in an area where the traffic is always relatively slow.
Never seen an exit on the left
Yea idk where you live but here we have like 1 exit on the left
We have left exits all over Texas highways. It's not rare but more like, uncommon.
This would drive me absolutely insane! Love the Autobahn even more now. Keep teaching them 😅
hoi
You’ve got a great thing going over there, that’s for sure!
They don't understand roundabouts either
Or you use sirens instead
Autobahn is fantastic if you do not mind a road system that is paid for by high taxes and less freedoms.
Having a nicer home, better finances and living in a country that is willing do defend itself is far more important.
My biggest fear in life is getting seen by Tedward in the wrong lane.
hahahahahahah
... and caught on video
Read your MANUAL
Same especially cuz I’m in mass
LMAO
as a 16 year old new driver they don't teach us any of this when getting our permit or our license, they actually teach us something completely different. so to be fair those cars are only doing what they were taught to do but this was extremely helpful information and I'll definitely keep this in mind while on the roads!
As long as folks only use left lane to pass and move right after we’re golden!
that's bull lol. Use the right lane for driving, and left lane for passing is driving 101. I don't know how'd you get your license xD.
This was absolutely taught in American drivers Ed. Quit making excuses. Left lane: pass. Right lane: slower traffic
Sincerely,
An American that got 100% on his license test
Idk what school you go to but im in Utah and for my school they taught us almost everything to know about driving enough to where I was confident to drive with only 4 hours of driving
POV: You failed the drivers test
This is the only YT video that's ever made a notable difference in my day-to-day life. Watched this two years ago, and I've been driving in a safer manner ever since. Feels good to be part of the solution rather than the problem.
Thanks for making a difference, Ted 👍
I'm sure it feels good to be completely alone and stuck behind slow ass drivers. 👍
Germany: This lane is for this, that lane is for that. You pass there, then go back here...
SoCal (in any lane): You either let me merge or we both die.
And there is Denmark which is a combination of both
In large Italian cities we mostly use indicators to mean "I am gonna go this way, yes I know I'll be cutting you off and no I don't care, see to it that we don't crash."
(Proceeds to ignore them in my 7k lb diesel pickup)
This is so true
Texas: if you don't drive an F-250, a Silverado, a Tundra, a Beemer, Benz or a Lambo, you're not allowed on the freeway anyway.
Problem seems to be driver's ed and even the license test doesn't cover this, seems like the knowledge is just not there amongst all the driver's and that's a huge problem that'll hopefully start to be fixed
Exactly, people literally just prepare to drive for the 10 minutes they need to just pass the test rather than learning how to actually drive!
it's about traffic culture and not giving a damn about other drivers
@@just_Lee2 This. The feeling of there's ME and then there's everybody else.
But I also think there's a second thing in play here: "everybody has the right to be an asshole." There simply are people who will deliberately do things like blocking and/or annoying others "just because they can."
@@tjroelsma yup usually its bmw people or trucks that tailgate me for 15 miles when there is an 18 wheeler in front of me 😂
Im an American and my mom told me to drive like this
I gave the German method of driving a shot earlier this week up and down the Mass Pike, and I was pleasantly surprised at how much safer I felt on the highways! Not to mention how efficiently I was moving through traffic! We really need to teach people that this is the most optimal way to drive.
You felt safer because you actually had an escape route to your right by keeping in the right lane. If you cruise down the center lane, you have no escape route to either side, but in the right lane, you can at least go to the break-down lane if you need to avoid something.
It shouldn't even be called the German method. It should just be how everyone drives all the time, everywhere.
Everyone in europe drives like this
@@paubayes2002 Yeah, Europeans are actually taught how to drive. Americans don't really learn from qualified instructors, but are taught by, and pick up all the bad habits of, their parents.
Most driving schools in the US don't even offer to teach driving on a manual car, for example. Just a few basic lessons in an automatic before sending you off to learn with your parents.
@@paubayes2002 except on the south-west going, 3-lane highway from Oslo, Norway. Nobody but trucks and buses use the right lane there.
There is a recent book called "confessions of a recovering engineer" that mentions some inherent problems with US highway design and differences in speed and time savings between our cities. Highways with frequent onramps and exit points are part of a larger design philosophy that is relatively new (1950's onwards) and for several years now has been showing its problems. Your video and the book I referenced both have some excellent insights for small, practical changes that might help to change our roads for the better.
I have also read this book and am a big fan of strong towns. I appreciate the pointers outlined in the video but a lot of people want to translate this to urban highways where there are many conflict points and entries from multiple points on the corridor, not just the right. When you take these rules outside of a limited access highway with high soeeds and no local destinations, all the rules laid oit above should go out the window. In places where you can turn left to access a business, the correct lane to be in is the one that will actually get you to your intended destination, regardless of whether or not you are passing anyone.
@@Mdb8900 yeah you're right it's hard to follow good driving principles on "stroads" essentially. An urban highway where you can make an unprotected left turn against oncoming traffic, in order to access a business is rather dangerous and inefficienct. It does both jobs poorly. It can neither move cars efficiently at high volumes and high speeds, and it also doesn't provide safe access to local businesses.
So to survive in a poorly-built stroad environment, I agree with you we have to use whatever lane gets us on the relevant side. Ideally, we'd build less stroads and make clearer delineations between local streets (designed to build wealth and provide access to shops and businesses) and roads (designed to move cars quickly over long distance). Skip the in-between portions of 55mph double lane + neutral turn lane setup that we see in the US everywhere. We are so used to them, even though they are inherently poor designs. If we could decrease conflict points on those corridors, it would help. But it's super hard to do retroactively! Until then, we will drive inefficiently and hog the left lane, in anticipation of our upcoming left turn, even if we're not passing slower traffic and the right lane is open... Darn stroads.
The trouble with this is it requires more driving and paying attention to the road which will distract me from scrolling through Instagram.
True.
Looking at your phone on the highway is extremely inconsiderate
@@sebastienjul6223 he’s joking
@@tegandteginus7767 he's joking.
@@sebastienjul6223 he's joking
As a Highway Patrol officer and driver enthusiast, I appreciate your video. But in states with 5-7 lane highways there’s no hope for lane courtesy haha.
A boy can dream
That's weird, in Europe there are usually 3, sometimes 4 and very very very rarely 5 lanes before an exit. So we don't have that problem here.
@@bananenmusli2769 the main highway that is a loop around my city, not even the main interstate, is typically 4-5 lanes around the whole city
Well here's the thing, if you actually WORKED if you actually DID YOU JOB and enforced proper lane use, we could. Everyonesays no one wants to work these days but post COVID the amount of cops and troopers I've seen has plummeted and the amount I see actually actively working is slimmer still. Get a move on pig
@@bananenmusli2769 This is becoming a big problem here in the UK, it's been getting worse and worse over the past several years, lane hogs are so bloody annoying!
I also feel like if a cop saw someone driving like this(correctly) he might pull them over because they're driving "erratically"
Seen it happen not mention he did multiple crossing lane changes lol which are unsafe as fuck.
@@roshawn1111 yea I was literally gonna say something about that. He is driving safe and that’s how people should drive but he’s crossing 2 lanes at a time literally most of the video which is illegal. I know it’s a stupid law but you can get a ticket if you jump 2 lanes without stopping to check the lanes. The way you change lanes going from the lane you’re in the the farthest lane is to look in your blind spot then go into the next lane, stop in that lane and keep your signal on, then check you’re blind spot again for someone speeding up trying to pass you on the right or left, then go to the final or next lane.
Apparently Tedward is unaware that it is legal to pass on the right on a multi-lane highway in the United States. It makes no sense to move from the far right lane to the far left lane in order to pass a driver in the middle lane and then move back to the right lane.
@@pcs5852 passing on the right is illegal depending on the state you are traveling in, and it's considered poor etiquette and can be argued as a mitigating factor for insurance/court claims, once again, depending on the state. In many cars the blindspot on the right is larger than the blindspot on the left. Don't be a douchebag and don't pass on the right if you can avoid it.
@@gavin9088:Actually, it has less to do with the state in which you are travelling and more to do with road conditions.
If you are travelling on a road with 2, or more lanes in one direction (which is why I stipulated "interstate"), and it is safe to pass, passing on the right is allowed.
There are many times when passing on the right is NOT legal, but interstate travel isn't one of them.
It's exactly the same in the UK. Hogging in the middle lane is a plaque. Some people are completely clueless about driving. Sometimes two right lanes are completely congested and the left lane free from traffic for miles.
I am German, but I lived in the UK for a few years. I have also driven in Italy a lot. There is a clear hierarchy of driving proficiency, and a clear hierarchy of driving proficiency.
Brits drive like Germans on their first day after they got their licence. Germans drive like Italians on the first day after they got their licence.
I haven't spent a lot of time on British motorways, but I actually don't remember lane hogging as that much of a problem. My main issue with other drivers was lack of experience with difficult situations and/or lack of concentration. On the plus side, British drivers tend to be more polite and more relaxed than German drivers.
On the other hand, most Italian drivers seem to be constantly under tension, and breeze through the craziest situations as a matter of fact, as if they were all stunt drivers. They have to, because of a handful of Italian drivers who do crazy stuff like going 30 km/h on the motorway without any regard to what's going on around them. And some crazy scary roads like that super busy motorway in the Po plane that has two extremely narrow lanes, no emergency lane whatsoever, and claustrophobia-inducing concrete walls on the side (if I remember correctly).
(Driving habits in France are somewhere between German and Italian, varying by region.)
American logic: speed is dangerous, lets make it slow, call it job done.
German logic: slow moving obstacles are dangerous, lets manage the way they position themselve, no obstacles no speed limit required.
slow moving objects are not dangerous...speed differential is.
@@TheNitroG1 🙈
@TheNitroG1 slow moving objects are not dangerous by itself, in Germany the trucks are driving maximum 90km/h (56 mph) at all times next to other cars that have no speed limit. But slow moving OBSTACLES are dangerous, please don't be an obstacles and stay on the maximum far right lane when possible.
Except that the speed limit in the US is one of the highest among countries with speed limits. Heck, even the German autobahn has an advisory speed limit of 80.8 mph, which is not far from the usual 70-80 mph we see in most US states. In practice, most drivers often drive 5-10 over the speed limit.
The speed limit will usually lower inside cities mostly for safety reasons. Yes, safety reasons. There may be sharp turns, many freeway exits/entrances, minor hills that obstruct the traffic ahead, etc. It is absolutely wise to lower the speed limit in these areas.
You also cannot compare Germany with the US. The US is in charge of a much larger population and also diverse population. Yeah, we might very well have more knuckleheads over here. To protect lives and prevent future lawsuits, we need to put “reasonable” speed limits in place. People need to stop seeing freeways as race tracks.
We have more "knuckleheads" because "we" have removed so much decision making from driving. Drivers don't pay attention anymore, which causes issues when oblivious / aggressive drivers do something unexpected. If we allowed uncertainty back into driving (removing speed limits would be a good start), drivers would be forced to pay more attention and work together, leading to a safer and more pleasant driving experience for everyone.
I had this amazing moment driving on the German Autobahn where I was overtaking someone and he was also coming up on someone slower than him. So what happened is that he signalled left, I signalled left, and the guy on my left also signalled left. So basically 3 lanes of cars simultaneously changed lanes to help one person. I just fell completely in love with driving in Germany after that experience. And it was not even a one time thing. It happened many times that people took advantage of the multiple lanes to avoid braking while also improving road capacity.
We Germans like efficiency. :D Try driving in Italy or parts of France. You want to punch other drivers in their face 20 times a day. ;D
It’s the same all over Europe
I've done this many times before to help other drivers, especially semi-trucks on American Roadways. I'm using the middle lane to pass someone on the right, see a slow car ahead on the right, and move to the left lane to make space in the middle. Sometimes people don't expect this and they still end up getting stuck behind the car on the right, but the people who do notice and move over will usually give you a thank-you flash.
Yup. In Poland many people have the good habit of changing to the left lane when driving by an entry to let the ones joining the highway have a safe and efficient way of joining its traffic. Not everyone does that but it isn't a rare sight. Sometimes I was even meet with the "thank you" dubble hazard light flash as we do it here.
We are taught to drive on highways the same way as Germans so yeah, and I think as most if not all Europeans.
Its really efficient when you have only 2 lanes. The traffic flows without any problems.
(And in advance I'm sorry if I made any mistakes regarding my English, its almost almost 1AM here and my brain may not be as well working as it it during the day. 😅😁)
One of the things you taught in driving lessons is to always observe traffic and anticipate situations. What you are describing is an exemple of this. Of course, you'll always find pricks that just don't care and don't move away, but as a general rule people do this in European roads.
“The left lane is the cruise lane for me... at 100MPH.” - Every lifted pickup truck driver ever.
Any pickup driver ever😭
and if you come to Saudi Arabia, rules for you as a Saudi,
1- full speed
2- don't care about your and others safety
3- don't wear seatbelt
4- 1.hand on steering wheel
5- hajawalah
6- remove speed sensor
7- remove numberplate
8- blast music's
9- snap chat it
10- sit with your cars seat as back and lower as possible
And brake check any car that’s behind them I swear every big suv or pick up has brake checked me
@@kevinmorelikekevout3639 the one thing I miss about driving a shitbox car was that, if anyone ever hit the car it was expendable and I didn't get brake checked much cause I think they knew this.
@@kevinmorelikekevout3639 nice I drive pick up on right lane 😂
This simply doesn't work on the highways I drive on in New York. You can't cruise in the right lane when there is 25 cars all merging in, and by the time the right lane has started to speed up there is another entrance lane and the cycle repeats. You have to use the middle lane to cruise and left to pass else you are just making it more dangerous for yourself and the others trying to get on.
And most of the time there's enough traffic where there is no such thing as cruising lol.
It does work; it's just situationally you are moving to the center to allow people on. It's exactly what the video is saying.
In a situation with 0 cars merging, you can move right. -- Fellow New Yorker
@@icallhax8304but to truly follow the hard line rule you should be changing lanes more often, not less. isn't a lane change the most unsafe thing you can do on the highway? The idea should be to reduce kane changes.
@@teagancombest6049 Oversimplified. When you follow lane discipline, you are reducing the number of NET lane changes across ALL vehicles, and you are reducing conflict points as traffic is separated by speed. Also know that you are required in all 50 states in some capacity to follow lane discipline.
I don't live in the US, but man just watching this video raises my blood pressure like nothing else. I truly feel for you guys, I'm so sorry you have to deal with this.
Get me the *FUCK* out of here please! I don't give a fuck if you have to tie me up and bag me, I need to leave *NOW!*
Thanks your sympathy is well appreciated.
Born and raised American, and love to just drive, cruise or whatever we may choose to call it. Living in Houston the past decade, has taking away the fun of just driving. So many people abuse these simple rules. Driving now gives me a lot of anxiety, I just want to get home and get out of my car. Traffic is horrible. You have to be an aggressive driver at times as well, which I will do, but rather not have to.
I still go for drives, but it is usually about 1 or 2 in the morning and on the back roads, if you want to call them that. There is always traffic, but it's a more tolerable driving experience.
At least where i live in California, its mainly the truckers that are the issue, they fully hog the right and middle lanes of the highway which means in order for some people to get anywhere faster than 55mph you tend to favor the fast lane which isnt ideal at all. if you get behind a big rig, you will for certain get rocks in your windshield and mess up your paint big time, so yeah it freakin SUCKS!!!
3 lane highway, everybody drives like its a 1 lane roads. Flow of traffic looks horrible.
Yeah i never realized I was doing it wrong until I saw this video. I instantly realized how much better AND faster this way of driving is. However, since im in NJ absolutely NO ONE follows this.
“Driving in the incorrect lane is more dangerous than speeding.” - couldn’t have said it better. Thank you.
Its funny too because those same people who denounce speeding will say; "Plan properly and leave on time so you don't have to speed".
Yet, these same people when asked why they won't sit in the right lane is; "Its too slow". They don't want to be burdened by the inconvenience of braking, letting cars in, driving behind slow cars or switching lanes.
Yet, the people who are complaining about them sitting in the left lane who they tell to "plan properly" share the exact same sentiment, its just different lanes and different speeds. Same issues.
So you can't 'plan properly' to leave on time to accept the rules of the road that are proven to work, but you want others to 'plan properly' and accept your speed and your rules which are proven to not work.
Although, if you just look at the division within our country, and the huge entitlement, this issue won't be fixed anytime soon.
Honestly, I think self-driving cars will be the closest thing to a solution, with proper programming, it will remove the stress of driving and set the rules up correctly. Win win.
@@mikehurbert5043 Even breakdown/shoulder lane?
@@ViolentMLG The other solution we already have is mass transit. Bus, tram, train, metro, etc. It is a matter of improvement and expansion.
In both cases the goal have similarities: prevent stupid people from driving the car themselves.
@@mikehurbert5043 sure, if your car has a minimum of 300 HP.
While I understand that is a very popular opinion in the enthusiast community, I don't think that is true. That is only something that people who like to speed tell themselves.
the worst is when you go to pass someone who was slower but then speed up so you cant pass them, then slow down when you go behind them again
Especially when you're just chilling with cruise control on a very long drive, and someone like that just ruins your flow because they're fragile
@@Mario_RX7 that's even worse. That's how people die. Just let it go
this is why having even a slightly fast car is fun, because you don't have to deal with people like this as much
It's actually an unconscious response people have. I've learned a few things to do in different situations.
1 - They speed up as you pass beside them
- In this situation, if you pin it and speed up 10km/h for a few seconds they usually end up returning to their original speed and you pass them nicely
2 - In situations where people have decided to speed up and then sit in your blind spot
- A nice swerve that looks as though you're about to change lanes and sideswipe them without exiting your lane will usually make them brake and stay back a little
3 - Your looking to pass and the car beside you speeds up to block you in
- This is truly annoying but I've learned that if you are getting close to the car in front as you get ready to pass often the drivers beside speed up. The solution is to actually stay a fair bit back and once adequate room has opened to pass do so quickly, passing with high throttle to avoid letting them speed up enough to box you in again. In nicer areas drivers will alow you to pass if you signal and give them a few seconds but thats not the reality for where I live
@@jacobvanhalteren7452 number 2 is insane behavior. You guys gotta chill
German here, the german word Rechtsfahrgebot stands for driving on the right and is translated: Rechts(Right)-fahr(driving)-gebot(command). The instruction to always drive on the right side. In germany, switzerland and austria you will get pulled over for being a lane hog. Absolutely enjoyed this video of yours Tedward
But "middle lane = cruising lane" at three-lane motorways seems to become slowly the social norm now as well.
SCHEISE!
@@gargoyle7863😢
In Ostdeutschland, Berlin, Hamburg, Niedersachsen oder Schleswig Holstein kapieren die meisten Leute das Rechtsfahrgebot. Baden Württemberg oder Bayern ist das Gegenteil da benutzt niemand die rechte Spur. Hast du auch die Erfahrung gemacht?
@@niwelezlusch9610 ich fahre tatsächlich überwiegend in Süddeutschland 😅 (ob es im Norden/Osten besser ist, kann ich gar nicht sagen)
I just took a driver safety course, to reduce my insurance cost, and the instructor went over this. Many of the older drivers said the drive in any lane they want because they pay taxes and they don’t care that others want to go faster, there going the speed limit and no one should be going faster! Someone like me who commutes 35 miles each way, it gets me crazy.
"I pay my taxes" is suchhhhh a bad excuse to be an asshole lol. Glad you see the light.
Legal wise in the State of Washington, it's legal to go 100 over the speed limit or even faster to pass, recommended that you go 15, cops might try and get you if they think you are being unreasonable though.
@@TedwardDrives yeah because we all pay our taxes whether we like it or not
I mean, no one should be passing you if you are driving the speed limit.
@@wigglytuffgaming traffic engineering studies this, they say varying speeds cause the best traffic flow, if everyone did 55 there would be massive traffic jams. Obviously your the guy in the left lane being oblivious to the line behind you.
As an American this is one of the main reasons why I felt unsafe driving on our highways which I couldn't quite explain... among other things like distracted and reckless drivers.
Proper lane etiquette is taught in Europe but not America for some reason. I hate to say but a lot of fellow America drivers are really dangerous drivers- on and off highways. We need to do better.
I feel unsafe while driving in America because 99% of drivers are too obsessed with the car behind them (most times I see people adjusting their mirrors) or their phones, once I see brake lights, it doesn't matter if it's a double lane and clear for me to pass, I'm passing the danger. It ain't my fault you decided to brake check and I am able to act accordingly because I am a safe and reasonable distance, SEE YA that's all you
In my area idiots decide to feed the horses on the highway drawing them to... you guessed it THE ROAD and blame the drivers like it's their fault for going the speed limit, NO it's theirs for feeding the horses on the main highway with no care for anyone's safety
Because the US has no public transportation so it has to give out licenses like candy w/o too strict standards. Because of this our speed limits have to be slow. 🐌
It is taught as a part of obtaining license how to use the lanes.
@@Stonerolog1st I have the opposite issue. People never look behind them, and they end up parking their car right in front of 20 other cars and creating a traffic jam.
Drivers course I took (online, authorized for Florida) taught students to:
-coast in the middle lane
-use left lane for passing
-use right lane to enter and exit highway ramps
That's crazy!
Lol, I think that EU highways are much safer.In the US taking driving license Is a joke in contrast with us.
@@aido2824 In America in many areas a license to drive is almost a requirement to live. The US is a SIGNIFICANTLY larger country than the UK, and has many areas with zero public transport.
@@Redslayer86 that is not an excuse tho.
@@aido2824 Lol, try driving across your entire country going 85 MPH.
In the time it takes you to do that, that's the amount of time it takes some people to get to work. It makes a huge difference. It is IMPOSSIBLE to live outside of a big city with no car. Some of our states are bigger than the vast majority of countries. Not a few, but a good amount of people live in a different state than they work. My family for instance.
people in my area don't travel in the right lane because often the right lane dissappears into an exit ramp that'd be unavoidable,and good luck on those exits where the 2 rightmost lanes turn into exits
Yeah. This sounds like it makes sense but it doesn’t work in America and having two passing lanes is pointless(I think it’s pointless anyway?). Staying in the far right lane on I5 is a total nightmare. Honestly the way he’s driving in the video feels kinda dangerous and unrealistic for those driving hours each day. It may be different in Germany but in America 3+ lane highways have been designed with the intent for the far right lane to only be used for merging in and out of the highway. The far right lane disappears at every single exit in some areas and if you are in that lane you typically (in larger areas anyways) will not be able to switch to the middle lane and avoid disappearing into an exit. I agree with the whole left lane passing lane thing but not this, it just doesn’t work with our road design. There aught to be a lane where you don’t have to worry about constantly merging with dreadful city traffic or having your lane disappear and not having the space to turn into another lane.
And the example country quoted in the vid is also a country with pretty decent passenger rail. That's why Germany is able to afford having the standards be so high to begin with
This a problem of improper following distance. If vehicles were using adequate following distance, merging over from an exit only lane would not be a concern, no matter how congested it is. I'm a truck driver and even when at a complete standstill I try to leave plenty of space ahead of me. Some assume it is so I can get rolling faster... or that I'm being a nice guy so they can cut in front of me to gain two inches... -it is niether. Its just in case EMS/fire has to get through quickly to the scene of a crash. Too many drivers are inconsiderate of the fact that their life and the world in which they live it is not always about them.
It is always about me. My convenience is infinitely more important than your life.
In the US, those lanes are marked differently than through-lanes that continue on the freeway. There is usually plenty of time to notice the lane is becoming an exit-only lane and merge over to the normal through-lanes to the left. Lanes that are on the right and designed for entering or exiting the freeway are called auxiliary lanes. Instead of the normal long white dashes separating the lanes, they have much shorter and usually wider white dashes to let drivers know the intended purpose of these lanes. If you're cruising along in the right lane and the dashes change from the normal long narrow dashes to short wide dashes, that's a sign that you should merge left unless you intend on exiting the freeway. This change is also accompanied by a large green exit sign with the name of the exit that also contains a white arrow pointing down at the dedicated lane with the word "ONLY" highlighted within a yellow box to let you know the right lane (or lanes) are going to exit the freeway. If a driver does not notice either of these obvious clues in order to move into the left lane to stay on the freeway before they reach the exit, they are clearly not paying enough attention and probably have no business driving a car.
In German Fahrschule I was always annoyed when my driving instructor told I need to go back onto the right lane whenever I passed someone. But now I understand, and I’m happy that a lot of people in Germany understand it. It’s nice
Im currently in Driving school, and boy oh boy my instructor would be mad if he saw this.
It`s not so many nowdays. More and more people want to drive as prices of cars are very low compared to the past. And major part of that people dont use their brain while driving. They know the speed limits, they know the rules, but they dont understand them.
If we Drive a BMW or Audi in Germany we stay on the left lane a make so called LICHTHUPEN
Nobody in german use the right lane. i drive above 600km per day and MAYBE 5% use the rule "rechtsfahrgebot". It is exactly the same
@@HardTechJohnny where are you driving?
"The 2 lane highway is pretty self explanatory"
You would think, but people still lose the plot.........
I have literally had to correct my sister-in-law who was sitting in the left lane on a 2 lane highway doing 10 over with 5, or so, cars lining up behind her waiting to pass her. She was doing, like, 10 over and basically just assumed that she was entitled to the left lane because of her speed.
Everyone loses the plot where I live. It’s infuriating.
Nobody ever had the plot where i live :D
Looking at you Subaru owners 👀
Laughs in german
Edit: I actually have to correct myself a little bit, where I live in Germany on 3 lane highways in the right lane you have the people that drive the suggested speed of 80mph then in the middle lane you have the people that just drive faster like 90-95 ish and the left lane is for 125+ even tho everyone can still overtake in the left lane when there are some a little slower vehicles in the middle lane, when faster cars come from behind they flash their high beams in good time to kinda say hey lookout I’m coming and you have time to get out of the lane, if not they will obviously slow down and wait until you moved out of the lane.
"Speeding is dangerous!!!" Yet the highway fatality rate in the US is double that of Germany, despite the fact that there are no speed limits at all on half the autobahn...
Ted touched on this in a previous video, but in germany its a lot harder to get your full unrestricted license than it is here in the states, and so you get morons who dont deserve a license who think they can handle more than 65 mph , eat shit for lane hogging, and then say speeding kills. Cars dont kill people, idiots do.
when people have to pay a couple grand for just the privilege of being able to drive + immense amount of hours to drive with instructors + hard tests it equals better drivers.. All I had to do in florida was a 15 minute online test, where you can just look up the answers and a drivers test in a parking lot lol
@@Anon_Fox Wow that explaines a lot. I live in Europe and even 20 years ago it took about 3000 dollars, 25 hours driving with an instructor and two exams (1 on the road and 1 theoretical) But our roads are small, busy and we drive faster. Also back then 90% of cars was stick shift. We only now started adopting automatic transmissions as standard. Cheaper cars are still all stick. Being close to Germany my father took me over there after I got my license because the autobahn was intense, nowadays its much more regulated but still can be dangerous. Once had an American friend over, he couldn't believe his eyes when I overtook a police car at 220km/h and they didn't start a chase...Come to think of it, I let him drive for 10 km but pulled him from behind the wheel because he kept cruising in left lane... String of very angry Germans behind us, almost caused WW3 🤣
@@Anon_Fox in Canada or atleast Ontario, we have g1, which is basically a permit so there restrictions like you need a older driver with u and can’t drive past 12 and can’t drive on major highways, which is fair, but the g1 test is a written/online test. 0 actual driving done. Then a year later or 10 months if you took drivers Ed, you can get your g2. Which takes away the time restrictions, and the experienced driver with you. It’s a like 10 min driving test on city streets. Now the problem is that your g2 also lets you drive on major highways, thing is tho, you don’t do your drivers test on a highway at all, so now your allowed to go on highways magically but wasn’t given a test there. Then a year after that you can get for full G license, only then do you do a test on the highway, a year after your legally allowed to go on them. In conclusion North America sucks cock at driving’s tests. And half of it doesn’t make sense.
@@Anon_Fox driving is a right not a "privilege" stop with "privilege" shit you have been brain washed with this BS
There's two reasons that people hang out in the middle lane.
1. Cities have way to many ramps, so yes, avoiding the merging traffic.
2. Slow passers. If you are in the right lane, you might be blocked by a slow passer and the left lane is empty and unused, while meanwhile you can't get over because you're blocked in. So better stay in the middle so you always have 2 places to pass.
Totally agree with you on speed limits. I hate them!
want to move to the left to overtake but are blocked by someone in pacing you in the middle lane? slow down a touch let the block car get in front then move into the middle lane behind them, now you can use the left lane to overtake both vehicles. remembering to move back to the right lane after.
These are both true, but not a good excuse for doing it.
America: world's slowest speed limit for cars.
Also America: world's fastest speed limit for trucks and buses.
Go figure
Well for faster busses/trucks, there's a lot to be said for keeping the speeds of vehicles similar. No excuse for slowing the cars
@@Channel7331 the buses and trucks take significantly more time to slow down and stop, so they should go slower.
@@laineotto1376 most busses and trucks are limited to 68-70 mph. Now civilian trucks can hit about 90 safely as most vehicles can. Outside sport vehicles anyways. Also no one should be driving in the right lane unless you're exiting or entering. The more left you go thats the lanes you should be in and then slowly move over per mile you have left until your exit on that final Mile either sit in the right most lane or the second lane and move over as needed. And when people in the left most lane drive 60mph on the freeway there is something wrong with you. That lane is not for you to sit In going 60.
@@Lotus_River here we have max 100 kmh on 2 lane roads (normal road) but usually 80. And motorways (4 lane) 100 in winter, 120 in the summer
@@TheJ2941 mate you drive here in Texas like that you're gonna be ran off the road. It's not 3 lanes here it's 5 or 6 lanes. There is too much traffic to even be in the right lane especially when people are going 40 mph. You'd never get anywhere and considering the amount of 18 wheelers and the massive multi lane custom house whatever they call them. Not the big trailers or vehicles. It's a literal house that's being moved. And you sure as hell ain't going anywhere when they are doing road maintenance to keep the roads in great condition at least where I'm at. Also exits and entrance ramps are almost always on the right hand side.
I bet a lot of the people you passed who were hogging the middle lane thought it was reckless of you moving back over to the far right lane even though what they were doing was illegal and dangerous
Thats what i was thinking lmao
Lots of stupid people. Key issue. Mfs eating plastic and shot up with mrna garbage.
Americans seem to be plagued by road rage, because of a lack of education on laws and practices on the road. Too many people have personal opinions on how things should be done, instead of sharing a common understanding.
@@josteinholen1312I’ve seen people get mad on the road for literally the smallest things, like it ain’t that serious
After many years of dealing with a plethora of oblivious, entitled, inconsiderate, and retarded drivers on US roads, sometimes you need to let off some steam. Some people are more easily triggered than others, but nobody can tell me they never nearly blew their top behind the wheel. Even if you're one of the bad drivers I mentioned at the beginning, who is hated by everybody else, you've probably been extremely pissed at one time or another.
Imagine being lectured on how to pass cars correctly by a BMW owner
Funny guy
"Immagine" smh my head🤦♂️🤦♀️🤦♂️🤦♀️🤦♂️🤦♀️🤦♂️😩😩😩😭😭😭😩😩😭🤮🤮🤮🤮😑
@@eduardoprisbrey9157 you okay dude?
@@eduardoprisbrey9157 bro, my keyboard is in italian, so it changed "imagine" to "immagine" (which means "image"), my bad
@@eduardoprisbrey9157 are you okay?
I remember when I originally saw this video when you released it 3 years ago. Sad to report that three years later, people still don't understand lane etiquette
ive pretty much learned to stop expecting other people to have common sense/critical thinking skills and its saved me so much stress and anger
Defensive driving is all u need
Its saved me from multiple accidents 😭 from dumbasss deciding to turn left on a 2 lane street from the right lane, a dumbasss merging but hitting the breaks as they do it etc
They actually taught that in my driving school, always expect everyone else to be an idiot.
Yeah, these days defensive driving takes more and more effort and energy. I love driving and road trips, but they do drain you mentally (and physically if you got the wrong vehicle).
Having driven in central London for the last few years, I have learned to assume that everyone is in the wrong lane, including myself. Has saved me a lot of aggravation
Wow a bmw teaching us how to drive “correctly “ on the highway?! Lol tbh I completely agree, wish more ppl saw this
I agree, but
3:48
Still doesn't use his blinker because it's a BMW 🤣
@@Majima_Nowhere probably speeding during the entire video too
@@Majima_Nowhere he does use the turning signal. After the sentence that ends with "... exactly the same speed as me", he moves his left hand and activates the signal.
Tbh BMW drivers are devoted drivers 😂
At first I thought this video was a joke because of the thumbnail then I realized it’s a legitimate video lol
I learned how to drive (unofficially) in Germany. I’m frustrated driving on American highways based on each point you’ve mentioned. Well done - pass this on!
Ive seen so many State troopers hog the left lane.
I’ve seen cop cars do more traffic violations than regular cars
“They see me rollin, they hatin’...”
@@ruskibruski cause becoming a cop is as easy as getting a drivers license :D
yo they love that shit, i almost never see them in the right lane and they're always speedin...
@@YohCanada pull them over then. See how it goes.
What about the guys in lifted trucks who forget the left and middle lane exist and follow less than 1 car length behind you even though you’re already going 10 over the speed limit.
You are part of the problem. You think you are entitled to cruise in the lane 🤗
@@Thr0wb4ckf1Lb4nd read the comment again. Nothing worse then getting tailgated in the right lane
Who cares, if they will bump into you, you just got yourself a free repair by them. Unless usa doesn't have mandatory insurance for car owners, then fuck that country, it should burn to the ground.
I drive parallel to the car next to me and run a rolling road block.
@@DenvilX The States do require car insurance to drive, but whose fault the accident is changes from state to state. In many states, it doesn't matter how it happened, if you rear-end someone, it's your fault, but other states may not have the same traffic laws, and it can get very confusing very quickly.
This video needs to be shown at all driving school in the U.S. Learned to drive in Germany, moved to Dallas. Not amused by U.S. drivers.
At the very least share with friends!
@@TedwardDrives I wish this video had millions of views haha. Thanks for making this point. I still drive like I learned in Germany, but I honestly thought it was legal to overtake on the right in the U.S. because it happens all the time.
@@AudiROCKS your name sounds Dutch to me
@@Bartem_ you know holland isnt far from germany.
@@D3nn1s yes, i am from there ;)
You’re not wrong, but this is essentially a 13 minute video of a man shouting at the ocean hoping it’ll stop the waves. Go with the flow, homie. It’s better for your blood pressure.
Him: "in congested areas, like i'm in right now"
Me: *cries in Californian"
LA folks here. The very right lane is faster in rush hour on 10 and 60
@@kiraasuka9943 can confirm. Just did this yesterday.
Lol my exact thought. His congested area is like 2 am traffic where I’m at
Same here LA, hahaha I wish I can do what he say, but 65 miles hour, well I try to drive faster, but especially going the 405 is like a parking lot, not really a Freeway.
cries in any major city in texas
The U.S Government and Highway safety department need to watch this.
We have 5 lanes here in my country Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦
the exact same principle applies no matter how many lanes
@@YHH_579Y The issue in LA is the RIGHT 2 lanes are mostly flooded with Semi Trucks, and no one feels safe been sandwiched between semis. So I think in a 5 lane highway, the LEFT 3 lanes should indeed be applied with the same principle.
@@JW-ur1jw If you're passing the trucks go ahead...if you're sitting at the same speed then move over.
@@saman-iw9tx Doesn't matter how many lanes you have if you don't have drivers who know proper lane discipline then you'll still get idiot lane hoggers. In the UK our motorways can go from 3 to 6 lanes and you'll always get people sat in the middle or right lane (we drive on left so for anyone wondering same theory applies as America lane furthest to right is the furthest overtaking lane) who haven't figured out how to move over now they've finished overtaking. Unlike in say Germany where proper lane discipline is taught sometimes you literally have to flash drivers to get them to move over.
Years ago, I went on vacation in Ireland, driving about 2200 kilometres in a week. I've always been annoyed by lane hogs, but that trip truly blew my mind. People immediately got over after passing and highway traffic moved so much more fluidly than I'd ever experienced. I've never driven the same since and wish there was a way for Americans to understand and experience how much better highway driving could be without going to another country...
Go drive around Europe, Ireland is a horrible country for lane etiquette in my experience
The problem is, most Americans aren't interested in understanding much of anything. The attitude is, Who is anyone to tell me what to do.
@@WildBikerBill Agreed I see many entitled drivers out here. They think that they are above the law
You can experience this on certain portions of American highways at certain times of the day. I live in the DC region and regularly drive hundreds of miles up North just to experience that feeling. It is truly blissful and surreal!
people complain about car guys bobbing and weaving or more commonly known now as “cutting up” or “swimming” through traffic but if people followed the road rules and actually used the lanes correctly, we wouldn’t have anybody doing that. but here we are.
Here in Puerto Rico, you drive where there's the least amount of holes, which is rarely the right lane.
i am so happy that it is a law to drive right in germany. But even some here in Germany don't understand that.
Yep but it's really amazing driving on a european highway, everyone keeps right or moves over if they see you behind. I remember seeing some european dashcam videos and people post having to slow down when a car in the left lane didn't move over in time 😂. Here they wouldn't move over at all
Oh ja
It's law in America too. It's just not enforced ever.
it’s law in most states too, like he said in the video, people don’t know/care, and cops don’t enforce
In Portugal is mandatory to travel on the far right lane (no matter the number of lanes!), and only use the other lanes to pass as mention in the video, penalty is 300€ for the first time, following ones could lead you to lose your license).
Civism are the result of somewhat a kind of penalty before we can appreciate it.
This is EU future/ goal:
"In order to ensure compliance with the law, persistent follow-up of road traffic offences and enforcement of sanctions are necessary. Controls should be systematic; sanctions should be effective and applied to all offenders that would help to move closer to the long-term goal of zero road fatalities in the EU by 2050."
"Vision Zero" Safety Goal for Mobility and Transport
I...... had....... no....... idea. And it makes so much sense. No one, and I mean NO ONE, ever, ever ever ever, taught me this. I appreciate it!
I've tried to teach a few of my friends and only one actually listened :(
I think the problem is that mostly nobody knew this, myself included, and it makes sense but you can't apply it when the inefficient way is the way for most.
Well we in Germany do have other problems: aggressive drivers (some drivers Really mind being overtaken) and Speed differences from 80 km/h (big trucks over 7 tonnes) and up to 250 km/h, Some few Even faster:D
@@TheNirgo I mean if it’s legal then I guess it can’t really be a problem. Kinda hard to slow the car down from 250kmh to pass someone going 130 at a slower difference.
that explains a lot
Thanks for this video! I'm 27 years old, and nobody explained to me how 3 lane highways work because in the country where I lived we only had 2 lanes.
In Europe the most common annoyance is middle lane driving. People here literally lose their shit when they see it, including me..
Truth. They're annoying as hell.
90% of Belgians love the middle lane. I always pass them on the right. Or I pass them on the left and go all the way right really quickly. Sometimes they see and then go right as well XD
@@EssenceOfTrance me too and overtaking by the right can give you a fright
@@EssenceOfTrance try Italy....
Turkey’s just as bad, if not worse than the USA. But the problem here is that most of these rules aren’t even taught + much worse things are not penalised by the police.
It’s really hard to change the way people drive. They should implement this RUclips video into driver’s education
Better yet, add this to the permit test. Force future drivers to understand what which highway driving lane is PROPERLY for. Then in Drivers Ed, and finally a warning from sheriff after they follow you in a unmarked sheriff’s vehicle.
Of course I didn’t know about this till this video showed up in the algorithm (
My nephew got hes licens 2 years ago, he was told the right way, but I was out driving with him yesterday and he made many small misstakes, you can tell People the right way 1000 times, ones they get out on there own, they get the habbits, most of the People that HOG the lanes knows its wrong, they just dont care, like tedward say, they Are lasy and simply dont feel like moving over for the ramps on and off.
My Sister do it, she knows its wrong, but she dont care, for reasons like tedward explain about being boxed in.
Chen Yu: "They should implement this RUclips video into driver's education".
The only problem with that is that the right lane is NOT the travel lane on 3 lane highways in the United States. The middle lane is the travel lane, the left lane is the passing lane and the right lane is used, primarily, for entering & exiting the highway though it can also accommodate slow moving traffic (hence, it's nickname, the "granny lane").
Only a person completely unfamiliar with U.S. highway travel would travel in the granny lane, move two lanes to the left to pass a vehicle in the middle lane and then move two lanes to the right back to the granny lane. This isn't Europe; it doesn't matter how traffic flows on the autobahn.
@@pcs5852 thank god I’m not the only somewhat knowledgeable one in the comments
I’m 17 and binge watching these before start driving on the big roads so i don’t develop bad habits early on 😂
Ah yes in Belgium we call them "middenvakrijders" when they keep cruising in the middle lane. Best of all is when you try to pass them on the left lane and they suddenly out of nowhere start accelerating 🙄 ...
Zeer herkenbaar
@@yannickverstraete8784 en zeer irriteert.
Zeker waneer je op de rechter rijstrook rijd
En iemand in eens zijn afrit bijna mist en voor je neus in eens komt
Van de 3de rijstrook.
Gewoon rechts voorbij ;)
Gelukkig hebben we een jaar of 2 geleden een campagne van de overheid rond middenvakrijders gehad plus meer controle door de politie waardoor ik persoonlijk wel heb gemerkt dat het nu beter is. Maar zelfs vroeger was dit niet te vergelijken met de verenigde staten. Daar was ik, als ervaren chauffeur, toch redelijk gestresst tijdens de eerste paar ritjes over de highway.
What 2 to do when the right lane is filled with trucks like it always is in EU.
We have the same rule in France than in Germany. Everyone has to be on the right lane, regardless of the number of lanes available on the highway, and we overtake only from the left. Especially if you see that you drive at the same speed than someone in front of you or there is no traffic anymore (if you feel you are faster than cars in front of you, you can stay on the middle lane until you pass the cars you wanted to pass), go on the right lane and don't stay in the middle lane for nothing... Even worst on the left lane.
And we have 130km/h speed limit on our highways. (80mph)
And the funny part is, they get mad when you go around them....
good. they deserve to feel mad
Because they’re going within or slightly above the speed limit and you passing them comes across you being impatient and not happy with their speed within legal limits
@@BRBallin1 or just get the fuck out of the way if your not passing
Dude, I swear. Pisses me off
@@BRBallin1 Yeah, MOVE out of the fuckin way. Especially if you are in the FAST lane. Annoying ass humans. YOU are the problem. Not people trying to pass. Some states actually have laws against driving slow in the passing lane.
"The two lane highway should be self explanatory"
tell that to the population of California lol
TELL THAT TO NORTH AMERICA!!
Yeah, I drove across the country a few years back and it's not just California.
And chicago
No doubt. I've actually had CHP pull over the car I moved over for in the left lane twice in the last month. It pays to have situational awareness and drive safely :)
You can't save the world, as long as you know what to do while driving, keep yourself safe. There's no need to have road rage and upset yourself every time you enter or exit the highway. Not everyone is going to follow the rules, it's life.
😂 you can’t change anything? Terrible mindset. There would be no improvement in any industry if that’s how people think.
I’m 17 and binge watching these before start driving on the big roads so i don’t develop bad habits early on 😂
Having good etiquette also makes driving more fun for some reason, I’m 17 btw
@@oswaldogarcia5358 yup ik what you mean
Same
tf i thought im the only one, I need more time to visualize and binge watch people driving on the highway
I did the same thing. I rewatch them from time to time in an attempt to keep myself above water as terrible driving etiquette seems to have become an epidemic alongside COVID, and I'd rather catch neither.
Agree with you. As a European that's lived in the US for almost 40 years, the majority of American drivers are terrible. I get sick of hearing the Transport Safety Board say that "speed kills". Yes, it can, but the major cause is stupid drivers that don't know how to handle a modern vehicle, or how to properly drive. The majority of American drivers wouldn't last 2 minutes in Europe, and if they did, they'd collect so many tickets they'd choke. As a side note - I think part of the reason that American drivers avoid the right lane is the condition of that lane - it's usually chewed up by heavy trucks. The reason for that is that the roads are made cheaply by German standards. The reason for that is, it keeps people employed in rebuilding/renovating infrastructure.
Most of americans, especially women just seem to not have a clue what they're doing behind the wheel and don't even pay attention to the surroundings.
I think haning only automatics has a role in that, you control that kind of car with only two pedals and the steering wheel, it requires less attention from the driver and on top of that even the most unfit can drive that kind of car (I'm not referring to some type of handicap or amputees, it's great they can drive too, I mean unfit in the sense there are people that don't have a clue about how you should drive safely and correctly). In europe you must learn on a manual and if somebody doesn't have a clue of what he's doing he doesn't get the license
Nope u just dont have any idea of what terrible driving is lol go to asia or africa so u can truly see the chaos that is traffic. If u have never been outside of Europe or North America u have no right to comment
I wouldn’t say the majority of American drivers are terrible. I think you’re right about the right lane often being complete shit. No way I’m hanging in the shitty right lane
@@draggy6544 Grow a brain.
Watchting this video as a German pushes my heart rate and pressure to the maximum to see how they drive an America. You are absolutely right about the points you make. I think why the accident rate in Germany is lower then America’s is correlated to the fact that Germans know how to use the lanes, even though we don’t have everywhere speed limits.
Furthermore, speeding is dangerous as your relative reaction time becomes longer due to the high speed, therefore its is taught that you have to drive predictably.
in america it is not taught.. they are just taught the basic rules and tested for them, but the test doesn't look into their way of driving
Yes! Being predictable is the most important thing when driving. Another issue we have here is that far too many people try to be considerate rather than predictable.
Where are you driving in Germany to think that things are even slightly better here? I have seen every issue mentioned in this video seen on german highways, and not as an exception, but the norm. Right lane is for trucks exclusively. And good luck trying to get room on the left lane if you drive a shitty car. If you drive an Audi, BMW or Mercedes, people make room, if you drive a shitty Opel Corsa, doing 160km/h while they do 120, they just ignore you.
You have less accidents cause your country is populated by Germans
I live in the US, and this wasn't one of the major things I was taught when learning to drive. The only thing I was taught concerning this was to go to the left lane if you were passing. A one-time mention, no further explanation, no examples, no question that I remember being tested on while doing the driver's test. Thanks for the lesson.
All my years of driving I never knew this. I genuinely thought it was only a slow, cursing and fast/passing lane. Now watching this video it the “correct” way just makes so much sense. I wish at some point of my education this was taught and beaten into me along with everyone else around me.
WELL NOW YOU KNOW WHY PEOPLE PASS YOU AND WANT TO KILL YOU.
DO YOU LIKE NEVER LOOK AT YOUR REAR END MIRROR AND WONDER WHY YOU HAVE 40000 CARS BEHIND YOU WHILE NOBODY IS IN FRONT OF YOU? AND BC OF YOU LOL THAT IS WHY TRAFFIC HAPPENS? NEVER CROSSES YOUR MENTAL INTELLEGENCE?
Man see I'm here wishing you just had a molucle of common sense
That's because it's not law. Only the far left lane is the passing lane.
@@lamarw7757 that is absolutely not true. Maybe in your flyover state
Same, I thought that the right most lane was used for only exits for some stupid reason, I was taught this in drivers ed and I do believe that they should make this a law and start giving out tickets to people who hog the passing lanes and start teaching this in drivers ed classes
Preach dude! I've driven extensively in Europe (Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, Netherlands, and Germany), and in every single one of those countries, people understand this concept. Germans will not stay in the passing lane on the Autobahn for one second longer than necessary. Unfortunately, it's not a lot of these people's fault. Poor driver education in the US is to blame. Michigan's driver handbook even says that you may drive in any lane on a freeway with three or more lanes. Thankfully, I learned freeway driving from my dad, who understands how to drive on one.
If we keep our right in Europe, it is because it is mandatory. Especially in France where the penalty for overtaking on the right is strong with a fine and demerit points. It happens a few times that some stay on the left but it's totally forbidden (they risk a fine) and very frowned upon because it's dangerous because generally they don't go very fast when you come behind at high speed. The danger is that people change lanes when you are speeding, and to prevent this I generally make lights calls when I get to a speed at least more than 50 kmh (30mph) above the speed limit
I mean in germany its told by law that you always have to drive on the right lane unless u have to pass
Called "rechtsfahrgebot" what roughly translates to right lane driving command
It's not just western Europe. As someone who's driven all across the Western Balkans, Hungary, Greece, etc... The etiquette is highly respected. A good chunk of people doesn't care about speed limits, but it's absolutely a big deal if you use the highway incorrectly. Since these countries are a little bit less developed, the road network is also smaller, but these regions I mentioned all are a part of one of the busiest Europe routes that go to Turkey and Middle East. So, everybody is aware of lane rules. I remember even back in the day in the driving classes, we used to talk a lot about that. You can only imagine what kind of chaos starts when these kinds of roads get congested. Since there is no alternative road, people from all across Europe are stuck and that creates anger. To make things worse, these countries are not all in the Schengen zone, so border controls are long and extensive. Couple that with road congestion and you just cost a lot of people, a lot of time, money, and nerves.
You have to consider you’re driving in arguably the “worst drivers” state in the US with the “me first” mentality.
As if the best is all that much better.
Add, some old ladies and completely distracted cell phone users.
Oh! And remove the: I don't believe in going ONE Speed or speed limits like the author of the video. Seriously!
Peace and harmony would be abound. 🕊️
And those that will do the exactly speed limit and not a mile and hour more causing cars to pile behind them.
What is it? New Jersey or New York?
@@LCdic09 south florida
You nailed it. When I visit NYC, Philly and other major cities, the MOST dangerous thing I often encounter is that people will use the middle lane as a cruising lane. It's "okay" if they are doing the speed limit but often times, they are doing 10-15 BELOW the speed limit and this causes a huge bottle neck with major braking. I mostly cruise in the right lane at the speed limit but this bottle neck screws everyone and infuriates me lol. GET OVER TO THE FAR RIGHT LANE DAMNIT!!!!
The most mind blowing experience happened to me this week using the LIE. A women was doing about 40 in a 55 in the middle lane with NO traffic in front of her and she was living her best life chomping on an apple. No worries for her but everyone else was hard braking, doing rapid lane shifts and random lane changes to "beat" traffic and to just maintain the correct flow of traffic.
I see this way too often. I'd take a fast driver any day of the week. I'd even take a driver watching Netflix over these dunces camping in the middle lane.
Where I live in EU, if you were to cruise in middle or left lane like those guys, everyone would tailgate you, flash lights at you and generally get pissed untill you would move right. We even have a "traffic code law" that states you have to move to the right to let faster vehicles pass you. It doesn't even say at what speed. If he's faster, you MUSTN'T slow him down, obstruct...
Where do you live?
This law also exists in the States. There are signs up and down the freeway that state either "Slower vehicles stay right" or Right lanes for passing only." Does anyone listen? Lol, no way.
The US definitely has those laws. Depending on what state you're in people follow them to an extent. Ome of the biggest problems is that American highways are often filled with semis. Depending on what highway you're on and all, but they all end up using the right lane. So you use the middle.
"in the EU" doesn't mean anything. Driving styles vary wildly between countries.
@@Tinfoil_Hardhat But in that case then it's the intended way to use the highway - you're in the middle because you're passing. The problem is when they stay in the middle even when there's like 800m of empty space in the right lane.
Ok, but there’s more to this.
First of all consider trucks in Europe are speed limited, so when they occupy the right lane, it creates a 100 kph merging buffer. No matter the speed limit of the highway, trucks set a merging pace; predictable. So that’s simply not the case in America, trucks here are moving fast, overtaking, travelling at different speeds, making it unpredictable to merge; the American solution is to straddle the middle.
Second, low American top speed limits are invariably why German style passing regiment will never be followed. On the Autobahn, Drivers have an incentive to move to the right, as there is always someone faster to overtake you, and travelling at +150 kph burns fuel fast. Most people Cruze at 140 kph. In America, occupying left is seen as a way of committing to going as fast as possible... despite an enforced limit everyone breaks to different thresholds. You get just one driver who feels he has hit a “maximum threshold” of speeding- boom the left lane is clogged and Americans commit to the usual behaviour of passing right, tailgating etc.
Third, consider how American merging lanes / right lanes are designed. You will find right lanes are nowhere as nearly congruent as they are in Europe. Right lane driving in America is a constant hunt for which lane is the right lane, because some right lanes will merge into a double lane exit, or a turnpike turnoff... the right lanes they seem are designed to torture the driver who who dare to stay in their embrace for anything more that a few minutes.
I provide three points as to why I think the tide will be against us in improving this driving etiquette. I don’t think all hope is lost, but it will definitely require the political will to: A) mandate truck speed limiters B) increase or remove speed limits C) re-reengineer the right lanes for better continuous lane occupancy.
As a truck driver, this is spot on.
A BMW driver using his turn signals? This is revolutionary!
good one
AHAHAHAHAHA
Part of the problem is highway patrol rarely enforce the laws about the left lane is mainly used for passing. In Germany, they figured out that many auto accidents were caused by people trying to pass other people in right lane, so it was designated that the left lane was for passing on the Autobahn.
Biggest problems from my view on US highways (you basically said all the same points):
- People don’t know how to merge. They do not accelerate enough, and they merge onto the highway at a significantly slower speed than traffic creating hazards. I see this constantly - people merging at 25 onto a 55.
- Roads that could safely support higher speeds are capped very low, drivers who obey the limit are at risk because of the lack of lane etiquette
- Speeding is dangerous is a bad take to make up for terrible distracted drivers. Modern vehicles can safely move at a high rate of speed when OPERATED BY AN ATTENTIVE DRIVER.
The ultimate solution would be adopting German style drivers education and permitting. But then I think most Americans would loose their license to drive when such a high bar is applied.
Facts on point two live in CT and some of our highways speed limits are only 50 mph when they can easily be 60- 75 that’s the speed everyone is going on the highway anyway
German style driving simply would not work with our outdated infrastructure
Your point is true. You can not use the right lane in the US, because people do not know how to merge.
Little problem with the merging onto the highway at the speed you want is that sometimes there are cops parked either right after the on ramp or prior so if your coming onto the highway at 50 or 60 you better believe your getting pulled over.
@@KonohazFinest Most cops don't know anything about the law, but the speed signs on most on-ramps are actually advisory and not limits. It's completely legal to come onto the highway at 55 or 65.
If only 10% of American drivers could see this video the highways would run so much more smoothly and efficiently.
Its just occurred to me that maybe using signals and changing lanes so often is just too much work for them. Here in Canada we've got a similar problem but it extends to transport trucks too hogging the middle lane and then all cars just drive in the passing lane like its a one way highway. Even trucks pass in the left lane! (which is illegal for us here) and our governments idea to fix it isn't keeping an eye on road behavior but instead to just add more lanes. I'm afraid our problem is never gonna get fixed
[forgive me for bad grammar]
last week I was driving the A4 highway in German and sadly there was similar problem with people. I heard that on Autobahn most of people know the rules.. On normal highways this problem occurs probably everywhere xD
Most likely people that watch these videos are (I'm guessing) driving enthusiasts or someone who has good habits already and are confirming or wanting to learn more. The "hogging-left-lane holding-phone-by-face-even-though-I-have-Bluetooth one-hand-driving" drivers will never watch this and quite frankly will never give a s*it
@@richardnavratil9661 Correct! couldn't have said it better.
@@JacobsKrąnųg Your English is great. Sad to hear it happens in other places too :(
I’ve always been taught that the left lane is the passing lane, but my driving ed class instructed us to stay out of the right lane on three lane highways as it was the exit/entrance lane. Many of the highways in my state have the right lane suddenly end and merge left, or become exit only. I think what you are saying makes sense, but it’s hard to make that a standard practice when the right lane rarely ever designed to be cruised in. Further complicating things is that in many urban areas in and around Seattle, a third of the exits are in the left-most lane rather than the right lane, meaning the passing lane becomes the exit lane. I’m totally against cruising in the left, but I’m pointing out that sometimes the interstate itself was designed in such a way that following those "rules" is rather impossible, especially in urban areas.
If all your friends jumped off a bridge then you'd have to go too huh?
@@SuperRat420 if the water is warm, hell yeah! But why do you ask?
Those highways are built wrong. There shouldn't be any lane that ends with turn. There should be always additional lane only when turn is present.
@@PiotrT-ue1jw I agree that the aren't in conformance with highway engineering guidelines, and it would be much better if they were built 'correctly'. Although 'correct' might not be the right term, since sometimes engineering solutions involves a lot of compromises.
Man shut up if you’re living in seattle. you’re really over exaggerating it. You can definitely cruise in the right lane on I-5 for majority of it here but you’re definitely right about having left lane exits in some areas, but it’s really not that complicated to start merging to the left if you need to before hand…it’s all about setting yourself up and not waiting last second to merge into the exit lane if you know the roads here. And if you dont, then it’s really just a skill issue and you still have no excuse if you use a gps since it’ll literally tell you how far you are from the exit
Tl dr, I taught myself to drive "slow" in the right lane, and it is relieving to do so on long commutes.
I used to drive fast 80mph+, usually passing left and crusing the middle to avoid the slower mergers, especially when I know the ramps are short and blind (if youre quite above the speed limit, crusing the right lane is asking for trouble). I had the mindset that i always had to be moving forward until i got to a group of cars traveling the same speed as me.
My commute now is an hour, and i learned most cars are most efficient around 50-65mph (tested and saw a difference with my fuel economy).
I first tried crusing right lane about 60-65. Even though the speed limit changes between 65 and 50 it felt dangerous because so many people were passing me, and I had to "trust" they would do it safely.
Eventually I bumped my speed to 65-70 it was a good balance, less fuel efficient, but at least it didn't feel like everyone was passing me at double the speed.
Anyway, i taught myself to drive slower, be far more accommodating, and always lean towards aself-defensee driving stance. On long commute, having to constantly pass peopl and check for cops, all while maintaining a higher speed is exhausting.
Learning to drive "slow" in the right lets me be more at ease. I simply allow more space in front of me so its easy for people to pass or cut in if they missed their exit. If i have a choice to speed to pass or slow and let merging cars find their lanes, I choose to slow down.
It requires less brain on my end. Also, my car is 15 years old, and it's on the slower end now. Trying to accelerate quickly above the speed limit will likely cause conjestion unless the left lanes are completely clear.
Well I'm guilty. You caught me, along with 95% of drivers in the US. You do make a lot of good points though we weren't taught any better in driving school, been driving for over 15 years. I75 is filled with semi tractor trailers hogging all lanes of the highway, the best part is they are most likely governed and can't go much faster than the other so it takes forever for them to pass each other lol
Yep… limited to 68 here 😒.
Heres a great idea. Put tractors with trailers limited to 61-68 on a 80mph speed limit highway. That is not dangerous at all.
Limited to 70mph here myself.
Nothing but hills will stop me passing someone going 69mph, only because in my 11hrs of legal driving time if I can I will so I can get 650+ mi per day it makes a huge difference on my paycheck if I can go my 70mph instead of staying stuck behind someone going 1mph slower than me.
All interstates are like that too, take it from an OTR driver.
All good dudes, I've worked at FedEx Freight as a cdsa for the past 8 years now an OTR pulling double pups (23 ft) doesnt matter if I'm in on of their kenworths, volvo, peterbilt or international we are only limited to 65. If we do 70 all kinds of chimes and beeps start going on. Most of the roads are 65 to 70mph along i70 and i75 though where I travel.
I was just about to say semis completely ruin this system of lane etiquette. When you have truckers hogging all 4 lanes of traffic because they feel the need to take at least 30 minutes to pass another trucker all other drivers are screwed. What we truly need is a law banning semis from using designated passing lanes so they won't constantly turn themselves into 18 wheeler traffic jams.
@@JohnSmith-nj9qo When the truckers who stop cursing 65 in the middle lane stop doing that I will keep to the more right lanes. But until then I will continue to move over all the way left to pass if I’m faster. That being said only if the right lane is blocked. There is very few areas that say “no trucks left lanes” so there is no law saying I can’t either when that sign is not present.
Guess who got pulled over for "agressive lane changing" when doing just that. It seems like they do not want you to change lanes after all.
Cause for US police it's not about safety it's about control and oppression
@@dannyhilljr518 more likely they don’t know like most Americans. I didn’t even know this but now I do!
@@dannyhilljr518 no it’s more likely you will get into a major car accident continuously switching lanes.
I’ve gotten a reckless driving ticket doing this lol. I still don’t understand why I got that ticket, i used my turn signal the entire time and was only going 10 above the speed limit.
@@keithw8307 there is zero credible evidence to support it, but concrete evidence showing speeding doesn't correlate with more accidents. (More deaths yes, but cause accidents that would have occured anyway may be fatal). Either way most traffic laws are designed for extortion, not safety, and a few police captains have admitted this themselves.
“Once I’m done overtaking all this traffic”
Things that don’t happen in Southern California.
SoCal*
Yessir
Cuckifornia*
@@MisterOwlz The whole USA.
@@fortheloveofnoise naa just California
As a new driver I’m so great full I came across this video because I’ve yet to go on the highway. I try to drive very safe, patient, and defensive, so it’s so frustrating how many freaking idiots are let on the road. There’s thousands of videos of people literally STOPPING in the middle of the highway because of road rage. I think people forget how dangerous driving a car can be
This makes perfect sense for highways with reasonable exits. At least where I am in Columbus, Ohio, the third right lane often turns into an exit-only lane. If you're going through an area with many exits, it's really more of a hazard to stay in the right and have to constantly lane change. Don't even get me started on on-ramps that double as exit lanes for what seems like only a few hundred feet.
I hate weave lanes so much because people just freak out when there's more than one car trying to merge on them...
Same with green bay
also some exits are come up on the left
if you cannot manage exitng and merging traffic, remove yourself from the road, child
Oregonian here, same boat. A third or fourth lane is often volatile and become an exit only quickly. Middle lane makes sense to stay in around here.
"65mph is laughably slow". Agreed my sir.
lol thats the speed u are allowed to go on country roads in Germany
@@real.jeremy.clarkson Yea but not highways He is on the highway
@@kevindt100 i know thats why its even weirder that their highway speed is our country road speed. And our highway speed is obviously as fast as your car let you go
@@real.jeremy.clarkson Damn. The max speed on highways where I live is like 60. Everyone goes 55. The highway is also in the middle of nowhere, with no towns for like 4 hours, and it’s completely straight.
Most highway are about 55mph and people still go 50, and then everyone hogs the left lane, on a two way highway.
Any other road that isn’t a highway is 30-40mph. And people STILL go 25.
@@Chevsilverado lmao i can not imagine driving so slow on a highway, no wonder there are so many accidents cause u get bored and distracted so quickly... in Germany about 60% of the Autobahn have no speed limit but that doesnt mean everyone speeds. Most people drive about 130-160 kmh (80-100 mph)
Many of our highways have such short on ramps that "middle lane cruising" is essentially using it as a passing lane to pass people merging/exiting.
it's not rocket science, if you wanna help people merge on, then move over, then move back. American roads are a dream to drive on, yet you guys have some of the highest fatality rates among developed nations per capita. Some of the slip roads (on-ramps) near my house in Europe are 150ft long at most, yet you don't hear us complaining, we make do. These particular on-ramps are so short you will often find people have to come to a complete halt and wait for a gap to merge with traffic going 80+, yet accidents rarely happen because European drivers are trained to MUCH higher standards. Much, MUCH higher standards.
Especially when 70% of people decide that entering the highway 20mph slower than the speed limit is safe.
I agree-obviously depending on the context. What some people might not realize is that there are freeways with two or more exits per mile-mostly in urban areas that had their freeways built so long ago that engineers didn’t know better, or had political pressure to add an excessive quantity of exits. It makes the right lane so chaotic that freeway engineers sometimes create dedicated “weave lanes” where the only people allowed in the right lane through the densest part of an urban area are those exiting or entering in the next 3-5 exits. Downtown seattle has 2-lanes dedicated to continuing south, and 3-lanes dedicated to weaving south.
Well yes, but at least 70% of Americans have high displacement, high horsepower vehicles. All you gotta do to merge at the right speed is put your foot down.
Yeah-unfortunately probably that same 70% of Americans leave a following distance the length of a popsicle stick between cars. Not only does this lead to a ton more traffic and rear-end-collisions, but it makes merging so much more challenging where there are no gaps between cars.@@GTDpowah
The thing is if you have a slower car every literal 60 feet on the right, I might as well stay in the middle. Because I'm constantly passing someone.
It's another thing entirely if you're in a relatively empty highway and there's more room in the right lane so getting back over to the right makes plenty of sense. But with the way things usually are there isn't even room in the right hand lane between each slow guy.
Your video looks great, there isn't too many cars. But so many people spend a lot of time driving in more congested highways and get trained to use the middle lane as the cruising lane, and sometimes even the left lane as the cruising lane. Because there's no extra spare room in the right hand lane to simply cruise in it at speed when you're done passing. You're literally always passing.
I don't think he's saying anything that contradicts you. As long as you are passing, you are okay in the left lanes.
Driver's ed and the behind-the-wheel test don't even cover the freeway at all. It's no surprise most people don't know how to act on them
So true, i avoided the freeway when i could when i first started..
You have so many and then they don't get covered? At all? That's just a recipe for disaster
Is it true that in the US driving test you basically have to drive up and down a road and that is it.
@@Bruintjebeer6 Yeah, you drive around residential areas for 15 min and reverse alongside a curb and you're done
@@80greaty WTF. In germany you drive at least 30 minutes in your final test drive. I drove for around 40 I think.
My grandma lives and drives in Jersey and she YELLS at my sister when she’s driving in the left or middle lane. It’s so funny to see her take driving so seriously as a 70 something year old woman in a big v8 e class Mercedes
I love your grandmother. Send her my warmest regards haha
i get pissed at my sister when she sits in the middle or left lane when going slow
Good. Your Grandma is a saint
We have signs in Minnesota that read "Slower Traffic Move Right" so people assume if they dont want to go slow, they shouldnt be in that lane.
In Australia it says ‘keep left unless over taking’ or for you keep right
@gedeon parker man let me tell you.. I have to drive from Grand Rapids to Brainerd and for years until about a year ago it was 55 max the whole way until the last 10 miles that was 60... it’s so shitty. Also no one knows about what lanes to use here
@gedeon parker I just drove to the cities and back last weekend and (Woodbury) and on the way back once I got on the highway I found a guy and we went 85-90 the whole way to moose lake and one other dude came and joined . Haven’t done that since I can remember. It was fun. Helped all the snow melted lol
There are signs like that in US too but nobody cares
Yep, most people think slow vehicles go right, normal in the middle and fast in the left regardless the traffic. This is a universal conception I believe. At least here also in Greece.
I'm behind you on this a hundred percent. I come from a country where this is taken for granted and taught to learners. While driving in Germany, I noticed another example of freeway etiquette (apart from giving room to merging traffic): temporarily slowing down in the leftmost lane when another vehicle ahead is going to need to use it to overtake a slower middle lane vehicle.
this is a much calmer way of saying it than me screaming at everyone and telling them that the world is a better place without them
Are we secretly twins?
LMFAO, im dead,,, lol
@@colbyzur4642 LMAO
Angry dudes are the best drivers change my mind
@@ImWatchingYou69 yes lmao
I think Jeremy Clarkson put it best. The outside (left for LHD countries) lane(s) are like the toilet. You go in, do what you need to do, and get out. You don’t stay there 24/7
When I was traveling in the US, didn't know drivers didn't know this, and I also didn't expect them to rage so easily. As a result, one time I was flashing my beams so the driver would move over to the right but no, he brake checked in the middle of the highway and chased me all the way to my exit.. Good stuff
I actually NEVER knew any of this as an American! They never teach us about any of this stuff when I took my government approved online class!
those are teh rule in germany where there no speed limit and teh freeway it empty 90% of the time
So you get your drivers license without being taught the driving laws? Ridiculous, that RUclips videos have to teach drivers those rules.
@@loghorizon45 that’s the thing i don’t even think this is the law that’s why it’s not taught
If that is true, its kind of sad, we learn All that in Denmark, but People still dont know or care about those rules, for exsample in Finland, People learn to drive the cars from a really young age, learning licens driving with a licensed Co driver, the reason why Finland has some of the safest streets, so i have been told :)
@@tenacious_freak5223 i took an inperson class and we leaned this. The issue is that people just don't give a fuck.
When driving through a city with traffic and a lot of onramps, the middle lane usually becomes the commuter lane otherwise we'd be changing lanes every 5 seconds. Even when joining at the speed limit, most are going over. It's a multivariate issues and seems easy on paper. Constantly moving in and out of lanes moving at different speeds isn't safe either. Staying to the right applies well when traffic is low. I've driven in Europe, they're more stringent about the passing lane, but it often ends up being similar when traffic is high. They also have FAR fewer 3 lanes highways.
That being said, people who live the far left lane are the absolute worst.
In Europe the rules are to put safety first, you are indeed allowed to stay in the middle lane if there is an on ramp very soon with traffic merging. Otherwise you should move over to the inside lane. It is also ok to move to the middle lane when approaching an on ramp to allow traffic space to merge safely when there is heavy traffic. Again it is safety that is important when making decisions so whilst this is not ideal it is an option that is available.
The "Rechtsfahrgebot" does not apply in city limits, only on Highways.
@@manuelg8050 that makes sense
@@manuelg8050 It's still done in practice. If a city has a long enough boulevard people still tend to stick to the right.
Agreed fully
My daily commute couldn't agree more.
far right lane is for anyone doing the speed limit or going slower and for exiting for sure . far left lane is for passing only and does not allow tractor trailers. middle lane is generally for cruising.
@@JustOotin No that just doesnt make sense
I always see crackheads doing 40 in a 55. And of course there’s a moron on the left lane halting traffic.
It seems pretty simple to me. The far right lane is reserved for people who are about to SLOW down for exits in their lane. Middle is for cruising, left for passing. Treat it as a 2 lane highway with a turn lane or "merge lane" per say.
Keep right except to pass.
@@TedwardDrives It is much more efficient if you treat it this way. Do you really think on a 4-5 lane highway they want you changing 3-4 lanes just to pass somebody? That is way more dangerous
@@TedwardDrivesso it's safer to do 4 lane changes to pass on the left than do 0 lane changes to pass someone 2 lanes away from you on the right? Doesn't make sense unless you assume "passing on the right is always unsafe"
No way man. Drive right.
@@miggitymikeb Go drive your pick up truck mike😮💨
Probably my single biggest driving pet peeve. And so many people have no idea they're in the wrong. Even worse are the people who think they're doing a service by blocking traffic that wants to go faster than them.
@@cyuan1990 Yeah, but the highway wouldn't be filled like that if assholes werent in the left lane.
@@cyuan1990 proper lane driving certainly won't stop rush hr, but it would immensely reduce traffic in literally every other situation. 90% of traffic where I live (south jersey) is because passing is impossible. Everyone here drives under the speed limit & hogs every lane all the time. Lines of cars all backed up, restricted because everyone is going 5mph under in the left & middle lanes. When I finally get to pass, I watch a mass of traffic grow in my rear view & I have an open road 90% of the time. It's out of control.
@@kona6732 thats just wrong lmao. Theres a differnce between a dense highway where all 3 lanes are using and an empty one. Also with all lanes being used you still can follow the principle that the lane to your left is faster, the one to your right is slower. So everybody can choose the speed he/she is comfortable with instead of having slow drivers in all 3 lanes.
@@D3nn1s did you even watch the fucking video.
Yes slower is safer, so I'm holding up traffic for safety.🤣
This video has taught me a lot. I'm a relatively new driver (just turned 21), and the only rule that is touched upon in this video that I actually follow is using the left lane as a passing lane. I always move over to the left lane when passing someone (unless there's nobody around, admittedly), but I generally use the middle lane on 3-5 lane highways as the cruising lane. It's a bit harder on a 5 lane highway in a congested city to switch over to the right lane and stay there because I generally pass everyone in the right 2 lanes, but I will definitely start to try and practice staying in the rightmost/cruising lane. It's true, driver schools in the US (at least where I'm from) don't teach you anything about lane etiquette and it's sad to see.
You are doing it right. In the US, we don't feel a need to leave 2 or 3 or 4 lanes empty for the people who want to go 15,30,45mph over the speed limit. That is not the focus. On a 3+ lane road, it's basically seen as the left lane is for passing, the right lane if for merging on and off the highway, and the middle lanes are for normal drivers doing about the speed limit. So basically it's a 2-lane highway that has a permanent exit and entrance ramp on the right. And most drivers seem to get this.
If you're lucky, those doing right at the speed limit will stay in the rightmost of the middle lanes on a 4+ lane road and you'll get something like our hero is looking for, but it's pretty rare--usually when there are 4 or 5 or 6 lanes going your way it's because there's crazy mad traffic with people coming on and going off the highway and drivers jockeying left and right like it's a NASCAR track.
To be honest, here in Spain driving schools teach you right in terms of how to use a highway, BUT some people are rucking retards. There's always someone with a Mercedes or a BMW thinking they are better than you (even if their car is some old crap 300k miles 2.0 diesel), and they just drive at the left lane the whole time, pushing everybody and screwing up people who drive alright.
Maybe in USA driving schools need to improve, BUT people have to make their move too. People should want to drive correctly, and that's not going to be an easy task.
Greetings from some random 20yo!
In my state, we've been recently taught on lane etiquette, but I don't think anyone will follow that rule
In my state, we've been recently taught on lane etiquette, but I don't think anyone will follow that rule
Nice! I'm glad to see people are willing to listen to others and how we all can improve our daily commute to and from places.
Yes, driver education has to change. We gotta stop thinking about ourselves and think about others and how we can make their day better by simply eating our egos and letting faster traffic move forward.