Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#136
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|
#137
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
Quote:
And then you have those people who live in their own world, not cognizant of anyone else. Some years ago a friend and another man simultaneously walked out of a drugstore here in TV and witnessed an accident in the parking lot. One car was pulling out of the lot, while another was backing out of a parking spot and backed right into the side of the car that was leaving. The wife (?) of the driver who was first backing out jumped out of the car and started screaming at the driver of the other car. The other driver wisely did not respond to her but simply called 9-1-1. The deputy was barely out of his vehicle when the woman started screaming at him. Her view was what right did that driver have to pass by just as the car she was in was backing out? The deputy could see quickly what he was dealing with and turned to my friend and the other man and asked if they had witnessed the accident, and if so, would one of them be willing to be a witness. Both replied yes to both questions. The other man then told the deputy that if it would help, he was the retired chief of police of [a small city in] Illinois. You'll do fine, the deputy said, and my friend left. If this can happen in a straightforward situation in a parking lot, it's hard to imagine the complexities of roundabout accidents! |
#138
|
||
|
||
![]()
Parking lots are my greatest fear - ranking even higher than roundabouts. When you are backing out of a space you can't always see to the sides because of the vehicles parked next to you. You have to back out slowly, and depend on anyone who is driving down the aisle is paying attention and not speeding.
|
#139
|
||
|
||
![]()
Want to avoid most roundabout incidents...1) don't ever travel MORE than 90 degrees in the outer lane, 2) don't ever travel LESS than 180 degrees in inner lane. If I mistakenly have to go more than 90 in outer lane, I always assume someone in inner lane will be exiting, possibly right in front of me...and slow way down.
__________________
Gary & Bev She from Orlando, He from Massachusetts - we compromised and settled half-way between. Question with boldness Hold to the truth Speak without fear "Too soon old...too late smart" |
#140
|
||
|
||
![]()
So based on what you just said, if you are in the left lane in a RAB, then you can never leave. Kind of like a trap
|
#141
|
||
|
||
![]()
What's the big rush in these roundabouts? That's the real issue.
|
#142
|
||
|
||
![]()
Not true here in FL. Almost every accident reported on the other site ends with the officer issuing a citation for a violation that he didn't witness.
|
#143
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
Yeah, roundabouts, especially two lane ones are hard, it's not a natural thing to be in the right lane and yield to the person on your left making a right ....so I guess the answer is you lay back, crawl through and say your prayers. We all know that won't work. Oh well..... |
#144
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
|
#145
|
||
|
||
![]()
Did the car exiting have their turn signal on? If yes, your fault, if not, his fault. Very simple.
|
#146
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
This includes "the other guy" and "the people on the bicycles" and "the golf carts who share the exit while crossing it on the outside perimeter of the circle." And of course, it includes you. The only way this can happen is if EVERYONE knows, cares, and follows the rules. Unfortunately you get random person who doesn't live anywhere near the villages, needing to drive down Morse Boulevard for whatever reason one day, having no idea that a traffic circle is even coming up, let alone how to navigate it. You get ONE of those people - and you have an accident. You get ONE person who has decided that putting a "street legal" sign on the back of a non-street legal golf cart gives them the right to drive on the traffic circles on the outside lane while attempting to make a three-exit turn. You get ONE person who forgets to look in his mirror while riding his bike around the circle from the outside lane. You get ONE person whose phone rings just as they're entering the circle, and they decide to answer the phone instead of paying attention to what they're doing. There are dozens of possibilities of "that one person" doing something that everyone else doesn't expect. That's why "everyone should just learn the rules" is a ridiculous, unreasonable, and unrealistic expectation. |
#147
|
||
|
||
![]()
So, the bottom line is to:
Follow RAB rules Drive defensively Try NOT to have a car next to you in a RAB. Here is the reason why and a possible/plausible contrarian perspective to everyone saying OP would be at fault. OP was heading north on Buena Vista and at RAB saw no cars to the left, proceeded at 15 mph in outer lane to continue heading north on Buena Vista. Driver at fault was traveling south on Buena Vista, entered RAB seconds earlier at a speed of 35 mph in the inner lane to take 3rd exit. Due to significant speed differences, both drivers were side by side (OP in outer lane, driver at fault in inner lane) when speeding vehicle made their exit, cutting in front of OP and causing an accident. |
#148
|
||
|
||
![]()
Well, even if we got everyone to learn the rules (which seems impossible given that half the posts in this thread are plain wrong) and the RBs were perfectly choreographed, it would just take one pack of rabid cyclists blowing through the yield sign in one group to upset the whole applecart.
|
#149
|
||
|
||
![]()
That's how I drive and it works for me.
|
#150
|
||
|
||
![]()
Big difference between the two. Politics is opinion and traffic circle driving is dictated by law, not opinion.
|
Closed Thread |
|
|