Northwoods Snowman
Well-known member
What dash cam setup are you using?
They designate traffic islands (whether there's an actual island or not). The local boards are full of riders that insist on using them then complain when they get cited. I avoid them.A pair of double-yellow lines next to each other ("double double-yellow") separating an HOV lane.Just out of curiosity, what is this DY DY thing of which you guys speak?
Yeah, out in the regular world of driving, a double DY is meant to simulate an island--namely, do not turn across here. Nevertheless, there are plenty of knuckleheads turning across them to enter shopping center driveways mid-block.They designate traffic islands (whether there's an actual island or not). The local boards are full of riders that insist on using them then complain when they get cited. I avoid them.A pair of double-yellow lines next to each other ("double double-yellow") separating an HOV lane.Just out of curiosity, what is this DY DY thing of which you guys speak?
What is this Hans' Principle you speak of? Google had nothingAnd speaking of which (knuckleheads?), as I was monkeying with them on the L.A. freeway, I felt like I was breaking more laws than I was comfortable doing. I really (no, really) don't believe the rules don't apply to motorcycles, as I've tried to capture in my "Hans' Principle of Motorcycle Advantage," promulgated years ago when I started commuting to help me define the limits of what I was willing and not willing to do to get ahead of traffic. Glad to be back in my own 'hood.
It's just something I came up with some years ago when I started commuting full time by motorcycle. I could always get ahead of or around stopped or slow-moving traffic because of my size, but sometimes doing so involved illegal or obnoxious behavior. So I had to figure out what my own limits were in terms of what I was willing, and not willing, to do to get ahead of traffic. And I developed what I called "Hans's Principle of Motorcycle Advantage," which quite simply goes like this:What is this Hans' Principle you speak of? Google had nothing
In TX it's in the statutes as the "improved shoulder rule".An easy example is riding up the right shoulder over the white fog line in cases where the lane is wide enough for a car: "If a car can do it, then why should I be allowed to just because I'm on a motorcycle?"
(6) "Improved shoulder" means a paved shoulder.
This is brilliant! Of course! In fact, I did it on my ride home just tonight from the train station: On the single-lane road with a white fog line and paved shoulder, when the car in front of me stopped to turn left, I entered the shoulder across the line to pass it. Why wouldn't that be the same situation when all the cars ahead of me are backed up?In TX it's in the statutes as the "improved shoulder rule".An easy example is riding up the right shoulder over the white fog line in cases where the lane is wide enough for a car: "If a car can do it, then why should I be allowed to just because I'm on a motorcycle?"
https://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/TN/htm/TN.541.htm.
(4) to pass another vehicle that is slowing or stopped on the main traveled portion of the highway, disabled, or preparing to make a left turn;
(5) to allow another vehicle traveling faster to pass;.
Taken at its face value, bikes and cars can go around slowing or stopped traffic on a developed shoulder. In practice "leap frogging" a traffic jam in a car will often get LEO attention. If doing it on a bike and you notice a patrol vehicle, simply take the next exit and, if asked, explain your concern about idling for an extended time in the stalled traffic.
§3304. Overtaking vehicle on the right.
(a) General rule.
-The driver of a vehicle may overtake and pass upon the right of another vehicle only under one of the following conditions:
(1) When the vehicle overtaken is making or about to make a left turn,except that such movement shall not be made by driving off the berm or shoulder of the highway.
(2) Upon a roadway with unobstructed pavement of sufficient width for two or more lines of vehicles moving lawfully in the direction being traveled by the overtaken vehicle, except that such movement shall not be made by driving off the roadway.
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