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Although I chuckled as I am sure others did too, I still think driving in the "fast"/left lane when there is no one in the right lane is very poor driving technique. In the video it looked as though there were several opportunities to move right and let him pass. Many states require this and passing on the right is also illegal in many states/municipalities.
Although I chuckled as I am sure others did too, I still think driving in the "fast"/left lane when there is no one in the right lane is very poor driving technique. In the video it looked as though there were several opportunities to move right and let him pass. Many states require this and passing on the right is also illegal in many states/municipalities.
Ugh this is what I'm afraid of (30 and female here). The whole status thing irks me and I already got a taste of it when I was getting the my nema 14-50 installed. One of the electricians who came out for a quote assumed that the car was my husband's or that he bought it for me and that I was a stay at home bon-bon eater or something. He was nice about it but kind of old fashioned.
A set of what??? Large tires? Tailpipes? Everything else I already have :tongue:.I propose we Tesla drivers all get a set of these to ward off the bad spirits:
Although I chuckled as I am sure others did too, I still think driving in the "fast"/left lane when there is no one in the right lane is very poor driving technique. In the video it looked as though there were several opportunities to move right and let him pass. Many states require this and passing on the right is also illegal in many states/municipalities.
I propose we Tesla drivers all get a set of these to ward off the bad spirits:
A set of what??? Large tires? Tailpipes? Everything else I already have :tongue:.
Could it be that what you saw as a "classic $money$" gesture was really a "world's smallest violin" demonstration? That would be somewhat rude and potentially applicable to his apparent mood, but not necessarily Tesla related. Then, you could chalk it up to general pissiness and not feel singled out for your choice of the world's finest vehicle.
Just a thought.
I agree that he driver taking that video has some culpability there... and am not really a fan of the premise that inducing "bad karma" by attempting to impose my will/values on others is a victory...
I disagree a little bit. Legally, the speed limits still apply to the "fast" lane. Speed limits don't apply just to the "slow" lanes. So you are fully within the law to drive 65 MPH in the left most lane. Anyone who is upset with you for not going faster is upset with your unwillingness to break the law. There is no culpability for someone who is following the law and is then subject to road rage by someone who breaks it by speeding.
Just my 2¢.
I disagree a little bit. Legally, the speed limits still apply to the "fast" lane. Speed limits don't apply just to the "slow" lanes. So you are fully within the law to drive 65 MPH in the left most lane. Anyone who is upset with you for not going faster is upset with your unwillingness to break the law. There is no culpability for someone who is following the law and is then subject to road rage by someone who breaks it by speeding.
Just my 2¢.
I disagree a little bit. Legally, the speed limits still apply to the "fast" lane. Speed limits don't apply just to the "slow" lanes. So you are fully within the law to drive 65 MPH in the left most lane. Anyone who is upset with you for not going faster is upset with your unwillingness to break the law.
I disagree a little bit. Legally, the speed limits still apply to the "fast" lane. Speed limits don't apply just to the "slow" lanes. So you are fully within the law to drive 65 MPH in the left most lane. Anyone who is upset with you for not going faster is upset with your unwillingness to break the law. There is no culpability for someone who is following the law and is then subject to road rage by someone who breaks it by speeding.
how it's done in NJhttp://www.mit.edu/~jfc/right.html
In Illinois, it is unlawful to operate in the left lane if you are not overtaking another vehicle and there is a vehicle directly behind you (with exceptions for emergencies and such).