Controlling
Your Lane
Lane
position should be chosen based, among other things, on establishing
escape routes, making yourself visible to others, staying out of the
blind spots of other vehicles, and road conditions. What is often
overlooked, in my opinion, is the concept of 'controlling your lane'.
For
example, assume you are riding on surface streets in a city and are
stopped at a traffic light preparing to make a right turn. Logic
suggests that you should be in the right track of your lane, but it is
safer, I suggest, to be closer to the left track.
Why? Because while nearer the left track of your lane you CONTROL the
lane. There are people that upon seeing you in the right track with
your right turn signal flashing will slide their vehicles into the
lane beside you and try to share the lane - to get a jump off the line
when the light changes.
That you only have two wheels is of no consequence - you OWN the whole
lane that they would try to share with you. If you were to change your
mind and elect to not make that right turn, you would be in trouble.
Worse, should that sharing vehicle actually decide to make a right
turn too, you could easily be forgotten (in his blind spot) and he
could drive right over you while making that turn.
Controlling
your lane is as important as any other consideration when you choose
your lane position.
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