I've never seen anyone get flashed that wasn't camping.Please tell me you aren’t one of the people who gets on my tail and flashes your lights when I’m already going 5 over and clearly passing someone slower in the right lane.
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I've never seen anyone get flashed that wasn't camping.Please tell me you aren’t one of the people who gets on my tail and flashes your lights when I’m already going 5 over and clearly passing someone slower in the right lane.
I'm cognizant of camping and have had it happen several times. I generally drive 5 over and am in the left lane only when passing. It's usually someone who is traveling 20 over and can't be patient enough to let the person going 5 over complete the pass. It does not motivate me to speed up, I can say that.I've never seen anyone get flashed that wasn't camping.
I'm cognizant of camping and have had it happen several times. I generally drive 5 over and am in the left lane only when passing. It's usually someone who is traveling 20 over and can't be patient enough to let the person going 5 over complete the pass. It does not motivate me to speed up, I can say that.
counter point German Autobahn.
"The question of safety on the Autobahn depends very much on who you’re talking to. In 2019, the German Federal Transport Minister, Andreas Scheuer, claimed that Germany’s roads were ‘the safest in the world.’ There are reportedly 1.74 deaths per 1 million vehicle kilometers driven on the Autobahn. For reference, that number is 3.38 in the US"
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Germany's Roads Without Speed Limits: How Safe Could They Possibly Be? - Kustom Signals Inc
In 1920s Germany, the government came up with the idea of a federally-controlled network of car-only roads that would stretch across the whole country. The idea might seem simple to us today, with our own highways running the length and breadth of the US, but for the time and place, this was...kustomsignals.com
it was awesome driving in ND a few years ago where it was 70mph on the rural 2 lanes.
it's the same out in rural ND. was surprised as they are really narrow winding roads along the hills out there in SW ND. but was great to get to and from site there. Edit: Went through the road on google maps and it's 65 all the way from SD to ND on that highway, but was still rural 2 lane.Texas has many 2 lanes with 70 mph limits, and some with 75 mph speed limits. Then again, these are usually areas with very little traffic.
I'm cognizant of camping and have had it happen several times. I generally drive 5 over and am in the left lane only when passing. It's usually someone who is traveling 20 over and can't be patient enough to let the person going 5 over complete the pass. It does not motivate me to speed up, I can say that.
Texas has many 2 lanes with 70 mph limits, and some with 75 mph speed limits. Then again, these are usually areas with very little traffic.
Experienced that in west Texas between the SW corner of Oklahoma and and New Mexico
I'm cognizant of camping and have had it happen several times. I generally drive 5 over and am in the left lane only when passing. It's usually someone who is traveling 20 over and can't be patient enough to let the person going 5 over complete the pass. It does not motivate me to speed up, I can say that.
You can tell cars have really gotten safer since the 70s.2025 was crazy low for Iowa. Iowa saw a 27% reduction, and the U.S. saw a 7% reduction.
Year Fatalities
2025 260
2024 357
2023 379
2022 336
2021 356
2020 343
2019 337
2018 319
2017 330
2016 402
2015 320
2014 322
2013 317
2012 365
2011 360
2010 390
2009 371
2008 411
2007 442
2006 442
2005 450
2004 388
2003 441
2002 404
2001 446
2000 445
1999 490
1998 461
1997 466
1996 465
1995 527
1994 479
1993 453
1992 440
1991 483
1990 463
1989 496
1988 517
1987 482
1986 447
1985 482
1984 422
1983 511
1982 465
1981 632
1980 588
1979 635
1978 610
1977 634
1976 569
1975 611
1974 592
1973 694
1972 815
1971 730
1970 912
A lot varies by the job, I usually end up driving 40-50,000 miles a yr. Some days 10 some days 600. I drive 9 over on 4 lane and 6 over on 2 lane. On some really empty 2 lanes in north central Iowa my foot will get a little heavy. Those roads can easily be driven at 70 as lightly traveled as they are.2 hours per day of driving I think is way off.
The Federal Highway Administration says that the average driver travels almost 14,000 miles per year.
That’s 37 miles per day, and an average speed must be faster than 18.5 mph.
I can’t and won’t dispute that the overall numbers of productivity show that the lost time spent alive by the few who die is less than the time saved by the many who live.
However I don’t think that productivity should be the main calculation used to decide items of safety and freedom.
Please tell me you aren’t one of the people who gets on my tail and flashes your lights when I’m already going 5 over and clearly passing someone slower in the right lane.
This applies to most of rural Iowa 9 months out of the year.Texas has many 2 lanes with 70 mph limits, and some with 75 mph speed limits. Then again, these are usually areas with very little traffic.
Truckers who do this are some of the biggest ******** alive.Now you've hit a pet peeve of mine on the interstate, the semis that are governed to 65 or 70 then they get side by side and take miles to pass. They need to have a passing override on those. They back up traffic a bunch on the interstate.
First off, username checks out. Second I do as needed, but if I’m going 80 in 75 I don’t always want to go 85. The guy who is going 95 who gets on my tail and flashes his lights because he has to slow down to (horror) 80 is the problem in this situation.You could avoid that entirely by speeding up an extra 5 mph. As the poster above said, it's safer to accelerate in this scenario.
The amount of times I see a driver sitting in a trucks blind spot for far too long while passing in DSM is wild. I know they think they are being safe by going the speed limit but it couldn't be farther from the truth. Speed up and pass and then get back over and slow down to the speed you want to go. Every time you merge to pass someone you should be accelerating to make the pass quicker.I'm often confused why people feel like they can't accelerate while passing on the interstate. "I'm going 70mph and not 1mph faster! Even if I'm camping here in this trucks blind spot!".
If you are driving 70mph, and you're passing someone 69mph, it takes roughly 35 seconds to pass.
If you accelerate to 75mph, it takes roughly 5 seconds.
It's actually safer to accelerate.
Speed doesn't matter, are you passing or are you not? It's not your job to govern the speed of others, however it is your job to get out of the passing lane.First off, username checks out. Second I do as needed, but if I’m going 80 in 75 I don’t always want to go 85. The guy who is going 95 who gets on my tail and flashes his lights because he has to slow down to (horror) 80 is the problem in this situation.
I’m not governing their speed. I am passing slower vehicle at what is in my judgement a safe speed to do so. If I don’t feel comfortable accelerating to 90, I will pass as quickly as I can and move over. It’s a shared passing lane.Speed doesn't matter, are you passing or are you not? It's not your job to govern the speed of others, however it is your job to get out of the passing lane.