sdanseo wrote: » Am I the only one who thinks that roundabouts are completely overused? There's plenty of reason to advocate them in certain places. For joining up 3 or 4 roads with light to medium traffic, they work and are appropriate. But in a lot of places, especially with a high volume of traffic, they only serve to slow things down and end up becoming signal controlled, which seems to be the single stupidest thing humans have ever invented. Busier motorway junctions - not busy enough to warrant freeflow - being the main examples. In places like Ballycoolin and on who-knows how many bypasses, there also tends to be a lot of them in quick succession which slows traffic down considerably on the road which has priority. Going around ten roundabouts is a lot slower than going through ten green lights. Is there any national guidance, maybe in the DMRB, as to when a 4-way junction should be used instead?
First Up wrote: » Easiest driving country I've ever been is France and they use roundabouts everywhere. I'm a fan.
Cloudio9 wrote: The French are also more tolerant of cars taking small gaps at busy roundabouts which makes them work better in heavy traffic. In Ireland people lose their sh1t if they have "right of way" on the roundabout.
dev100 wrote: » Ay yes the ould yield the attitude of drivers who aren't even near the roundabout think they can just drive straight thru at hi speed and not slow down even if other cars and then go ballistic because you got onto roundabout before them .
Peregrinus wrote: » Those drivers are correct. Right of way goes to the driver on the right, not the driver who got their first. You shouldn't enter the roundabout if you're doing so will cause a driver coming from your right to have to slow down.
Peregrinus wrote: Those drivers are correct. Right of way goes to the driver on the right, not the driver who got their first. You shouldn't enter the roundabout if you're doing so will cause a driver coming from your right to have to slow down.
mikeymouse wrote: » You also get "Milton Keynes" tyre wear
dev100 wrote: » No I believe you would be wrong . Your meant to slow down and yield when approaching a roundabout you just can't drive straight onto it thinking you've the right away. The person already on the roundabout has the right away no matter what happens .
Pinch Flat wrote: » The problem with roundabouts here is that a lot of people don't know how to use them. So you'll have idiots in the right hand lane approaching, because the left lane is busy, then going straight on.
Victor wrote: » There is a recognised problem with people just driving straight through crossroads, without obeying traffic lights or yield / stop signs. Hence T-junctions and roundabouts.
Peregrinus wrote: Nope; you must yield to traffic coming from the right. The question of who gets to the roundabout first is irrelevant. Thus if there's a car approaching the roundabout from your right, which hasn't yet entered the roundabout, but it's close enough that if you enter the roundabout you will obstruct it (i.e. force it to go slower than it would otherwise need to) then you must give way to it.As the Rules of the Road succinctly puts it, "you must yield to traffic coming from the right". They even print the "must" in red. There's not a whisper to suggest that this is confined to people already on the roundabout who are coming from your right. You're correct to say that you're meant to slow down when approaching the roundabout, but the main purpose of this is so you can check whether there's anyone approaching from your right, and so that you'll have the opportunity to stop if you are required to yield to them.
CeilingFly wrote: That is correct. So many think it's "driver to right" has right of way.
CeilingFly wrote: On roundabouts, a driver on the roundabout prior to you entering, has right of way whether that driver is ahead on the roundabout or to your right on the roundabout.
CeilingFly wrote: Incident three years ago with wife. She entered a roundabout before a driver came from road to the right. The plonker effectively drove into her and tried to claim right of way.
CeilingFly wrote: Gardai didn't buy it and neither did court as he was convicted of careless driving and insurance claim went against him too. Thankfully she had a dashcam - which also showed his animated anger which did not go down well in court.
Peregrinus wrote: None of that supports your initial statement that "the person already on the roundabout has the right of way no matter what". The right of way goes not to the person who gets to the roundabout first, but to the person who is coming from the right.
Patww79 wrote: » This post has been deleted.