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PASSING ON A FREEWAY
INTO
A FASTER LANE
As a group, it can be difficult
to pass a slow moving car on any road with two or more lanes of
same-direction traffic. This is especially true with moderate to
heavy traffic. Often there is not enough room for the entire group to
get between cars in the faster lane.
The way to accomplish this is
for the last bike to pull over one lane to the left and hold his
position. Each rider should move to the left lane as the cars in
front of the rear biker pass them. You can then pass the slow car as
a group after the lead rider moves to the left lane.
The lead rider should move back
to the right lane after passing the slow car by a safe distance. It
is very important that the lead rider maintain speed to make room for
all the other riders. Each rider should move back to the right lane
one at a time once safely cleared the slow car. This can be a real
slick choreographed move for other motorists to observe. |
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PASSING ON A FREEWAY
INTO
A SLOWER LANE
During a lane change into a lane
moving slower than the group (usually to the right), the FRONT bike
moves over first. Now, what do the rest of the bikes do? Legally, if
the whole group moves like a "brick" (everyone changing lane together
in one movement), that is considered to be parading and can cause
problems if any emergency arises. Also, if you remember from your MSF
classes, you learned that you and you alone are responsible for your
own safety. So, if each bike individually changes lanes in order
following the first bike to change lanes (whether from the front or
the back), you can reduce your risk factor, change lanes legally, and
still look REAL GOOD while doing the maneuver!
It is important that the lead
and tailing bikers talk to each other before the ride and come to an
agreement on how they intend to pass cars.
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