Forums > General Discussion   Shooting the breeze...

Road Rage

Reply
Created by billykiter > 9 months ago, 19 Jun 2015
Mr Milk
NSW, 2978 posts
23 Jun 2015 12:06AM
Thumbs Up

The most spectacularly stupid bit of road rage I have ever been involved in.
Driving my truck up King Street about 7 o'clock one morning and a cab takes a right-hand turn from the left-hand lane (King Street is one way and 4 lanes wide) straight across the front of my truck. We were only driving at about 10 km an hour so all it did was wipe out his driver's side door.
Why did he do this? Apparently, one block earlier, he claims that I have brushed against his driver's side mirror and broken it. He wanted to stop me so that I could pay for it.
Unfortunately any evidence has just been destroyed.

Buster fin
WA, 2575 posts
23 Jun 2015 6:06AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
purefun said..

Kamikuza said...

thedrip said..


Kamikuza said...


purefun said..



Kamikuza said...
There's breaking the rules, and there's being a useless driver.... The two are not necessarily the same thing.





so basically if you label yourself an advanced driver your free to label your breaches of law as a necessary extension of one being advanced, but others who do it, well their just selfish and incompetent
if all cars printed out exact data of what that car did......most would lose their license very quickly.....even the ummmm advanced ones...

laughable, wheres that thread on integrity




Yes.

*you're

I have no problem with other people breaking the arbitrary, pointless laws of the road if it keeps traffic moving and puts nobody in danger.

It's pendant law-abiders who think they're the best drivers cos they stick to the couple of laws they know, who are laughable.

Oh, and you. You're laughable too.





You sound like a dangerous numpty to me. I don't think I could disagree with you more. Stick to the rules and be considerate and you never know how smooth and unstressed driving can be.


Imagine how dumb* your average person is, then realize that half the population is dumber than that. If you rely on them to know the rules and act according, you're asking for trouble.


* or insert self-centered/lazy/half-asleep/on the cell phone



so the 460 fatalities on Australian roads this yr was simply dumb people??????
do smart people ever die or cause accidents???

by your reckoning, truckies have the most potential to cause harm on the roads, are they societies smartest....

how to you rate your own intelligence?
are you above the average
what about nascar drivers
you must think they are unbelievable intelligent

dumb people say dumb things......



Dumb people don't say anything.

flyingcab
VIC, 942 posts
23 Jun 2015 11:17AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
Buster fin said..


Macroscien said..
Everybody proud here of their V6 and V8, horse powers and kilowatts of torque, but
when it comes to start at green light, postie bike get if first across.

Lights turns red again, and two or three cars managed to cross intersection.




Yeah, what's with proud engine folks? I can buy all the horsepower I want. How does it make me macho?
Your granny can too. Does she do macho?



Yeah but I bet you couldn't do the work yourself, nor could your granny,
but then again those people take said work somewhere else, not on the streets

Gorgo
VIC, 4981 posts
23 Jun 2015 12:00PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
beerdead said..
Tailgaters are usually the poor bastard that the carnt in front cut in on.
...


Tailgaters are usually the people who decide to sit in the right lane and drive 2-3kph faster than the cars in front. They push and push and push until you get past the slower traffic in the left lane so you can move over. Then they stay in the right lane until they catch the next car in the right lane and do it again. Or even worse, they get about a metre in front of you then cut in and slow down.

Ian K
WA, 4048 posts
23 Jun 2015 10:32AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
sn said..

Toph said..
The one that ****s me the most, are the ones who come to a stop at a green light because the 'prepare to stop' flashing amber lights started flashing just as they came up to the signal. You can easily get another two cars through before the actual traffic signals turn amber. I watched what would've been a certain fatality (if it wasn't for the quick reaction of the truckie), as a car came to a stop but the truckie was going to continue on. The right lane was clear so the truck swerved into the right lane missing the car, and continued through the lights before they turned from green.



one of our truckies had a similar incident.

"netball-mum" in a tarago pulled in front of his semi and hit the brakes for a stale red light.

Truckie had anticipated the lights being about to go to green and had slowed down so he would not have to stop for the red.
He very nearly steam roller-ed the mum and her van with it's load of kids - luckily managing to drift the semi into the other lane - but sliding through the intersection barely under control as the lights turned green.

At the next set of lights he was stuck next to netballmum, so he [sort of] politely asked her, "what did she think she was doing cutting in front of a loaded semi."

her answer........

"you have more wheels, so you should be able to stop faster"

I'm pretty happy to not be driving trucks anymore


stephen


That's just truckies driving beyond their brakes. It scares me to see truckies dicing with motor cars at 10 kph over the speed limit expecting other drivers to allow for their longer stopping distances. They only have to back off 10kph and their stopping distances are the same as the car that has just ducked in front.


Check the figures for 40 mph. ~ 60 kph. Stopping distance is proportional to the square of speed. Compare the ratios of 60 squared with 50 squared and then compare the ratio of 125 feet with 80 feet. If truckies travelled 10 kph slower through the suburbs, put away the mobile phones, drove within their brakes, the economy would not grind to a halt and novice car drivers as described by Toph would not be killed.

ThinkaBowtit
WA, 1134 posts
23 Jun 2015 11:15AM
Thumbs Up

Schools should be teaching stuff like ^^ that, along with all the other relevant driving skills needed to be a driver who is aware of your own vehicle's limitations, as well of those you share the roads with. Could save a lot of grief - if you can't pass a driving class in school, you are not ready to hold a licence.

Kamikuza
QLD, 6493 posts
23 Jun 2015 2:08PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
purefun said..

so the 460 fatalities on Australian roads this yr was simply dumb people??????
do smart people ever die or cause accidents???

by your reckoning, truckies have the most potential to cause harm on the roads, are they societies smartest....

how to you rate your own intelligence?
are you above the average
what about nascar drivers
you must think they are unbelievable intelligent

dumb people say dumb things......



Obviously.
Of course, dumb people cause the accidents.

Uh?

Well.
Yes.
Dunno, that ****'s boring.
Nope. Fans of, even lower.

If you say so.

Kamikuza
QLD, 6493 posts
23 Jun 2015 2:12PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ThinkaBowtit said..
Schools should be teaching stuff like ^^ that, along with all the other relevant driving skills needed to be a driver who is aware of your own vehicle's limitations, as well of those you share the roads with. Could save a lot of grief - if you can't pass a driving class in school, you are not ready to hold a licence.


It's about $3,500 to get a licence here. They teach all those stats, show horrific videos and testimonials of people who are now in traffic prison, have specialist driving courses... And yet, they can't drive for crap.

You should love and treasure your truck drivers cos they sound way better than the bullies behind he wheels we have here.

choco
SA, 4032 posts
23 Jun 2015 4:03PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
sn said..

Toph said..
The one that ****s me the most, are the ones who come to a stop at a green light because the 'prepare to stop' flashing amber lights started flashing just as they came up to the signal. You can easily get another two cars through before the actual traffic signals turn amber. I watched what would've been a certain fatality (if it wasn't for the quick reaction of the truckie), as a car came to a stop but the truckie was going to continue on. The right lane was clear so the truck swerved into the right lane missing the car, and continued through the lights before they turned from green.



one of our truckies had a similar incident.

"netball-mum" in a tarago pulled in front of his semi and hit the brakes for a stale red light.

Truckie had anticipated the lights being about to go to green and had slowed down so he would not have to stop for the red.
He very nearly steam roller-ed the mum and her van with it's load of kids - luckily managing to drift the semi into the other lane - but sliding through the intersection barely under control as the lights turned green.

At the next set of lights he was stuck next to netballmum, so he [sort of] politely asked her, "what did she think she was doing cutting in front of a loaded semi."

her answer........

"you have more wheels, so you should be able to stop faster"

I'm pretty happy to not be driving trucks anymore


stephen


this might help

jonnulla
NSW, 74 posts
23 Jun 2015 5:35PM
Thumbs Up

i saw that today and my 1st thought was what happens if the truck is stopped immediately after a rise in the road, so the road hide's the taillights of the truck. you can only see the screen which shows nothing ahead until you get over the rise in the road and go 'WTF a ghost truck?!!?' as you slam into the back of it.

sn
WA, 2775 posts
23 Jun 2015 9:58PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote


Ian K said..



That's just truckies driving beyond their brakes. It scares me to see truckies dicing with motor cars at 10 kph over the speed limit expecting other drivers to allow for their longer stopping distances. They only have to back off 10kph and their stopping distances are the same as the car that has just ducked in front.


I think you must have missed half of what I wrote.........

The truckie had slowed, using his gears to slow down but still maintain momentum so he would not have to come to a complete stop at the lights.
A semi loaded with concrete takes some time to get moving - and if he cops a red light, it is likely that no one else will make it through.

Any decent truck [or car] driver is looking a lot further than the next vehicle in front of them - they are monitoring the road way ahead so they can smooth out the trip.

Braking and accelerating cause wear and tear and excessive fuel consumption.

When I was trucking, I would test myself by seeing how far I could get without needing to use brakes purely by anticipating traffic and using gears.
Several times I made it from Kwinana to Midland via Kewdale [admittedly not usually during peak hour]
Longest run was Kewdale to Karratha and return.[I was driving 2up, co-driver didn't bother]
My trip from Baldivis explosives reserve to Augusta with no clutch was interesting


Anyway - the semi driver WAS driving safely - not "dicing" - it was the numpty in the van who risked killing herself and her passengers by diving in front of the semi and standing on the brakes.


Same principal of a car trying to beat a train over a railway crossing - you don't blame the train driver for the accident. incident


stephen

Mark _australia
WA, 22348 posts
23 Jun 2015 10:10PM
Thumbs Up

^^^ Totally agree.

Ian I think your post was ignoring the fact that many drivers have no clue and the further back the truck sits, the more of them will pour into the 'vacant' lane. My stomach turns and I feel for truckies when I see some of the idiots jumping in front of them...
I've see a truck doing under 40 in a 70 zone concertina a number of cars cos they all jumped in front then stopped...... over 100tonnes going downhill - not pretty. Not the truckies fault either...

cauncy
WA, 8407 posts
23 Jun 2015 10:16PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ThinkaBowtit said...
Schools should be teaching stuff like ^^ that, along with all the other relevant driving skills needed to be a driver who is aware of your own vehicle's limitations, as well of those you share the roads with. Could save a lot of grief - if you can't pass a driving class in school, you are not ready to hold a licence.


But your 1st car can be a v8,

Mark _australia
WA, 22348 posts
23 Jun 2015 10:19PM
Thumbs Up

^^^ could - or should?

I say the latter, natural selection.

Cal
QLD, 1003 posts
24 Jun 2015 12:22AM
Thumbs Up

Doesnt WA have power/weight restrictions for young drivers?

Ian K
WA, 4048 posts
24 Jun 2015 7:36AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
Mark _australia said..
^^^ Totally agree.

Ian I think your post was ignoring the fact that many drivers have no clue and the further back the truck sits, the more of them will pour into the 'vacant' lane. My stomach turns and I feel for truckies when I see some of the idiots jumping in front of them...
I've see a truck doing under 40 in a 70 zone concertina a number of cars cos they all jumped in front then stopped...... over 100tonnes going downhill - not pretty. Not the truckies fault either...


Yes I ignored a lot of things. Just pointing out that if the graph, the first google hit on the internet, is to be believed... A car doing 60 jumping in front of a truck doing 50 cannot out brake it. That ignores the driver reaction time of course, but a car would generally have to have a reason to brake and that should be become apparent to the truck driver at the same time , if not sooner. If the cars continually jumping into the gap left by the truckie don't continually move onwards then you have a traffic jam anyway.

The majority of truckies do drive 10kph slower than the car traffic, it's a minority I was referring to that scare me. I've done a little truck driving myself, have experienced the phenomena, a little frustrating, but easy to cope with if you drive the truck at an appropriate speed.

Little Jon
NSW, 2115 posts
25 Jun 2015 8:57PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ka43 said..
Its todays attitude of "*** you as long as Im OK". Unfortunately a lot of people don't give a **** and this extends to their driving. They think they have a right to do what ever they want and others will allow for this behaviour. I watched a dummy mummy in her 4wd reverse park into a spot at our local shops. She actually got out to see how her effort was. Problem, she was 2/3 in her spot but 1/3 in the next one. She shrugged, grabbed her keys and walked off. If you say anhthing you cop a gobful or the old "Ill only be 5 minutes" Doesn't ****** matter dumb arse.
Says it all really.


Same thing in my local shopping centre car park on a very busy day, had to leave a twig in the tyre valve. Just need to pump it up again.

mineral1
WA, 4564 posts
25 Jun 2015 8:55PM
Thumbs Up

sn
same situation today at end of freeway northern end. Go's from 100 K's down to 70 k's on a down hill grade. Mum in van with kids, zips out of left lane, rounds me up and the semi (loaded). No sooner she gets back in the left lane, just as her rear passes front truck bumper to line up to turn left, she jams on the anchors to get down to 70 k's. Ol truckie was on high alert, first thing I spotted was the smoke off the tyres as he was pulling the rig up smartish Lucky he was on high alert.
Dumb stupid person in the van needed to be dragged out by the hair, dragged to the nearest rehab hospital, and made to wash incapacitated accidents victims for a month.
Fortunately her left turn light went green before the semi stopped, otherwise she would have been on stalker book as soon as she got home,whinging about some ugly big truck driver yelling at her messing up her pristine makeup.

sn
WA, 2775 posts
25 Jun 2015 10:39PM
Thumbs Up

like I said........

I'm pretty happy to not be driving trucks anymore

The Sandwichmaker is even happier about it - and was positively beaming when I had my truck license downgraded to a basic car license so I couldn't be tempted to moonlight when the old bosses ran short of D.G. and Explosives permitted drivers.

Sometimes bridges need to be burnt.

The funny thing though, is I am still professionally driving - chauffeuring Nuns around Perth - which is the most stress free job I have ever had!


stephen

mineral1
WA, 4564 posts
25 Jun 2015 11:03PM
Thumbs Up

^^^^
While I sit home scratching me coit.
Sounds like a cream job, well done and you deserve it mate.

ThinkaBowtit
WA, 1134 posts
28 Jun 2015 2:53PM
Thumbs Up

Here's a shocking case of road rage in Queensland.

ratz
WA, 472 posts
28 Jun 2015 4:44PM
Thumbs Up

faaaaark. what a looney..

dmitri
VIC, 1040 posts
28 Jun 2015 7:26PM
Thumbs Up

I've seen that video before..
The thing is we don't know what happened before...

I noticed my young boy showed a finger to someone once... I said to him: " son, never do that again, because one day someone come to you and smash your nose for that... "

ok
NSW, 1088 posts
28 Jun 2015 7:32PM
Thumbs Up

ThinkaBowtit
WA, 1134 posts
28 Jun 2015 9:47PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
dmitri said..
I've seen that video before..
The thing is we don't know what happened before...


Doesn't really matter what happened before, ute guy lost the plot and shouldn't have. No one deserves to be treated like that, whether they've done something or not.

sotired
WA, 598 posts
29 Jun 2015 5:13AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ThinkaBowtit said..


dmitri said..
I've seen that video before..
The thing is we don't know what happened before...




Doesn't really matter what happened before, ute guy lost the plot and shouldn't have. No one deserves to be treated like that, whether they've done something or not.



Agreed. We all have things that happen to us on the road that make our blood boil, but its important to not take it personally. Its not an insult to your masculinity. Its not a targeted attack on you. Its just someone doing something stupid.

An hour later, you are not going to be bothered by it... unless you ram their car, drive on the wrong side of the road, jump on their bonnet, and generally make an arse of yourself. That's where it becomes your problem. As in, they have done something stupid, but you are the idiot for being bothered by it.

petermac33
WA, 6415 posts
29 Jun 2015 5:48AM
Thumbs Up

Around 20 years back I was involved in a sort of road rage incident.

Driving along Nicholson Rd doing aout 60-70 km/h i slowed down to turn left into Langford Avenue.

There was a City of Canning large truck behind me who didn't fancy putting his brakes on.

I had pissed him off a bit about 30 seconds earlier when I indicated to move into the left lane of Nicholson Rd ( in front of him) ready to turn left into Langford Av.

As I slowed down to turn left he was about 80-100 metres behind me but didn't break one bit!

I had to take evasive action in the end to stop being whacked from behind by a 10 ton truck and actually accelerated around the corner very fast.

I then did a U-turn and followed him all the way to the Canning Vale Depot.

My blood was boiling and when he got out of the truck I gave him a earful,though I was a bit fearful with all of his fellow employees sitting around the depot!

Would not react that way again but when you've nearly just been killed by a fruit loop its hard not to.

Funny thing about that incident is from where the incident took place to the Canning Vale depot is around 10kms,but no joke he took the biggest detour of all time---- around 20-30 Kms!


Perhaps the sight of my car in his rear vision mirror all the way had something to do with that.

In the end I guess he figured out he better return to base before it closes

myusernam
QLD, 6123 posts
29 Jun 2015 9:03AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
sn said...
like I said........

I'm pretty happy to not be driving trucks anymore

The Sandwichmaker is even happier about it - and was positively beaming when I had my truck license downgraded to a basic car license so I couldn't be tempted to moonlight when the old bosses ran short of D.G. and Explosives permitted drivers.

Sometimes bridges need to be burnt.

The funny thing though, is I am still professionally driving - chauffeuring Nuns around Perth - which is the most stress free job I have ever had!


stephen


Do any of the younger ones put on a tease and let you see up their habit in the mirror?


Semi drivers - speed limited to 100 makes them try and overtake you without enough space. I've been overtaken by a b double (my speedo said 100) and he's not even made it past the first trailer before he's started to move back in to the left lane. Forcing me to brake to avoid collision. But I see it a lot here (single carriageway highway) . they also follow too close (not all speed limited), try and push people along etc.

Cal
QLD, 1003 posts
29 Jun 2015 11:22AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
myusernam said..

Semi drivers - speed limited to 100 makes them try and overtake you without enough space. I've been overtaken by a b double (my speedo said 100) and he's not even made it past the first trailer before he's started to move back in to the left lane. Forcing me to brake to avoid collision. But I see it a lot here (single carriageway highway) . they also follow too close (not all speed limited), try and push people along etc.


Anyone up with how the tachygraph/electronic vehicle monitoring matter is developing? it is several years since I drove heavy vehicles and Ive lost track of the topic.

mineral1
WA, 4564 posts
29 Jun 2015 10:40AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
Cal said..

myusernam said..

Semi drivers - speed limited to 100 makes them try and overtake you without enough space. I've been overtaken by a b double (my speedo said 100) and he's not even made it past the first trailer before he's started to move back in to the left lane. Forcing me to brake to avoid collision. But I see it a lot here (single carriageway highway) . they also follow too close (not all speed limited), try and push people along etc.



Anyone up with how the tachygraph/electronic vehicle monitoring matter is developing? it is several years since I drove heavy vehicles and Ive lost track of the topic.


Not sure, however, first hand experience in WA. Any large prime mover/truck involved in a traffic accident, the department of transport will show up and demand a download of the on-board engine management system, which has a data logger inbuilt into the system and will show if the vehicle has been tampered with to go above the 100 kph speed limit, and if it actually had been prior to the accident. First time this approach was made, my staff gave the transport chap a quick exit, explaining he couldn't have the data unless vehicle owner agreed.
He was back four hours later with a court order
Ever since, any time they arrive, we ask for authority, they would produce documentation

There are considerable number of pirate programs in the market place to override the on-board ECM's These are from a OEM perspective highly disapproved of.
On top of that these are illegal to fit up, however it doesn't appear to deter vehicle owners from installing, as our experience has shown, where they will send tucks in for service/repairs, and forget to remove prior to dropping off at shop

One state, some years back NSW I think it was, trucks recorded three speed breaches, then the trucks were excluded from driving on NSW roads. I.E. no entry. Not sure if its still in place.



Subscribe
Reply

Forums > General Discussion   Shooting the breeze...


"Road Rage" started by billykiter