Friday, June 13, 2008

Freeway Merging Mistakes

Freeways are a great way of transportation, but in order to drive on them, you have to know how to merge. If you don't have a guide (with a lowered price), you are prone to fail on your test in case it goes on a freeway. Here are the common merging mistakes on freeways.

Freeway Merging Mistakes That Ruin Road Tests

Freeways are a great form of transportation. They allow a large volume of cars to travel at high speeds. They have no traffic lights, and entering them requires cars to merge. Merging is normally an easy task, but for beginners and driving students it's not easy at all. It requires patience, timing, and coordination, yet some people don't have these qualities. On a driving test, driving students make many mistakes on freeway merging, some of them repeat more than others.

One silly yet critical mistake is not stopping at an on-ramp red light. Some on-ramps have traffic lights to regulate traffic on the freeway. Some drivers are not aware of it and just go through them like they don't exist. Doing this counts as running a red light, which is, of course, a critical error and immediate failure.

Stopping unnecessarily at on-ramps is a very serious mistake that takes ages to fix. Freeway traffic is fast, so merging cars should also drive fast. Some driving students, out of fear, stop at the on-ramp. This is highly dangerous, as other drivers expect fast moving traffic and might hit the stopped student. Furthermore, stopping makes it very hard to merge with freeway traffic, and the driving student gets lost.

Signaling is an important part of merging. Although drivers expect the new entering drivers to merge, signaling is still required for the driving test. Also, some places require signaling, since the entry lane is also an exit lane, and freeway traffic expects drivers on this lane to exit. Not signaling is a minor error, but it can be one minor error too much.

Not merging at all with no reason is the worst mistake that can be made. If the driving student reaches the end of the merging lane without merging, this tells the examiner that the student has no idea what to do on freeways. On this case, there is not much the examiner can do. The students fails on the spot.

Freeway driving, and especially merging, should be practiced by driving students. But not every practice is good. Driving students should get a guide that explains them in detail how to merge, drive on the freeway, and exit properly for the driving test. Moreover, it should explain how to avoid these mistakes and more mistakes that were not mentioned here. Without it, the chance for passing the driving test is less than 50%.

You can find a guide like this at the Pass Your Road Test area of my site (again, the price was dramatically reduced). There is also a free driving test mistakes and tips course on this page.

Have a great weekend,
Nadav

nadavs

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