Depending on your country, whichever is the direction that requires you to cross the other lane, e.g. if you're in America it would be turning left because that requires you to cross the lane going the other way, but in Britain it would be right for the same reason.
They help reduce them, but accidents still happen when people turn from the turning lane when a car is coming.
No. If the car turning left is in his proper lane and has the proper signal he is not liable.
Car turning right has the right away. Car turning from left has to yield the right away to cars coming strait or turning right this is the law in all 50 states
The left tire will lift if your turning right
You turn the turning signal up to go left and down to go right. You turn the turning signal up to go left and down to go right.
If the right turning driver is in the turning lane without lights then you have the right away to turn left. If he is in a meiddle strip then you still have the right away because the rule is the right hand turning driver must first give way to traffic to the left and or right and then any oncoming traffic going straight or turning left into the horizontal road. This is for Countries that drive on the left side of the road. If you drive on the right side of the road then i assume this answer would be reversed and he would have the right away. I have no sources for this but i suggest you go to a website containing road rules for your country cause everywhere is different even with states within your own country. My answer might only apply to where I live, if you live in Australia then take my answer 100% as correct.
Due to centrifugal force, when turning left, the left side of the car will life. The same goes for right handed turns. If turning right, the right side of your car will have less weight on it. The weight will always be on the outside of the curve. Hope this helps :)
Yes, absolutely. The only exception is if the driver turning right has a yield sign. This is one of the most common mistakes I see in the area I live. Many times, the driver turning right has a yield sign. That would give priority to the driver turning left. However, if the driver turning right has no yield sign, she has the priority. There are so many yield signs in my area that drivers turning left automatically assume they have the right-of-way even if no yield sign is present for the driver turning right.
if the right side chain moves faster than the left it will turn to the left, and same with Left side turning faster for right turns.
my balls
The left turn has right away
Oncoming traffic always has right of way. When turning left, signal, stop, wait. Move only when it is safe.