As an EMT, I work on the ambulance a lot and I've seen many ways people try to get out of the way of an ambulance. On ANY road, when an emergency vehicle is coming, SLOW DOWN, or STOP and pull to the RIGHT. That is the correct way to yield right of way to an ambulance. This will help ambulance crews AA whole lot.
Type one ambulance means an ambulance... which is type one.
Singapore has 10 expressways right now, with the 11th one, the North South Expressway, to be opened in 2020.
There are 10 expressways, most of them ends with E (stands for expressway) like KJE (Kranji Expressway), CTE (Central Expressway) and PIE (not the pie you eat but Pan-Island Expressway) except for one special expressway called ECP (East Coast Parkway), maybe due to the fact it has a E in front (or it becomes ECE) or maybe because it just runs along the East Coast Park.
The number one lane
the car making the left yields to the car making the right otherwise the car making the left can be sited for failure to yield to the right of way to oncoming traffic.
One day i was about to ride an ambulance
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.
Correct. The law imposes an obligation to yield the right of way under certain circumstances, but does not give the "right" of "way" to anyone.
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Everyone on the road - including emergency vehicles. E.g., if a police car and an ambulance - both with lights and sirens active - meet each other at an intersection, the ambulance has right of way.
If the intersection is not marked, the car to the right has the right of way. If the intersection is marked, then obey the signs. If one vehicle needs to yield to an on-coming vehicle, then the larger vehicle probably has the right of way. If it is during planting or harvesting time, be prepared to yield to farm vehicles.
Generally "Yield Right of Way", "Yield" or "Yield Ahead" signs are posted on "approaches to a through street or Highway where conditions are such that a stop is not always required" in the United States. They are also sometimes used in the merging of traffic where safety dictates that one or more lanes must give right of way to the other lanes. Most often yield signs are posted where there is sufficient visibility that merging traffic does not necessarily have to come to a stop before entering a roadway, although you still MUST yield the right-of-way to traffic in that lane.