When you pass a bicycle, you pass it the same way you would if it is a car.
The person in the car is to blame because the person riding the bicycle would have no way of telling when the car door would be open. the person in the car could have easily looked in the side mirrors and could have seen if someone riding a bicycle was passing by.Added; The traffic offense charge would be "Opening Door to Traffic."
If you use the passing car as a reference point, you would appear to be moving south. This is because your perspective changes as the passing car moves north, making it seem like you are moving in the opposite direction, even though you are stationary.
When passing a truck, your car should always pass from the left side. This is because the driver’s blind spots are larger on the right side, making it more dangerous to attempt a pass there. Additionally, trucks typically have better visibility of the left lane, allowing for a safer passing maneuver. Always ensure you have enough space and time to complete the pass safely.
when its a "no passing zone" or "do not pass"sign posted never attempt to pass a car ahead of you.. ~On a curve. ~Near or at the crest of a hill. ~In an intersection
No! It is illegal to do so. That's why they call it a no passing zone...
Nope. If you had to speed in order to pass, you didn't need to pass.
A deraileur is the device that shifts the chain to different cogs on a bicycle.
Passing on a blind hill is the most dangerous situation to attempt to pass another car on a 2 lane road.
On a curve. Through an intersection. Anywhere a no passing sign is posted.
In a car or bicycle tyre (US tire).In a car or bicycle tyre (US tire).In a car or bicycle tyre (US tire).In a car or bicycle tyre (US tire).
i recently read you are allowed 5 mph over or under the posted speed limit. and also that when you are legally passing a vehical you must got 10mph faster then the car you are trying to pass. is this true???
No, that's false