Why Do People Engage in Tailgating Behavior on the Road?

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The discussion revolves around the frustrations and dangers of tailgating and maintaining safe following distances while driving. Participants express their annoyance at drivers who fail to observe recommended distances, with some sharing personal experiences of being tailgated on highways. The conversation highlights the importance of maintaining a safe stopping distance, especially in adverse conditions, and the risks associated with tailgating, such as potential accidents when sudden stops are necessary. Some drivers resort to tactics like slowing down to encourage tailgaters to back off, while others emphasize the dangers of driving too slowly on highways, which can lead to more accidents. The dialogue also touches on regional driving behaviors, with some areas exhibiting more aggressive driving styles, leading to a culture of tailgating as a norm. Participants agree that tailgating is dangerous and often stems from a lack of awareness about safe driving practices. Overall, the thread reflects a shared concern for road safety and the need for drivers to be more considerate and aware of their following distances.
  • #61
edward said:
Looking ahead is a good idea. I will usually drive the fast lane and if I can't see through the windshield of the vehicle in front of me I will drive a bit offset to the left in the lane so I can see what is ahead. It bugs the heck out of my wife because I drive so close to the edge of the road.

Lines on the road mean nothing to me. Ill drive half way on the shoulder if it means I'll take the turn smoother. I use all the available road surface possible. Most off ramps have a shoulder. They say take the off ramp at 40. If you drive with your car in the middle of the white line between the off ramp and the shoulder, you can take it at 60mph and it will feel smooth as silk with no tire noise, and no feeling of being thrown to the outside of the turn. Just keep the white line relatively in the middle of your windshield during the entire time you take the off ramp. (Although, there's a bit more to it. For example, almost all exits are to your left. So you want to start the turn almost all the way to the right as possible. Then when you turn left you want to kiss the apex and keep the shoulder line in the middle of you car. That way it will feel smooth, and you will go fast the entire time). Most of the time cars following me are also going fast...until we go on the off ramp and I leave them in my dust despite the fact that my car is not powerful at all. They just take the turn wrong and end up slowing down considerably)
 
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  • #62
Cyrus said:
...you can take it at 60mph and it will feel smooth as silk with no tire noise, and no feeling of being thrown to the outside of the turn...

60? I do about 190 through there... sucks though because there's usually a stoplight at the end of the off ramp. :frown:
 
  • #63
Im not talking about KPH. 190KPH is 118 MPH...are you joking? You're going to kill someone going that speed on an off ramp. Thats moronic.
 
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  • #64
nonono mph man, I go faster and faster each time, I mean you have to have some way to make driving entertaining when your not tailgating people right? Soon I'm going to need a new car though I think I'm nearing the limit of mine, and I don't want to lose the game.
 
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  • #65
Oh, I forgot that you own a 190MPH ferrari. :rolleyes:

There going to scoop your brains off the interstate one of these days.
 
  • #66
hehe... on a more serious note, can anyone imagine going that fast? I mean, high end sports cars these days top out over 200mph, with a few exceptions over 250! Furthermore, not only are they incredibly fast in a straight line, but their handling capabilities (I'm talking European sports cars, not american cars) are incredible. I can think of very few things I'd rather do than drive a high end Porsche (like the GT2/GT3/Turbo/Carrera GT) on a closed circuit... it would be, well, I can't find the words.
 
  • #67
You would not be able to handle such a car at its limits. You would kill yourself.
 
  • #68
I never said anything about taking it to its limits, I have no doubt that I lack the driving skills necessary to do that. But that doesn't mean it wouldn't be absolutely exhilarating!
 
  • #69
So I guess my question has been answered mostly indirectly (and directly by chroot) -- I had assumed that the prevailing cause for tailgating is a combination of not actually having learned properly how to drive, and sheer stupidity... and none of the stories in the thread apply to the general case.


I would like to point out that if I'm "blocking" you in the left lane, that either means I am in the process of passing a group of cars, or I have been pinned into the left lane (e.g. by someone speeding up as I was passing). In the latter case, tailgating would be counter-productive -- cutting off most of my rearward visibility is likely to increase the amount of time it takes for me to move back over to the right. In the former case, it runs the risk of shifting me out of "pass these cars" mode into "risk mitigation" mode. (Which would again probably increase the amount of time I'm in front of you)

In any case, I do not consider being in front of you a sufficient reason to drive illegally.
 
  • #70
rocketboy said:
hehe... on a more serious note, can anyone imagine going that fast? I mean, high end sports cars these days top out over 200mph, with a few exceptions over 250! Furthermore, not only are they incredibly fast in a straight line, but their handling capabilities (I'm talking European sports cars, not american cars) are incredible. I can think of very few things I'd rather do than drive a high end Porsche (like the GT2/GT3/Turbo/Carrera GT) on a closed circuit... it would be, well, I can't find the words.

http://www.millionairesconcierge.com/racecar.htm
 
  • #71
Ivan Seeking said:
http://www.millionairesconcierge.com/racecar.htm

That is awesome! They have some other cool stuff as well "fighter jet thrill" *boyhood excitement races through rocketboy*
 
  • #72
Hurkyl said:
I would like to point out that if I'm "blocking" you in the left lane, that either means I am in the process of passing a group of cars, or I have been pinned into the left lane (e.g. by someone speeding up as I was passing). In the latter case, tailgating would be counter-productive ...

you're right, tailgating isn't going to help anything, a more productive solution is to pass on the shoulder! :biggrin:
 
  • #73
Kurdt said:
I drive a McLaren Mercedes SLR which has carbon ceramic disk brakes and can stop in half the recommended distance. Thats why I tail gate.

I do tail gate but I have this thing where I have to be as close as possible to the car in front. Even when the traffic has stopped I only leave a couple of inches between cars. I don't know why, just one of the many weird compulsions i have.

Jerk.

Sorry
 
  • #74
Cyrus said:
Im always packing when I drive baby. I need a special permit to carry around that concealed weapon.

Undoubtly, a small caliber with a short barrel. :smile:
 
  • #75
Integral said:
Jerk.

Sorry

Sheesh! I was only joking about the McLaren SLR. :rolleyes:
 
  • #76
The use of tailgating is to get the slow drivers out of the fast (left) lane of traffic. Personally I don't tailgate much myself, someone would have to be going pretty slow for me to do that. What I normally do is drive my comfortable distance behind someone, and usually within a couple of minutes someone will start getting close to me. I'll just switch one lane to the right, let the people that want to tailgate past, get behind them and let them clear the way. Traffic (not just for me, but the dozens piled up behind the one slow guy) then speeds up tremendously. People going faster than the speed limit (even around 20 mph faster on a 70mph roadway) don't really bother me (I usually get out of the faster lane if I'm in it to let them pass), it's the person yabbering away on the cellphone or falling asleep or just plain not paying attention that cause me problems.

Edit: If traffic starts to pile up behind me (therefore making ME the slow guy in the fast lane), I usually just step on it, going up to 15-20mph over the limit to get around any obstacles in the right lane, then switch over to let the faster traffic past. Everybody wins in that situation.
 
  • #77
Greg Freeman said:
it's the person yabbering away on the cellphone or falling asleep or just plain not paying attention that cause me problems.

Same here. They'll drive you nuts because they're completely oblivious that they're impeding traffic driving under the speed limit or an inconsistent speed (that's more annoying than the slow drivers, because it's harder to just pass them), and usually in the middle or left lane (if they want to go that slow, they belong in the far right lane with flashers on like all the trucks with full loads that can't get up the mountains). If they're especially oblivious, that's why they put horns in cars...to wake them up and let the person on the other end of the phone know they can't talk and drive at the same time too.

If everyone would get in their car and focus on their driving rather than everything else...phone, radio, screaming kids (you'd think with all the carseat and seatbelt laws that kids would be less of a distraction than they were when I was a kid crawling around the car fighting with my sister because she crossed the invisible line on the seat onto my side), eating lunch, putting on makeup, shaving, organizing schedules, etc...then we might not have such problems.
 
  • #78
Greg Freeman said:
The use of tailgating is to get the slow drivers out of the fast (left) lane of traffic.
There's a recipe for you. Pick the worst drivers on the road, and put yourself in danger of hitting them. This is Darwin Award material at its best.
 
  • #79
P4PPY said:
I once did a small psych test on the cause of tailgating. The results were interesting.

It seemed that drivers would gauge their speeds based on the car in front of them subconsciously. Instead of looking at their speedometer, they would just follow the car in front of them and their vision would judge the speed. This happened more and more at faster speeds and longer durations of travel time.

The reason behind the tailgating was when the car in front of them would slow down or speed up gradually. The mind would not calculate in the safest distance as the speeds increased. It would only tell your mind to accelerate or decelerate depending on the speed of the car in front… not the distance.
Brake lights were the only thing that would “wake” the mind up.

If you really want to mess with someone though… use your E-Brake to slow down. Your brake lights don’t come on… and the vehicle will slow down at a faster rate than normal. (Just don’t lock the rear tires up). The car behind you (if in a state of subconscious driving) will bump into your tailgate without even knowing what happened.

I notice this a lot. I drive a standard, and most of my deceleration is from engine braking because I'm trying to save money on future brake repair, and I'm trying to save gas (you burn less gas if you gradually slow down and never need to come to a complete stop at intersections, opposite of truck owners who race toward red lights).
While engine braking, people tailgate like crazy. They have absolutely no clue how fast they're going, how fast I'm going, what a good distance is, or even that there is a red light ahead of them. I drive a small car, too, so it's not like they're physically incapable of seeing what's up ahead; they're just retards.

What's interesting is that you can also tell who's a retard by looking at brake lights. Today on the way to work, there was a small car to my left, followed by a guy in a truck. The small car gets up to the standard ~68km/h (8 over the speed limit), and the guy in the truck is tailgating him. I'm going a bit slower than that, so I'm getting a back view of this, and I see the truck guy is applying his brakes every few seconds. Closer, tailgating, braking, closer, braking.
My brother does this too. I once let him drive my car on the highway, and he kept using his brakes to slow down. He would get a big gap, accelerate hard, brake, big gap, accelerate, brake. If your friend starts complaining that he needs to fix his brakes every 10k miles, it's probably because he sucks at driving, and it has nothing to do with the mechanical integrity of the car.
 
  • #80
rocketboy said:
That is awesome! They have some other cool stuff as well "fighter jet thrill" *boyhood excitement races through rocketboy*

http://www.incredible-adventures.com/

I was planning to do Migs over Moscow by now but business got slow, so I needed to wait for a time [back up now though]. In the mean time we are looking at the Hollywood and Vegas flights.

...stay on topic... it is a cure for tailgaters! :biggrin:
 
  • #81
ShawnD said:
I notice this a lot. I drive a standard, and most of my deceleration is from engine braking because I'm trying to save money on future brake repair, and I'm trying to save gas (you burn less gas if you gradually slow down and never need to come to a complete stop at intersections, opposite of truck owners who race toward red lights).
While engine braking, people tailgate like crazy. They have absolutely no clue how fast they're going, how fast I'm going, what a good distance is, or even that there is a red light ahead of them. I drive a small car, too, so it's not like they're physically incapable of seeing what's up ahead; they're just retards.

What's interesting is that you can also tell who's a retard by looking at brake lights. Today on the way to work, there was a small car to my left, followed by a guy in a truck. The small car gets up to the standard ~68km/h (8 over the speed limit), and the guy in the truck is tailgating him. I'm going a bit slower than that, so I'm getting a back view of this, and I see the truck guy is applying his brakes every few seconds. Closer, tailgating, braking, closer, braking.
My brother does this too. I once let him drive my car on the highway, and he kept using his brakes to slow down. He would get a big gap, accelerate hard, brake, big gap, accelerate, brake. If your friend starts complaining that he needs to fix his brakes every 10k miles, it's probably because he sucks at driving, and it has nothing to do with the mechanical integrity of the car.

Your car must suck, because I brake my honda accord very hard constantly and it works just fine.
 
  • #82
I have to use compression braking in the Camino, or my brakes are sqealing like stuck pigs within 4 blocks of home. It generates an awful lot of heat slowing down those 33" Trailblazers. I've always done it in any vehicle because of better control, but it's essential in that one.
 
  • #83
lisab said:
What makes me crazy is when I'm on a two-lane highway and I'm following the car ahead of me at a reasonable distance, going the same speed. That car ahead of me is doing the same, as is the car ahead of him, and so on, and so on.

Car after car after car, all moving along at the same speed on a winding, two-lane road.

Why, why does the guy in back of me ride my bumper?

Because tailgating you magically causes the car 20 spots ahead of you to speed up and clear traffic, obviously :]

Seriously, though, the only time it's okay to tailgate is to alert oblivious people that they're blocking the passing lane. And then, it should only be done for a short burst (it's the sight of you approaching them quickly that causes them to wake up and move over; they're liable to simply tune you out if you follow at a constant distance, no matter how close). Also traffic situations where you will get cut off by aggressive drivers if you leave any room in front of you... although that's not quite "tailgating" (as I understand the term) but simply "following too closely."

One phenomenon that absolutely baffles me are the people who will continue to tailgate a slow driver in the left lane even after the right lane(s) have become open, rather than just pass them on the right. Maybe these people are big sticklers for the no-right-lane-passing rule (which is a complete joke where I live). More likely they're just oblivious and don't even realize what they're doing (which is the cause of 99% of bad driving out there).

Although it bears mentioning that, where I live, there seem to be a lot of not-so-fast drivers that habitually drive in the fast lane (we have 4-lane freeways). No amount of tailgating or right-lane-passing or cuting-off will change their behavior: they apparently think that the leftmost lane is the slow lane. It's always disheartening when you see a slow-moving car enter an empty freeway and immediately change all the way over to the fast lane. The really baffling ones are the people who are attentive and courteous that they'll move over to let faster traffic pass them, but then immediately merge back into the fast lane and resume driving slowly...
 
  • #84
One thing I hate is passing lanes on highways with only one lane of traffic each way. In theory they are great and I always move to the right unless I am going to pass someone, and it never fails someone driving in the left lane who is planning on passing me will drive just behind me (but in the left lane) until the right lane is nearly about to run out and I need to move back over, then they decide to pass me. Seriously if you are going to pass me step on it and do it, don't dawdle in the passing lane and hinder my ability to merge back in when my lane is going to run out!
 

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