From dividing strip count 1st lane. if 2ways, close to soulder is 2nd lane
No. That would be a 4 lane road. 2 lane road is just that 2 lanes. One in each direction.
Multi-lane highway.
Depends on what state your in. In some states the far left lane is used primarily for Emergency Vehicles and a passing lane. In California you can travel in that lane as long as you move to the right if an Emergency Vehicle comes up behind you. According to the Florida handbook, "if the road has 4 or more lanes with two-way traffic, drive in the right lanes except when overtaking or passing." Or when you're carpooling.Overtaking and passing.When passing.When passing slower moving traffic.
I have court soon for "Failure to Yield to Stationary Emergency Vehicle". I have read the Virginia law section 46.2-921.1 I was mainly wondering what constitutes a 4 lane highway as stated in that section. "on a highway having at least four lanes, at least two of which are intended for traffic proceeding as the approaching vehicle, proceed with caution and, if reasonable, with due regard for safety and traffic conditions, yield the right-of-way by making a lane change into a lane not adjacent to the stationary vehicle" Let me first explain the road I was driving on was 3 lanes, a median, then three lanes in the opposite direction. Is this a 6 lane road? or a 3 lane? I would also like to know if a turning lane counts as the 4th lane, if the road is only 3 lanes.
All lanes are equal. You still run the same amount of meters. However, lane one you have to catch up a bit. Lane two is kinda alright. Lanes 3 and 4 are the best. Lane 5 is a focus lane. Lane 6 is an apprehensive lane. Lanes 7 and 8 are lanes where you will have to maintain your speed or pick it up in order to win.
Need at least 4-second gap in traffic
Depends on what state your in. In some states the far left lane is used primarily for Emergency Vehicles and a passing lane. In California you can travel in that lane as long as you move to the right if an Emergency Vehicle comes up behind you. According to the Florida handbook, "if the road has 4 or more lanes with two-way traffic, drive in the right lanes except when overtaking or passing" or if the exit you need to take is shortly on the left. Overtaking and/or passing.
The far right lane. On multiple lane highways, the lanes are counted from the left to right -- the fast lane is #1. So if you are on a 4-lane drive in #4. This applies to The US and right-side drive road, left side driver cars
That depends. The fastest people are generally placed in lanes 4 and 5, and as you progress outwards to lanes 1 and 8, the seed times become slower, so you could say that lanes 4 and 5 are the best. The best lane in terms of physics is any lane which is about 7-12 feet deep and not not right next to the edge/wall.
By the swimmer's seed times coming into the race. The middle lanes are the fastest, and the outer lanes are progressively slower (that's why the swimmers often seem to be in a V shape) To be specific, the swimmer with the fastest time swims in lane 4, 2nd fastest in lane 5, third fastest in lane 3 fourth fastest in lane 6 fifth fastest in lane 2 sixth fastest in lane 7 seventh fastest in lane 1 eighth fastest in lane in lane 8.
According to the Missouri driver's manual, you do not have to stop if your are traveling in the opposite direction of a school bus on any road having four or more lanes. In fact, it is illegal for a bus driver to permit students to cross multiple lanes of traffic.
Try always concentrate on moving with the traffic flow, and you'll be save on any number of lanes. Always try to create an empty space around you, so you can change lanes safely. Never slow down when you change lanes, go with the traffic flow.