- Lane splitting
Lane splitting is a form of
lane sharing in which the rider of a relatively narrow single-track vehicle (i.e. amotorcycle orbicycle ) travels in the unused space between two lines of moving or stationary vehicles. It may be legal or illegal, depending on local laws. When the purpose of lane splitting is to overtake slower traffic, it is a form offiltering forward . When the cyclist is traveling on the stripe separating two adjacent lanes, it is calledwhitelining .afety
Proponents state that the practice relieves congestion by removing commuters from cars and gets them to utilize the unused roadway space between the cars. Nonetheless, opponents criticize the maneuver, questioning the danger it poses to the cyclist and others.
The
Hurt Report , published in 1981 and based on accident data gathered in the 1970's, concluded that lane splitting reduces rear end crashes and improves motorcycle safety. [cite journal
last = Hurt
first = H.H.
authorlink =
coauthors = Ouellet, J.V.; Thom, D.R.;
title = Motorcycle Accident Cause Factors and Identification of Countermeasures, Volume 1: Technical Report
journal =
volume =
issue =
pages =
publisher = University of Southern California
date = 1981
url =
doi =
id =
accessdate = ] FARS data from theUnited States Department of Transportation shows that rear end collisions with motorcycles are 30% lower inCalifornia (the only US state where it is legal) than inFlorida orTexas , states with similar riding seasons and populations. [cite web| url=http://www.whybike.com/blog/index.php?p=147 |work= WhyBike? | title= Is sharing lanes more or less dangerous than sitting in traffic? |date=27 February 2007 | accessdate= 2007-09-01 ]The Oxford Systematics report commissioned by
VicRoads , the traffic regulating authority in Victoria,Australia , found that for motorcycles filtering through stationary traffic "No examples have yet been located where such filtering has been the cause of an incident." [cite web
last =Oxford Systematics
first =
authorlink =
coauthors =
title =Motorcycle Transport – Powered Two Wheelers in Victoria
work =
publisher =VicRoads & Victorian Motorcycle Advisory Council
date =July 2000
url =http://www.vicroads.vic.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/48FF487F-9A0C-4057-A29F-B462165E05AB/0/oxford2000vol1_1f.pdf
format =
doi =
accessdate = 2007-04-07 ]In the
United Kingdom , Motorcycle Roadcraft, the police riding manual is explicit about the advantages of filtering but also states that "The advantages of filtering along or between stopped or slow moving traffic have to be weighed against the disadvantages of increased vulnerability while filtering". [cite book
first = Philip
last = Coyne
coauthors = Bill Mayblin, Penny Mares
title = Motorcycle Roadcraft - The police rider's handbook to better motorcycling
origyear = 1996
accessdate = 2007-09-01
edition = 10th impression
publisher = The Stationery Office
isbn = 9780113411436
pages = pp. 139–140 ] The manual goes on to offer advice about things to watch out for and anticipate while filtering.There are very few studies relevant to lane filtering, behaviour, risk or capacity. Some that are helpful include:
Halcrows for the UK Department of Transport, which examined weaving behaviours in London traffic, a series of reports led by WSP with RAND and Oxford Systematics participation also for the UK DoT.
WSP Policy and Research UK, Motorcycles and congestion: the effect of modal shift: Phase 3 policy testing. 2004, WSP for Uk Department for Transport: Cambridge UK. p. 44.
WSP Policy and Research UK, Motorcycles and congestion: the effect of modal shift: Phase 2 - Modelling Methodology. 2004, WSP for Uk Department for Transport: Cambridge UK. p. 47.
WSP Policy and Research UK, et al., Motorcycles and congestion: the effect of modal shift: Summary Final Report. 2004, WSP for Uk Department for Transport: Cambridge UK. p. 26.
All available from the Uk DoT websites with and executive summary at http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/regional/policy/motorcycles/motorcyclesandcongestionthee3728, and the Transportation Research Board Record publication:
Burge, P., et al., The modelling of motorcycle ownership and usage: a UK study. Transportation Research Record J Transportation Research Board, 2007(2031): p. 59-68.
This set of reports examined the choices made by commuter riders in London including lane width, for an analysis of the effects of motorcycles in congested areas.
This area is still severely under-researched.
Allowed in
*
Austria
*Belgium
*Brasil
*Croatia
*Estonia — legal while keeping off medians and indicating before the maneuver
*France
*Greece
*Italy
*Japan
*Netherlands
*Norway
*Portugal
*Spain
*South Africa
*Sweden
*United Kingdom [cite web| url=http://www.survivalskills.clara.net/riding_skills_20.htm
title=Tips & legal status of filtering in the UK | ]
*United States — only inCalifornia [cite web
url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/10/30/MN87097.DTL
work=San Francisco Chronicle
title= It's OK for Motorcycles To Squeeze Past Traffic
date=October 30 ,2000
accessdate= 2007-09-01 ] [cite web
url=http://www.whybike.com/motorcycle274.htm
work=WhyBike?
title=All the info you need on lanesharing (lanesplitting)
accessdate= 2007-09-01]ee also
*
Motorcycle safety References
External links
* [http://www.whybike.com/motorcycle5.htm Tips for Splitting Lanes]
* [http://www.laneshare.org LaneShare.org]
* [http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/hdbk/pgs55thru57.htm California DMV website]
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