Mate you just wrote the text-book about how to drive when being overtaken by a heavy vehicle 100% correctBefore I did a trip through NT and WA I was told horror stories about road trains and read about how careful you need to be passing or overtaking them.
My experience was just the opposite. I had no problem at all with road trains. That was partly because of the way I dealt with them and partly because of the commonsense and courtesy of the road train drivers.
On dirt roads I could see them coming from some distance away, so I simple pulled well off the road and waited for the dust to settle.
On sealed highways, I had no problem overtaking them, they were all driving faster than I was.
It was the way that they overtook me that impressed me. It wasn't really an option for me to pull off the road. I worked on the principle that as long as my behaviour was predictable and I didn't suddenly slow down to force them to overtake, they would be able to choose their moment to overtake.
It all seemed to work quite smoothly. They would gradually gain on me and if the road ahead was not clear, they would slowly drop back and then gain on me again to get momentum to overtake when the road was clear. That let them choose their moment to overtake.
I assumed that as the road train drivers didn't tailgate me or indicate in any way that they disapproved of my behaviour that this was the way to handle the situation. I'm sure the truck drivers on the forum will put me right if I am mistaken.
The important thing is that the road train drivers were careful, considerate and safe; the opposite of what I had been led to expect.
I have no way of knowing whether the drivers I encountered were typical of the vast majority of road train drivers or the exception. I like to think they were typical.





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. I am a firm believer that they are creating heavier traffic on roads parallel to new tollways (eg Stud Rd from Knox to Dandenong). In these days of super-great technology and sensors at lights etc, why are entire groups of 50 cars getting a red light, then just as the first in the group gets to the next lights, IT TURNS RED. I've seen this happen for half a dozen lights in a row. 50 cars all creating pollution accelerating from 0 to 60 just to stop again in 200m, over and over again. And i'm not talking about peak hour traffic in the city. This is the outer suburbs.


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