jalapeno_pretzel
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 13, 2015
- Messages
- 2,417
Near where I live, we have two lanes that drop down to one, soon after an overpass for the highway. The right lane drops, and the left lane proceeds. The whole road is backed up at rush hour, both before that bottleneck and after it. Where the road crosses the highway, two lanes open up to make a left turn on the highway. During busy times of day, there are more people wanting to go left than can be accommodated by those two left turn lanes, so the left through lane (which is also the one that will proceed on after the right lane drops) gets backed up with cars not only wanting to go straight and proceed on, but with cars that want to get off the road and onto the highway.
Now, according to the zipper merge idea, cars continuing on past the highway should be using both left and right lanes - even though they know the right lane will soon drop - and merge by taking turns right at the merge point. In addition to making the merge go more smoothly, it keeps cars out of the left lane which would then be adding to the congestion of all the cars that want to move from the left through lane to the left turn lane for the highway.
According to the anti-zippers, every car that wants to proceed onward should get into the left lane as soon as they know that's what they'll be doing. (Which, I might be driving on the section of road with 2 lanes for 5 miles before the lane drops). Why should I get in the left lane that early and be backed up by the traffic that wants to turn left at the highway intersection when there is an open lane beside me? There are 2 lanes for a reason, and they are both intended to be used.
Early merging is entirely appropriate and efficient in light / moderate traffic situations, but when it's heavy traffic, zipper merging is more efficient. Luckily most people around here seem to understand that and are perfectly capable of taking turns at the merge point. I think of it as if there were two lines formed that were going to one bank teller. Once you get up to the head of the line, you take turns with the other line with who goes up.
Now, according to the zipper merge idea, cars continuing on past the highway should be using both left and right lanes - even though they know the right lane will soon drop - and merge by taking turns right at the merge point. In addition to making the merge go more smoothly, it keeps cars out of the left lane which would then be adding to the congestion of all the cars that want to move from the left through lane to the left turn lane for the highway.
According to the anti-zippers, every car that wants to proceed onward should get into the left lane as soon as they know that's what they'll be doing. (Which, I might be driving on the section of road with 2 lanes for 5 miles before the lane drops). Why should I get in the left lane that early and be backed up by the traffic that wants to turn left at the highway intersection when there is an open lane beside me? There are 2 lanes for a reason, and they are both intended to be used.
Early merging is entirely appropriate and efficient in light / moderate traffic situations, but when it's heavy traffic, zipper merging is more efficient. Luckily most people around here seem to understand that and are perfectly capable of taking turns at the merge point. I think of it as if there were two lines formed that were going to one bank teller. Once you get up to the head of the line, you take turns with the other line with who goes up.