If you would like to have your dashcam videos (from anywhere in Western Australia) featured on the channel, then please upload your files here: www.dropbox.com/request/XyfRfcPBgIjx4RjIJtW8
The first few videos are so Perth. Complaining about a slow vehicle moving out of the overtaking lane and then not letting another car change lanes in the next video.
About the the car at 2:30 in the video, I have a letter from Lisa Harvey when she was the minister responsible stating that failing to keep left is a serious offence deserving of 2 demerit points and a $250 fine. She never explained why the government doesn't enforce that rule and instead uses all the revenues raised from speed cameras to buy more speed cameras.
Just came across you and subscribed. Whilst the driver in the Ranger was wrong to tailgate for so long, he was probably trying to get the slow driver to move left - which I'm not saying is right, but it is so frustrating that so many do not keep left unless overtaking and think its' OK to dawdle along in the right lane(s). The focus in WA has been revenue raising from mostly hidden speed cameras and it certainly hasn't helped driving standards and therefore road safety. I learned to drive in the UK and when I came to Perth in the late 80's, the overly casual driving here was frustrating, however, I will say that the driving standard in the UK is so much worse now, many don't indicate, they don't keep left and the common courtesy has mostly disappeared. One good thing you can drive faster over there on most roads and whilst some here will argue this, I say that the slow speed limits we experience in Perth on what are, the widest most open roads anywhere, do result in drivers not focusing on their driving, causing them to wander out of their lanes and spend more time looking at their phones!
Yeah, both those drivers where in the wrong. Thanks for subscribing, I hope we get more video submissions so we can start competing with the big Australian dash cam channels for interesting/entertaining content
0:19 Don’t think that the truck ran the red light. They were sitting in the intersection when the light changed, and just waited to ensure the oncoming vehicles had stopped. Unless you were referring to the cars?
@@holgerlubotzki3469you learn this when you get your license I did like 25 years ago. To keep left unless overtaking. Be nice if people in the right lanes on kwinnana learnt this too. ...
The bigger problem was the ute tailgating regardless of the car staying out in the right lane. All in all the other clips are pretty tame and the video quality is the worst part of the post.
If you would like to have your dashcam videos (from anywhere in Western Australia) featured on the channel, then please upload your files here:
www.dropbox.com/request/XyfRfcPBgIjx4RjIJtW8
The first few videos are so Perth. Complaining about a slow vehicle moving out of the overtaking lane and then not letting another car change lanes in the next video.
About the the car at 2:30 in the video, I have a letter from Lisa Harvey when she was the minister responsible stating that failing to keep left is a serious offence deserving of 2 demerit points and a $250 fine.
She never explained why the government doesn't enforce that rule and instead uses all the revenues raised from speed cameras to buy more speed cameras.
Costs too much money to enforce it vs the cost of doing so I’d suggest. Maybe they will develop a camera for it one day 🙄
@@WestAussieDashcams They need to develop the "Fail to Give Way Cam" first!
Who would of thought,bad drivers in perth
Just came across you and subscribed. Whilst the driver in the Ranger was wrong to tailgate for so long, he was probably trying to get the slow driver to move left - which I'm not saying is right, but it is so frustrating that so many do not keep left unless overtaking and think its' OK to dawdle along in the right lane(s). The focus in WA has been revenue raising from mostly hidden speed cameras and it certainly hasn't helped driving standards and therefore road safety. I learned to drive in the UK and when I came to Perth in the late 80's, the overly casual driving here was frustrating, however, I will say that the driving standard in the UK is so much worse now, many don't indicate, they don't keep left and the common courtesy has mostly disappeared. One good thing you can drive faster over there on most roads and whilst some here will argue this, I say that the slow speed limits we experience in Perth on what are, the widest most open roads anywhere, do result in drivers not focusing on their driving, causing them to wander out of their lanes and spend more time looking at their phones!
Yeah, both those drivers where in the wrong. Thanks for subscribing, I hope we get more video submissions so we can start competing with the big Australian dash cam channels for interesting/entertaining content
0:19 Don’t think that the truck ran the red light. They were sitting in the intersection when the light changed, and just waited to ensure the oncoming vehicles had stopped. Unless you were referring to the cars?
Definitely a few cars taking the piss, the truck didn’t get moving until we had the green so he was held up
aw yeah. when the sandgropers become skid marks.
2:58 that ute has "f'head driver" signs all over it
Must be a mandatory requirement to own a ranger
2:11 Welcome to WA. There are no “keep left unless overtaking” signs, so no one does. Who needs road rules….
There’s a few signs around, no one reads them
There actually are “keep left unless overtaking” signs but nobody can see them for some reason.
@@holgerlubotzki3469you learn this when you get your license I did like 25 years ago.
To keep left unless overtaking.
Be nice if people in the right lanes on kwinnana learnt this too.
...
The bigger problem was the ute tailgating regardless of the car staying out in the right lane.
All in all the other clips are pretty tame and the video quality is the worst part of the post.
is this just one person whinging or are there others?
Mostly just one, but hoping to grow the channel to include many, many more whingers