• rainwall@piefed.social
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    4 hours ago

    Zipper merge is always the most efficient if people dont prevent merges, regardless of road conditions. It means both open lanes are used to move cars forward until the last moment when they cannot. “Move over early” means less throughput in the system, no matter “how open” one lane is at some point.

    By blocking merges, you causes braking, which is what causes traffic. You framing people driving efficiently to prevent traffic as “people trying to force their way in last minute” means its you creating traffic, not them.

    You’re arguing from a sense of moral suppority, I.e “I got in line early, you should have to,” not from a sense of efficently moving cars down a road.

    • taiyang@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      It’s rare, but I think they’re referring to when it’s open enough and running at optimal speeds. It happened the other day on a side street during an off hour, the free lane couldn’t cut to the front without going like 70mph in a 40mph zone.

      Of course a muscle car did just that, but still.

    • LurkingLuddite@piefed.social
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      3 hours ago

      No.

      Throughput is determined by number of through-lanes and the speed at which traffic is moving. Period. Completely.

      Filling the merge lane when traffic is already slow does nothing but drive density up, which slows traffic further.

      Sure, YOU might save some time by passing a bunch of cars, but it DOES NOT IMPROVE THROUGHPUT.

      Zipper merging is about NOT having an area of abrupt speed change. It is not about using up a lane that is going away. Period. Ever.

      It’s the same as an on-ramp: If you’re speeding up just to slam on your brakes to merge, that’s not zipper merging!