hammer-lane barnacle - meaning and definition. What is hammer-lane barnacle
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What (who) is hammer-lane barnacle - definition

Hammer lane; Hammer Lane; Outside lane; Passing lanes; Overtaking lane; Left lane
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  • A sign indicating that all vehicles shall be driven only in the right-hand lane unless overtaking slower vehicles.
  • A sign directing slower traffic to remain in the right-hand lane.

hammer-lane barnacle      
A person or vehicle that cruises in the passing lane, without actually passing anybody.
Sorry I'm late, I got stuck behind a hammer-lane barnacle all the way from the airport.
lane         
  • A38(M) Aston Expressway]], showing tidal flow/reversible lanes controlled via overhead gantries, in [[Aston]], [[Birmingham]], [[England]]. This motorway has seven lanes, with the one lane always kept as a buffer in the center – in the morning peak time, there are 2 lanes leaving central Birmingham (northbound) and 4 lanes in (southbound). In the evening, there are 4 lanes leaving central Birmingham and 2 lanes coming inwards. At all other times there are three lanes on each side.
  • Changing lanes, [[Gothenburg]], Sweden
  • An unusual left-turn merging lane in Germany, explained with signage
  • Black center line on an Autobahn in Germany in the late 1930s
  • Transfer lanes, connecting surface collector lanes with through lanes between two tunnels
  • Aura]], Finland
  • Turning lane on the [[Rodovia]] [[BR-101]], Brazil
  • The [[Ontario Highway 401]] in the [[Greater Toronto]] area, with 17 travel lanes in 6 separate carriageways visible in the midground
DIVISION OF THE CARRIAGEWAY WITHIN A ROAD DESIGNATED TO BE USED BY A SINGLE LINE OF VEHICLES
Lanes; Traffic lane; Lane line; Lane markings; Lane (road); Truck lanes; Truck lane; Truck-only lanes; Truckways; Truckway; Road lane; Acceleration or deceleration lane; Laned; Travel lane; Traffic lanes; Lane jumping; Lane jump; Lane change; Travel lanes; Weave-merge lane; Auxiliary lane; Right lane; Vehicle lane; Acceleration lane
n.
Alley, narrow street, narrow passage or way.
Lane         
  • A38(M) Aston Expressway]], showing tidal flow/reversible lanes controlled via overhead gantries, in [[Aston]], [[Birmingham]], [[England]]. This motorway has seven lanes, with the one lane always kept as a buffer in the center – in the morning peak time, there are 2 lanes leaving central Birmingham (northbound) and 4 lanes in (southbound). In the evening, there are 4 lanes leaving central Birmingham and 2 lanes coming inwards. At all other times there are three lanes on each side.
  • Changing lanes, [[Gothenburg]], Sweden
  • An unusual left-turn merging lane in Germany, explained with signage
  • Black center line on an Autobahn in Germany in the late 1930s
  • Transfer lanes, connecting surface collector lanes with through lanes between two tunnels
  • Aura]], Finland
  • Turning lane on the [[Rodovia]] [[BR-101]], Brazil
  • The [[Ontario Highway 401]] in the [[Greater Toronto]] area, with 17 travel lanes in 6 separate carriageways visible in the midground
DIVISION OF THE CARRIAGEWAY WITHIN A ROAD DESIGNATED TO BE USED BY A SINGLE LINE OF VEHICLES
Lanes; Traffic lane; Lane line; Lane markings; Lane (road); Truck lanes; Truck lane; Truck-only lanes; Truckways; Truckway; Road lane; Acceleration or deceleration lane; Laned; Travel lane; Traffic lanes; Lane jumping; Lane jump; Lane change; Travel lanes; Weave-merge lane; Auxiliary lane; Right lane; Vehicle lane; Acceleration lane
In road transport, a lane is part of a roadway that is designated to be used by a single line of vehicles to control and guide drivers and reduce traffic conflicts. Most public roads (highways) have at least two lanes, one for traffic in each direction, separated by lane markings.

Wikipedia

Passing lane

A passing lane (North American English), overtaking lane (English outside North America) is a lane on a multi-lane highway or motorway closest to the median of the road (the central reservation) used for passing vehicles in other lanes. (North American usage also calls the higher-speed lane nearest the median the "inside lane" but in the United Kingdom this is the "outside lane".) Countries with right-hand traffic put the passing lane on the left; those with left-hand traffic put the passing lane on the right. Motorways typically have passing lanes along their entire length, but other roads might only have passing lanes for certain segments, depending on design specifications typically related to available space, funding, and traffic levels. A 2+1 road alternates the passing lane between directions every few kilometers.

The passing lane is commonly referred to as the fast lane, and the lane closest to the shoulder the slow lane. Some jurisdictions, particularly on limited-access roads, ban passing-lane driving while not overtaking another vehicle; others merely require slower cars to yield to quicker traffic by shifting to slower lanes, or have no limitations.

On roads with only one lane in a given direction, overtaking is accomplished by briefly pulling into oncoming traffic. This is often prohibited by "no passing" signs and road markings on lengths of road where a hill or a curving road limit sight distances, and some jurisdictions ban this entirely. So-called suicide lanes provide a shared third center lane for passing in both directions, with the expectation that drivers will check for oncoming traffic before entering.

In modern traffic planning, passing lanes on freeways are usually designed for through/express traffic, while the lanes furthest from the median of the road have entry/exit ramps. However due to routing constraints, some freeways may have ramps exiting from the passing lane; these are known as "left exits" in North America.