Americans who start a road trip around England may think that driving on the “wrong” side of the road will be their biggest challenge.
Away from it
They also have to move in the bizarre driving customs, which can be much more interesting. From the correct way to throw in other drivers to the accepted method for displaying despair behind the wheel, there is a strange driving to drive on the outer coast that is not common in the United States
To help the Americans, the UK was asked by a poll by the Toro Car Division Company to name the most important aspects of the country’s driving protocol, and the TV character and individual car enthusiasts produced a short film showing how to “drive England”.
The most important of them to visit Americans is the British law for “tornado”, which explains 74 % of respondents who have to be patient with patience, “like a queue in a supermarket.” At the junction, drivers must move to the right, like you at an uncontrolled intersection.

Americans may get used to extensive highways, but the narrow lines of England are very different. Massive delays are common, but 57 % of drivers are happy to “wait” when they block the agricultural vehicles that block the road.
These small lines explain that there is also a person where Americans are involved in the “car’s car”.
He warns that you have to “as you go”.
Given 58 % of drivers, this “royal wave” is expected as a thank you. The main thing is to make sure that the wave is only visible in the rear mirror.
Another option is “Double Flash of Risk Lights”, which is a way to synthesize “thanks” in the polite Morse code system that prefers 35 % of the UK.

Disappointment arises, but it is very important, they say 24 % of respondents, who, when they explore, dominate the art of patience at the Zen level.
A person explains that an accepted way to express discomfort is “head shake”, with 34 % of survey people say that it should be done in a “desperate” school administrator.
According to Freddie, visitors are also allowed to “flash their lights, close the horn, or throw a little under their breath.”
“If you twinkle, just look at the mirror and turn on the radio,” he adds.

“The British driving culture has many unwritten rules that can make visitors mysticism,” said Rary Brimer in Toro.
“Our research shows how much these behaviors have been dumped – out of the formalities [traffic circle] Dance to precise and consisting of you. For American visitors, understanding these delicacies is not just about goodwill – this is about preventing the vague appearance of disappointing British drivers. “
“With many tea pots to discuss driving customs with US visitors, I have decided to have a completely new non -verbal language installed in any driver in the UK,” Freddie added.