Service manual

Switch on your turn signal, check your
rearview
mirrors as you move
along, and glance over your shoulder as often as necessary.
Try
to blend
smoothly with the traffic
flow.
Driving on the Freeway
Once you are
on
the freeway, adjust your speed to the posted limit or to
the prevailing rate if it’s slower. Stay in the right lane unless you want to
pass. If you are on
a
two-lane freeway, treat the right lane as the slow lane
and the left lane as the passing lane.
If
you are on a three-lane freeway, treat the right lane as the slower-speed
through lane, the middle lane as the higher-speed through lane, and the
left
lane
as the passing lane.
Before changing lanes, check your rearview mirrors. Then use your turn
signal.
Just before you leave the lane, glance quickly over your shoulder to make
sure there isn’tanother vehicle in your “blind” spot.
If
you
are moving from an outside
to
a
center lane on a freeway having
more than two lanes, make sure another vehicle isn’t about to move into
the same spot.
Look
at the vehicles
two
lanes over and watch for telltale
signs: turn signals flashing, an increase in speed, or moving toward the
edge
of
the lane. Be prepared to delay your move.
Once
you
are moving on the freeway, make certain you allow a
reasonable following distance. Expect to move slightly slower at night.
Leaving the Freeway
When you want to leave the freeway, move to the proper lane
well
in
advance. Dashing across lanes at the last minute is dangerous. If you miss
your exit do not, under any circumstances, stop and back up. Drive on to
the next exit.
At each exit point is a deceleration lane. Ideally it should be long enough
for you to enter it at freeway speed (after signaling,
of
course) and then
do your braking before moving onto the exit ramp. Unfortunately, not all
deceleration lanes are long enough
--
some are too short for all the
braking. Decide when to start braking. If you must brake
on
the through
lane, and if there
is
traffic close behind you, you can allow a little extra
203