Roundabouts - The 12 O'clock Rule

Roundabouts the 12 O'clock Rule

When it comes to teaching roundabouts using the 12 o'clock rule is by far the easiest, simplest and most concise way to teach basic lane positioning for learners on roundabouts.

How do we know this is true -

  • Because we have been teaching learners for almost 20 years - you dont remain successful by teaching the wrong things
  • We are ORDIT registered and have been for 18 years -which means the DVSA reccomends us and they things we teach
  • Driving Examiners pass our pupils - we have a 65% first time pass rate
  • Telford - The town where we are based has over 120 roundabouts - if what we were teaching was wrong our pupils wouldn't pass
  • We teach people for ADI Part 2 and ADI Part 3 who come from all parts of the country - they pass back where they live - using the things we have taught them
When it comes to teaching roundabouts using the 12 o'clock rule is by far the easiest, simplest and most concise way to teach basic lane positioning for learners on roundabouts.   How do we know this is true -  Because we have been teaching learners for almost 20 years - you dont remain successful by teaching the wrong things  We are ORDIT registered and have been for 18 years -which means the DVSA reccomends us and they things we teach  Driving Examiners pass our pupils - we have a 65% first time pass rate  Telford - The town where we are based has over 120 roundabouts - if what we were teaching was wrong our pupils wouldn't pass  We teach people for ADI Part 2 and ADI Part 3 who come from all parts of the country - they pass back where they live - using the things we have taught them
Jemma passed her ADI Part 2 and ADI Part 3 first time - Her first pupil passed with 0 driving faults - What we teach is correct!!
The first thing that we need to set straight is that the 12O'clock rule IS NOT a rule!  It is a GUIDE or a PRINCIPAL that is good for teaching the basics of understanding lane positioning on Roundabouts -  However like ALL guidelines or rules there are exceptions! We will explore some more of those shortly  But probably on 90% of roundabouts using the 12 O'clock guide is still by far the best way of teaching.

Roundabouts the 12 O'clock Rule

The first thing that we need to set straight is that the 12O'clock rule IS NOT a rule!

It is a GUIDE or a PRINCIPAL that is good for teaching the basics of understanding lane positioning on Roundabouts -

However like ALL guidelines or rules there are exceptions! We will explore some more of those shortly

But probably on 90% of roundabouts using the 12 O'clock guide is still by far the best way of teaching.

The 12 O'clock Guide is simple, Effective and easy to use

When it comes to using the 12 O'clock routine it is very simple to understand and works on 90% of the roundabouts your learners will come across when you are first teaching them to deal with lane position

Compare this to how one driving instructor who writes a blog but refuses to identify themself or there company teaches people to do roundabouts

Your choice of a signal and lane position is not automatic, and depends on the individual roundabout and the circumstances at the time.

DTL -Your choice of signal and lane position depends on the position of the exit that you are taking

But there is a problem with it – it doesn’t work all the time, so it cannot possibly be called ‘a rule

DTL - True it is not a rule but a guideline - most rules have exceptions - Do you ALWAYS give way to the right on roundabouts? NO - There are some  roundabouts where you give way to traffic on the left --  if a roundabout has traffic lights, you go by the lights not the traffic, -- If the traffic light is green on the roundabout do you always keep going? - NO - If there is a yellow box junction on the roundabout and you cannot clear it, you need to stop at the green light  --- See always exceptions!

the last thing a new and nervous driver who is already struggling with roundabouts needs is to have to decide whether the road they want is after 12 o’clock or not on top of everything else

DTL - But this should be the FIRST thing a learner needs to be shown - The lane position should be explained before they are anywhere near the roundabout, so as they get closer, the learner is free to deal with speed, gears and looking to see if they can go or need to stop, linked with good commentary from the driving instructor this should make doing roundabouts less stressful and easier to accomplish!!

the approach roads may well have bends on them which give the illusion of an exit being in one location on the clock face when it is actually elsewhere. In general, your lane positioning and signalling on approach to an unmarked asymmetrical roundabout should be exactly the same as for the symmetrical ones.

DTL - Thats why you go by the sign on approach, you expect someone to look and decide what lane they need as they approach a new roundabout based on whether it looks symmetrical or Asymmetrical??????  How do they do it at night???? Or at rush hour with cars and lorries blocking their view?

The way I teach it is intended to get them to think about things, and not to blindly apply silly rules which achieve nothing

DTL  - Thinking symmetrical or Asymmetrical rather than 12 oclock or before?

Basically, if the 2nd exit is very much further to the right, a signal might make sense.

DTL - Define much further?? So there lane choice is dependent on what YOU are thinking???

sometimes only experience can teach the best way of dealing with them.

DTL - Its only once you have done that roundabout a few times and been flashed at, had horns going and been verbally abused that you'll remember how to do it - despite the fact you've driven to the other side of the country and will never do that roundabout again?

the HC explicitly refutes the ‘12 o’clock rule’. It is not in the HC.

DTL - Refute = prove (a statement or theory) to be wrong or false; FALSE  as we have said it is not a rule but a guide- However the principal is not only shown in the Highway Code but also by yourself in the final statement we quote in this article (see the box underneath)

 

If I’m waiting to emerge on to a busy roundabout and see someone coming round it with their right indicator on, I will wait – and it is bloody annoying when they then exit left before they get to me.

DTL - Any car coming from the left will be in the right lane with the right signal on, they will then exit left before they get to you - Do they annoy you in the same way? Any car coming from opposite, if the lane markings say straight ahead is right lane, will be in the right lane and then come off at the exit before you, Do they annoy you in the same way??

Doesn't the highway code Rule 185 When reaching the roundabout you should give priority to traffic approaching from your right,

Your learners by sticking to the 30 mph limit will no doubt annoy people, are you advocating learners driving should be based on others feelings???

 

Learners should understand what they are doing, not just following stupid rules made up by people who understand little more than their pupils do. The ‘12 o’clock rule’ does not work.

DTL - So in a simple easy to understand way that people first getting used to roundabouts can take in, learn from and progress

How do you teach roundabouts not using the 12 o’clock rule? -

This is where an ADI earns their money. In most cases, the reason pupils can’t do roundabouts is because they panic and everything becomes a blur – they’re worried about all the other traffic on the roundabout and, as a result, lose sight of the lanes. They need to be able to bring things back into focus and learn how to deal with what is, after all, only a simple junction. What I normally do is sketch a diagram of a crossroads, Obviously, there’s a bit more, but this is a way of trying to demystify the whole roundabout situation.

DTL - And this is more simple to understand than 12 oclock or before left lane~??????  But the diagrams you show of crossroads all have one lane and none of the exits are at the 1 or 2 O'clock position

Ordinarily, the left hand lane is the correct one for straight ahead. -

DTL - FINALLY!!! and there you have it ---all this waffle for one simple statement - 12 oclock or before left lane - unless the road markings or signs say otherwise

if the roundabout has more than one ‘straight ahead’

DTL - EH???? How on earth can you have more than one straight ahead???????????? STRAIGHT - there can be only one!! This is what happens when you dont use the clockface!! Can you have to 12's on the clockface?? There's a 10 or 11 or 1 or 2 - You can have 2nd exit on the left, 3rd exit on the left, but we have never heard an examiner or a sat nav say "Please take not the first straight ahead but the second straight ahead"

Can I change lanes on the roundabout if I get into the wrong one? Yes However, it is a risky operation unless it is very quiet, and if you are likely to impede someone just follow the lane you’re in and effectively ‘go the wrong way’.  ---

DTL - So if the learner is out with a pdi or friends and family and the lane there in, is for the motorway, which is illegal, immeadiately voids their insurance and would lead to an instant ban if stopped by police, your advice is to follow it?

The service road is that little dash. Sometimes, the dash is so small you could easily not see it as you drive past. I usually don’t include them in the exit count – so the 2nd exit here would still be the one just after the 12 o’clock position.

DTL - So this road that you DON'T count as an exit - Can you come off at it? Whether its into a garden centre, Hospital, wherever, can you exit on it? So why do you choose NOT to count it as an exit if the sign does? Does The highway code say Your driving instructor needs to decide the exit? But if they are going to the Garden centre and the sat nav says take the second exit - using your teaching methods they will go wrong

If the third exit is before 12 o’clock where do you position yourself in a roundabout?

As I have explained, there is no such thing as ‘the 12 o’clock rule. You simply use the same rules as for all the previous examples. Remember that ‘straight ahead’ doesn’t automatically mean ‘the 2nd exit’. It depends on the road. Sometimes, ‘following the road’ can mean what would be virtually a right turn if you only looked at it from a geometric perspective.

DTL - STREWTH! As well as looking if the roundabout is Symmetrical or Assymetrical you now expect the learner to look at it from a Geometric perspective???????  As well as deciding what are exits on the board- Please for the love of everything - How is this easier for a learner to understand rather than look at the board and think "12 O'clock or before left lane - Unless the signs or markings say otherwise

the HC explicitly refutes the ‘12 o’clock rule’. It is not in the HC.

To refute something means to disprove something or show that its wrong - So does the Highway Code show that 12 oclock or before in the left lane is wrong?

This is the image in the 2023 Highway Code, it shows the blue car going straight ahead - Which lane is the car shown to be using?

So if you think of that roundabout as a clock - the blue car is coming from the 6 and going towards the 12  - so 12 oclock or before left lane?

If there was a second exit on the left, just after the first exit - by using this picture which lane would the blue car use?

So 12 O'clock or before = Left Lane

It really is that simple - So the truth is the Highway code shows EXACTLY what the 12 O'clock guidance actually is

Now isn't that easier than is it Symmetrical, Is it Asymmetrical, Is it Geometric?

This is the image in the 2023 Highway Code, it shows the blue car going straight ahead - Which lane is the car shown to be using?   So if you think of that roundabout as a clock - the blue car is coming from the 6 and going towards the 12  - so 12 oclock or before left lane?   If there was a second exit on the left, just after the first exit - by using this picture which lane would the blue car use?   So 12 O'clock or before = Left Lane   It really is that simple - So the truth is the Highway code shows EXACTLY what the 12 O'clock guidance actually is   Now isn't that easier than is it Symmetrical, Is it Asymmetrical, Is it Geometric?
Highway code 2023 clearly show straight ahead as left lane now think of that roundabout as a clock

Roundabouts 12 O'clock Rule

The alternatives to teaching simply and effectively are people reasoning along the lines of  First and Second Exit is left lane - Third and fourth exit is right lane - This is wrong

Let me show you how easy it is

1 - 3rd exit - Left lane

2 - 2nd exit  - Right Lane

3 - 2nd Exit - Left lane

4 - 3rd Exit - Left Lane

5 -- 2nd exit - Right Lane

6 - 2nd exit right lane

7 - 2nd exit right lane

8 - 2nd exit is actually Middle lane as this is what the road markings tell you.

Can you see how much easier, quicker, concise and fulfilling for the pupil to be able to understand and do it this way?

But there are exceptions like we mentioned at the begining, just like there are exceptions when turning left, turning right, using bus lanes or cycle lanes, parking on the pavement or verge, Double yellow lines, Green traffic lights. The list is endless.

The alternatives to teaching simply and effectively are people reasoning along the lines of  First and Second Exit is left lane - Third and fourth exit is right lane - This is wrong   Let me show you how easy it is   1 - 3rd exit - Left lane   2 - 2nd exit  - Right Lane   3 - 2nd Exit - Left lane   4 - 3rd Exit - Left Lane   5 -- 2nd exit - Right Lane   6 - 2nd exit right lane   7 - 2nd exit right lane   8 - 2nd exit is actually Middle lane as this is what the road markings tell you.   Can you see how much easier, quicker, concise and fulfilling for the pupil to be able to understand and do it this way?   But there are exceptions like we mentioned at the begining, just like there are exceptions when turning left, turning right, using bus lanes or cycle lanes, parking on the pavement or verge, Double yellow lines, Green traffic lights. The list is endless.
Using the 12 oclock method is easy, simple and effective

The reason its Guidance and Not a rule

The reason is simply either local authorities and the Highways Agency are incapable of either designing or providing signage that's standard throughout the country.

So occasionally you get a roundabout that you can go right on, from the left lane with no proper signage.

 

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