When it done where I am at we call it a California stop. Explains where that name comes from that they actually have a saying for that type of "stopping ".
KY/OH here. It’s not a Cali thing, it’s an American thing. Almost daily I have people rolling through stop signs or just straight up not stopping at stop lights if they’re turning right.
Story time: drove in Europe for the first time this year. Totally different. Lower speed limits even with that weird metric system. Way less lights and more round abouts and stop signs.
Train can’t stop like a vehicle does.
I live in California; many drivers here make it seem like regular cars can’t stop either the way they roll through stops.
Cars in New Mexico appear to have brake failures at every stop sign, they slow down but do not stop.
Idk if this is more of a local thing but in Ohio we call rolling stops a California stop
I’ve always heard it called the “California Roll” from other Californians. I like the pun. A California roll is also a local kind of sushi.
California rolls (sushi) are common in mostly the entire US.
Sweden also has them
They are local like Hawaiian pizza is local to Toronto. They might have been created there but itnhas caught on elsewhere.
When it done where I am at we call it a California stop. Explains where that name comes from that they actually have a saying for that type of "stopping ".
KY/OH here. It’s not a Cali thing, it’s an American thing. Almost daily I have people rolling through stop signs or just straight up not stopping at stop lights if they’re turning right.
Story time: drove in Europe for the first time this year. Totally different. Lower speed limits even with that weird metric system. Way less lights and more round abouts and stop signs.
That’s because it’s actually allowed in the majority of the US
Well right turns on red are allowed in most of NA.
Just to be pedantic, trains are vehicles.
I heard it takes like 1 mile 1km for a train to come to a complete stop.