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What Are The Most Common Driving Test Mistakes
by Marsh Finance on Sep 18, 2024 10:10:01 AM
👉 The most common driving test mistakes
👉 Conclusion
👉 Our driving test advice and support
Your driving test can be scary, but knowing the most common errors can help you avoid slipping up on your test. We’ve covered some of the top tips to pass your driving test in a separate piece. In this specialist driving test blog, we’ve taken a look at the most common mistakes that people make on driving tests across the UK. These mistakes have been provided by the UK government, which you can find here.
For more information on all things driving tests, visit our piece 'everything you need to know about passing your driving test'.The Most Common Mistakes
Not Being Aware When It’s Really Needed
This is quite an obvious one, but lots of people fail to spot potential issues when they are most important, like at roundabouts, junctions and slip roads. Failing to check for oncoming traffic at roundabouts can lead to oncoming traffic having to slow down to accommodate you. When emerging from a slip road, failing to look right can potentially cause a serious accident if the cars are moving at speed. When emerging from give way junctions, failing to look right for oncoming traffic and left for parked cars and pedestrians can potentially cause you to fail. Check your surroundings at all times, but especially when you are approaching junctions, roundabouts or joining other roads.
Failing To Use Your Mirrors
This is one of the most common mistakes on a test and is such an easy mistake to make. Not checking your mirrors throughout your drive won’t help your case, but failing to check when joining new roads, emerging junctions and setting off from stationary positions might even see you fail. The best way to avoid making this mistake is by constantly checking mirrors throughout, and making it clear to your examiner that you are doing so. This is a point we covered in a separate piece, titled ‘the top ten tips for passing your practical driving test’.
Not Moving Away Safely
Failing to move away from a stationary position safely is a common mistake people make. This could be anything from a traffic jam to an instruction from an examiner to stop and move away. Getting your move away right is important, as you could stall or potentially set off too quickly and endanger cars ahead of you. To guard against this, make sure you have your bite in manual cars before releasing the handbrake, and have a scan of all your surroundings before pulling away. Just taking that extra second to get ready and check your mirrors could be the difference between passing and failing.
Not Positioning Your Car Correctly At A Right Turn
Right turns can be tricky, especially if you are having to wait for oncoming traffic to pass before turning. This situation is a sticking point for lots of drivers in their tests, with them struggling to position the car correctly. A common issue is being too far over to the left. This is easy to do as you look to avoid the oncoming traffic, but it can actually endanger you by blocking the passing traffic on your left. Blocking the lane is considered a major offence, and could see you failing your test. Another issue is if you are too far to the right, and you end up blocking oncoming traffic. Sadly, this will result in the same outcome: failing your test. To prevent this from happening, check your mirrors and the road markings below you as you approach a right turn. Take your time, and trust your car placement, and don’t take your eyes off the road.
Failing To Follow Traffic Lights Correctly
Not being able to follow traffic light rules successfully tends to happen quite often. This displays to the examiner that you can’t follow signs and drive independently, so getting it right is important. The most common occurrences are running red lights and failing to see that a light is green. Take your time and pay attention to the traffic lights; they are there to help you, not hurt you.
Failing To Control The Steering
Having one hand on the wheel or not being at ten and two in your positioning are common errors people make. Not having your hands at ten and two won’t cause you to fail, but it will be an unnecessary minor fault that you could have avoided. Remember to drive with your hands attentive to the steering wheel, and where possible, maintain the ten and two rule. This not only stops you from getting a minor but also helps you keep control of the car in the best way possible.
Mis-Reading Road Signs And Markings
These errors tend to happen fairly often and don’t necessarily mean a fail, but they do hurt your chances of passing. As part of the driving test, you will be expected to drive independently and follow road signs. An inability to do this shows the examiner that you might not be ready to pass. Brush up on your car theory beforehand and get into the habit of following road signs. Knowing your local area can help, too, as roads you have already driven on become more familiar and easier to navigate. We covered this in more detail in the top ten tips to pass your driving test.
Poor Road Positioning
This can happen without you even realising. You might be so caught up in the test that you forget to check your road positioning. This is easy to do, but the consequences can be serious. Make sure that as part of your constant checks, you assess your road position and make adjustments if need be. Pay particular attention to road positioning at junctions and right-turn traffic lights.
Driving At A Dangerous Speed
Perhaps one of the most obvious errors, drivers can often go over the speed limit. This is frowned upon by examiners, as it displays a recklessness and lack of awareness. Add speedometer checks into your checking process whilst driving, and adjust the car if you’re going too quickly. At the other end of this, you can pick up minor errors for driving too slow. This is another common error, as drivers look to air on the side of caution and drive slightly slower to avoid going over the limit. Examiners notice this and can mark you down for it. Drive at a pace which is suitable for the road and traffic you are encountering, sticking to the limit but not being too slow that the examiner notices.
Conclusion
So there you have it, the most common mistakes drivers make on tests. As you can see in the list, a lot of these can happen fairly easily, especially if you aren’t concentrating properly. To guard against making these mistakes, take mock driving tests with your instructor and get into a habit of always checking whilst driving. This can help you spot an error early and correct it. Last of all, don’t be too harsh on yourself. Everyone makes mistakes, and it’s about how you respond in the test that matters. Trust your instincts and ability as your instructor does and take on the test with ease.
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