油井緋色;2021978 said:
I'm taking the test straight. However, I can see how you could EASILY fail it. A friend of mine failed for going 50 through a construction site (supposed to be 40) and duckwaddling constantly (she's short).
Try the test straight and refer to the thread in the law section. My suggestion is spend a week riding with the following habits:
#1. Stop a foot or two before the white line.
#2. Stop a bike or bike and a half behind cars.
#3. Always block (there is almost never a situation where you do not block by MTO standards).
#4. Follow speed limits.
#5. Check your blind spots every half intersection.
#6. Check left right left (or was it right left right?) every intersection.
#7. Double check the blind spot in the direction you are turning before turning.
Some of these I do automatically but I noticed most riders won't do 1, 2, and 4 lol
Some clarification and specificity:
#1 Stop before the limit line if there is one, or if not, the pedestrian crossover, and if there are neither, before the intersecting roadway
#2. Leave a full bike length in front of you behind other vehicles. Leave more if it's a large vehicle (truck, bus)
#3. Always be in the CORRECT lane position. There are very specific situations where the simple blocking position is incorrect. (not enough of them to fail, but they are there)
#4. Follow speed limits, but don't be too much under them, because you're creating a hazard.
#5. I don't know what "half" intersection means. Check your blind spot immediately before initiating any turn or lane change. Not necessary for a shift in position within a lane.
#6. Left-right-left (you remember which way if you learn it, instead of just doing it for the test

)
#7. One blind spot check is sufficient for the actual turn. If you had to do a lane change to get into a dedicated turn lane, you should have done one way back there, then one immediately before the turn.
Special note for blind spot checks - they should be done before any steering input on the bars, not when you're half leaned into a turn.