I’ve seen them called “Stop Lines”, “Balk Line”, etc. The thick line painted on the road at a Stop Sign.

You’re supposed to stop before the line, but a lot of the time there’s a bush or other obstruction so you can’t see any crossing traffic. You have to creep forward until you can see anything.

Is there a reason for this? Is it done on purpose? It makes sense if there’s a crosswalk or something, but I see it a lot where there shouldn’t be any pedestrian activity.

  • In UK it is compulsory to stop at the line, and then you start edging forward. So logically it’s further back so that instead of wildly driving into a main road you creep into it. The stop line slows traffic all the way down so they’re driving out into that road at 10 mph perhaps.

    •  sping   ( @sping@lemmy.sdf.org ) 
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      13 months ago

      I’m the UK the stop lines are not set back 15ft from the intersection. I don’t really understand your point, or certainly how it is relevant to the question, which is effectively “why are American stop lines different from British stop lines”.