I have something similar to this, a short sliproad entering a dual carriageway after a blind bend so seeing what is coming is impossible until you are near the end. It is single carriageway so no overtaking, but it can still lead to problems.
If you tailgate a slower car you can end up having to stop if that driver doesn't have much confidence to enter the traffic. You are then in danger of having to enter a 60mph dual carriageway on a blind bend from a standing start and it could be a 44 tonner bearing down on you,
It sounds counter intuitive and possibly not easy if its busy, but a gap is your friend. You need to increase your distance between you and the car in front, even if this means slowing slightly.
This then gives you time to let the slower car get away and you can then use the rest of the sliproad to accelerate.
This is what I do in my situation, if there is a car in front I slow until I know that car is committed I then have the sliproad to get up some speed before merging,
Edited by daveyjp on 06/09/2021 at 20:46
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