Mark, you have given me a lot to think about. I will be going on our summer holiday (in Austria, we love the mountains, which we do not have).
I hope you do not mind teaching me more about building an excellent TL speaker. Anyway, thanks again for your willingness to share your knowledge with this newby.
I know you don't have mountains in Holland. We had a family holiday in Belgium/Holland when I was 17. I loved it. It was the year I got my first driver's license. We took the car ferry over to Ostend. I did a lot of the driving for the family. We had an Austin A 60 estate, which was a real lump of lead.
It was just like this one, but white.
So that was my first experience of driving on the right side of the road. However the steering wheel was also on the right! So overtaking was a problem. My wife and I spent a few days in Amsterdam on our way back from Italy celebrating our 25th wedding anniversary. I spent a lot of time trying to find out what the Dutch meant by Beer and Schnapps. In my teens our boat was moored in a boat yard in Frindsbury Kent on the River Medway. There are a pub right there, and Dutch seaman would often lean over the wall as I worked on the boat, and ask where they could find Beer and Schnapps. I had to tell them I did not have a clue, and I'm sure the publican did not either. They seemed greatly annoyed. So in Amsterdam it still took me a long time to find what they had been asking for. As I suspect you know, it is Heineken with a chaser of Jacob Genever which is a potent gin that is extracted from the deep freeze before serving. Apparently this was favored by Dutch seeman according to the publican.
The UK, has kept to the Roman way of doing things, as they marched on the left, as most people are right handed, so that way they could have their swords at the ready, to smite enemy columns.
The French had to be awkward, and changed it to the right. During the early post civil war years, America was enamored with the French, Pierre Charles L'Enfant being the architect of Washington, which is why our capital city, has such a French feel to it. The US ended up driving on the right because of that connection.
Anyhow enjoy your time in Austria. I have only been in the part that used to be Austrian, but was given to Italy after WW I. I went to visit Gustaf Mahler's composing shack. The whole area was stiff with German speaking people prancing about in Lederhosen. They seemed a bolshy bunch to me, upset to be in Italy and not Austria.