Tags:
Lights on bicycles
lights on bicycles
lookin' like a foooooooo
with your lights on bicycles
Anything would be an improvement for the masses I (hardly) see riding at night with zero illumination. A serious pet peeve. As a cyclist who drives for work, it's highly stressful to have to worry about invisible riders. Tonight I was surprised by two witless bike ninjas creeping up on my right on Western Ave.
PLEASE RIDE WITH LIGHTS!!!!
Anything would be an improvement for the masses I (hardly) see riding at night with zero illumination. A serious pet peeve. As a cyclist who drives for work, it's highly stressful to have to worry about invisible riders. Tonight I was surprised by two witless bike ninjas creeping up on my right on Western Ave.
PLEASE RIDE WITH LIGHTS!!!!
Duppie-- is this passage what you were referring to as "data?"
The knowledge of human perception calls into question the use of red warning lights when the vehicle is parked in or next to the highway. Instead of warning people away, the red emergency lights actually draw drivers towards the lights. This so-called moth effect refers to "a state of narrowed attention associated with excessive concentration on some object or task with the resulting in a loss of voluntary control over response." People drive where they look! Drugged, drunk, elderly and fatigued drivers will drive right into the rear of the vehicle in the road and drive off the road to hit the vehicle parked on the shoulder that is displaying the red warning lights. This happens more than we like to admit. How many close calls have you had? Or is there something else in another link? I'd be interested to see actual data about this too.
Duppie said:Interesting article. This is the first time I see some data backing up the existence of the so-called moth effect.
I wonder whether the flashing pattern has something to do with it. For example, I find the PB Superflash in blinking mode to be positively vertigo inducing. Lights that have a simpler blinking pattern, don't have this effect on me.
Bicycle friendly countries like the Netherlands and Germany have always required bicycle lights to be solid. Maybe they know something we don't
I see, thanks. I think the first link is the one I excerpted.
I saw that too but I am having a hard time relating a huge mess of confusing, blinding lights to the effect of a flashing vs. constant red tail light. Would be interested in anything else in support of the oft-heard concept that putting your rear lights in blink mode makes drivers more likely to drive towards you.
On my Cannondale I roll with just a front and back set of Monkey Electrics both flashing red and white. And I have noticed a vast improvement in my visibility. I have been stopped by drivers telling me that they could see me blocks away but it wasn't "annoying." Seriously, that happens all the time. So if you get a set for the back and front you'll be seen, but the trade off is at least every other day talking to someone from a car window about your lights.
On a slightly related note, Todd can back me on this, if you're out on a Bike Copwatch patrol we make it a requirement that our members are street legal. Meaning visible front and back lighting. I am pretty sure only the front is required by law, but the cops in the city seem to think you need both. They have ticketed us for very minor bike infractions on numerous occasions. And even when I am alone doing my own thing in my hood, and a battery dies or something, I am almost always pulled over by cops for not having the proper lighting.
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