The modern ones are mostly useless, those from half a century ago worked well with a loud double ring.Is it just me or what?, but I find the ping ping bells supplied with bikes embarrassing.... I have had a few Halfords bells but they dont seem to last long,,
your prayers will be answered for £1.28.Is it just me or what?, but I find the ping ping bells supplied with bikes embarrassing.... I have had a few Halfords bells but they dont seem to last long,,
Yes,I used to have one like that Flecc, got it at a cycle jumble, a big one ,which really chimed, like one of those shop counter ones, one strike and it chimed on the down stroke then on the return, unfortunately it was liberated from me along with the rest of the bike.The modern ones are mostly useless, those from half a century ago worked well with a loud double ring.
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Very much like the former donger I used to have, maybe get one for polite warnings to passerbys ,at the moment using air horn ,I need to pip it some distance before passing.I bought this after my battery operated one failed in the rain it's very expensive but absolutely brilliant had many many compliments as pedestrians can here it from a great distance and it's made in England
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0077PQX9S/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Which tone would you use?Yeah, that siren is way to aggressive to use as your first warning signal on a shared path
I'd choose the loudest, most obnoxious tone it has to offer and use it as my secondary 'bell'. IMO, if a ped can't hear a regular bell for whatever reason, your siren is then fair game. I use a single tone 12V motorbike horn as a secondary warning and it always gets heard, even by those inside other vehicles.Which tone would you use?
We tried one of those. It made a nice loud noise, but somehow the pedestrians couldn't hear it, no matter what tone. As I said above, the only thing that works is a bring-bring bell. Anything else just confuses them if they do hear it.Which tone would you use?