They object to my using cycle paths, which is why I've stopped using them. Cycle paths end too soon in strange places and are are too short and bumpy with tree roots - road is faster and usually smoother anyway. The uphill winding paths I use aren't marked. There are often MTBs hurtling downhill - sounding the horn ahead of bends alerts them to slow down. No chance of those guys hearing a little tinkly bell.I've had the odd run-in with people who, despite me approaching at a very slow speed and ringing the bell, are startled away from their mobile phones sufficiently for them to give me abuse -"You shouldn't be riding a bike on this path!". Pointing to the clear cycling signs doesn't bring about a change in tone.
The "bring bring" bells are great. It's a sound imprinted on people's minds either from when they were a child, or teaching a child to ride. Totally non-threatening. I always get a more relaxed reaction when approaching people from behind and quite often a cheery hello.Those loud horns don't work. either people don't repond, it makes them panic or it makes them angry. The best warning is a "bring bring" type bell because that's what people associate with a bicycle coming. Ny friend and I tried a whole range of warning devices, but none worked other than the bell. the loud horn works better on the road for cars because they're tuned to that sound when driving.
They're also totally inaudible to drivers. I had a bell, and it worked fine on shared paths, but I nearly always cycle on the road. If I doubt a driver has seen me at an intersection, I sound a 120db beep. Bells are useless in that situation and similar.The "bring bring" bells are great. It's a sound imprinted on people's minds either from when they were a child, or teaching a child to ride. Totally non-threatening. I always get a more relaxed reaction when approaching people from behind and quite often a cheery hello.
If you're cycling on pavements, they can walk straight out of a doorway right in front of you - cycling on roads, there's more opportunity of seeing pedestrians approaching. My Hornit 140db has stopped many a pedestrian walking out in front, between parked cars. They looked surprised then sheepish, not annoyed. I might still have video proof of this somewhere, because I used to keep those snippets for a compilation video of greatest misses.I'm now trying different routes and keeping more to back roads Vs cycle paths because of the anxiety I'm getting.
At 2 min... Is it your usual near death experience riding?
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Well spotted! I'm glad someone is paying attention for more than the first few seconds of video. As I said, I nearly always use the road because it's faster and cycle paths are badly planned - that's one example of when my bright flashing front headlight shining on the tarmac ahead of my bike got me noticed and prevented a collision. The light flashing is brighter than the Gopro is capable of capturing, it's brighter looking in real life. You might just about be able to see the flashing mid frame. I really should have stopped and waited, but I was unfamiliar with the area and that path, and in a hurry. I'm forever catching trains to unfamilair places with weird cycle path solutions, some are a handful of yards long yet clearly signposted and fully marked with graphics lol. I've learned it's wise to avoid them all. I now have three very bright front flashers for greater conspicuity: 1800LM + 1800LM + 2400LM = 6000LM. Wish I'd had this setup in the 80s...At 2 min... Is it your usual near death experience riding?
I agree, thats's exactly what this idiot usually does! Much quicker and safer to avoid all cycle paths in my experience: dogs, irrational shouty people, kids, cats and dogs off the leash, a feeling of guilt, people of a nervous disposition becoming discomfited to the point their state of health might be compromised by the sight of a bike rolling towards them, bloody huge tree roots, bloody deep holes etc. It's all well worth avoiding INMHExperience. It's why I ditched cycle paths for roads, and a useless little tinkly bell for a Hornit 140db.If you want to ride fast without care then join the roads with the other idiots.
I can't choose what time I cycle, unfortunately. People inconveniently want to chat during office hours, usually in the afternoon, often somewhere I've never been before. It gets boring, so I get my laptop doing this sort of thing with my Gopro helmet camera's footage. 1080P is selectable, which makes it even weirder to look at, but less boring.Choose the times and days when the most are at work, don't ride weekends or school holiday time .
Your strobe light is very visible on your video. Are people complaining of it?The light flashing is brighter than the Gopro is capable of capturing, it's brighter looking in real life.
I don't hear any complaints during the day, Even I can't bear to look at one light flashing let alone three at night, so I keep them constant when it gets dark, and they're all angled down.Your strobe light is very visible on your video. Are people complaining of it?
I disagree, being there at the time and able to see the driver's eyes.It wasn't a flashing light that saved you from accident. It was a driver who stopped on time.
Do you pay attention to other vehicles on the road? It seams like you ramming through roads without slowing down or checking if there are any cars coming from left, right or behind you.
I really should have stopped and waited,
It's funnier turned up to 11. Everyone's gotta have a hobby, and fortunately we don't have to be good at them.BTW your Bafang makes a funny noise
bad use of the word shared perhaps.. dual use track white line delimiting usage with cycle and people icons along with red ring signs indicating which side to useShared cycle routes are just that - the clue is in the title. No amount of lights or audable warning devices will get around the fact that pedestrians have priority. Just read the Highway Code.
Agreed, I took my Air-Zound horn off for that reason.Agree with the Bell v Horn comments, I've fitted bells to my bikes simply because I get a calmer response from pedestrians compared to using the supplied horn..
Whoa, even I wouldn't use that thing. The timbre of the Hornit 140db is far less unpleasant, yet still loud:Agreed, I took my Air-Zound horn off for that reason.
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Effective against errant car drivers though !Whoa, even I wouldn't use that thing. The timbre of the Hornit 140db is far less unpleasant, yet still loud:
That for me, is the important bit! People who pootle along on cycle paths and over pavements can probably get away with tinkling their little bells at pedestrians, but I'm almost exclusively a road cyclist, therefore use a loud horn. I'm not against putting the bell back on next to the Hornit 140db, but so far nobody has complained about my Hornit 140db on the rare occasions I'm on a trail. Besides, there's no more room on my handlebar and I'm not buying a new longer one in titanium (why else would I buy a new handlebar?)Effective against errant car drivers though !
Correlation isn't causation.But risks a manslaughter charge if it's use causes a pedestrian's fatal heart attack.