snorri
Legendary Member
- Location
- East coast, up a bit.
I just believe there are many measures that could be taken to improve road safety but hi-viz for cyclists gets talked about out of all proportion to its beneficial effect.
Adrian, you are quite right but I'd venture that this may sometimes not be the best way.
I witnessed an accident about two years ago where a motorist just before dusk pulled out on a motorcycle combination which struck his front bumper, sending the rider over his bonnet.
I'd been in a perfect posiion to see the combination but hadn't. He was riding (not long before dusk but in fair visibility) a matt black combo, with black clothing and a black helmet. No lights. All perfectly legal, but in the conditions he was so hard to see that no witness was aware of his presence until a fraction of a second before impact.
I was the first to get to the prostrate rider and thought him dead until I heard a snuffling snore-type sound from behind his visor. The rider was riding perfectly legally and within the speed limit. The motorist who pulled out on him was driving with caution.
I'm not a faddist for multiple lights and the latest shiny-fandango cyclegear. I frequently ride helmetless. Nonetheless, I do feel some sort of responsibility for giving other road users a fair chance of seeing me.
As a driver and motorcyclist I've frequently seen 'ninja' cyclists far later than I might have. This has been because they were inadequately lit. It is perfectly possible to be driving/rding perfectly legally and at the same time be making it harder than it ought to be for others to see you.
I don't get wound up by ninja riders, but many of us have seen people out there who are loading the dice unhelpfully through their clothing and lamp choices.
I just believe there are many measures that could be taken to improve road safety but hi-viz for cyclists gets talked about out of all proportion to its beneficial effect.
Adrian, you are quite right but I'd venture that this may sometimes not be the best way.
I witnessed an accident about two years ago where a motorist just before dusk pulled out on a motorcycle combination which struck his front bumper, sending the rider over his bonnet.
I'd been in a perfect posiion to see the combination but hadn't. He was riding (not long before dusk but in fair visibility) a matt black combo, with black clothing and a black helmet. No lights. All perfectly legal, but in the conditions he was so hard to see that no witness was aware of his presence until a fraction of a second before impact.
I was the first to get to the prostrate rider and thought him dead until I heard a snuffling snore-type sound from behind his visor. The rider was riding perfectly legally and within the speed limit. The motorist who pulled out on him was driving with caution.
I'm not a faddist for multiple lights and the latest shiny-fandango cyclegear. I frequently ride helmetless. Nonetheless, I do feel some sort of responsibility for giving other road users a fair chance of seeing me.
As a driver and motorcyclist I've frequently seen 'ninja' cyclists far later than I might have. This has been because they were inadequately lit. It is perfectly possible to be driving/rding perfectly legally and at the same time be making it harder than it ought to be for others to see you.
I don't get wound up by ninja riders, but many of us have seen people out there who are loading the dice unhelpfully through their clothing and lamp choices.
1802017 said:Or more precisely a bloke using the road in a perfectly legal fashion with a reasonable expectation that other road users are reasonable people driving in a competent fashion.
Given your story, do you think motorcycles and cars should all be painted in hi-viz? They seem to not see each other often enough.
Eh, driving with caution, of course he was, that's why he pulled out in front of the fekkin motorbike. What is the point of this anecdote, which tells us nothing, that's rhetorical by the way, I require no answer.
I've witnessed a few accidents of people pulling out and in all cases it was because the person pulling out hadn't looked properly.
If I am ever the cause of an accident, it'll be because it was my fault not because the other person wasn't wearing Hi Viz/didn't have his lights on/didn't yell loud enough.
Makes me wonder how things will develop now car manufacturers are adding daytime running lights.
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Back to car colour: I'm not sure I'd buy a car in the shades of white, pewter and 'brushed steel' that one sees these days. If driven in mist or at dusk without lights, they do quite a good disappearing act. But hi-viz on a car? Really, no.
I thought it was valid, although I'd argue that that someone who drives a car carelessly enough to put lives at risk is at a lower level than a thief.1802607 said:You are comparing normal everyday activity with criminality. Was that your intention?