User3094 said:I'm already in training![]()
Glad to hear it. Do some pub training as well and you might make the Lushketeer Division. Gary, meanwhile, has gone a bit quiet, but I have a plan.
User3094 said:I'm already in training![]()
User3094 said:... of being a sentient human being (with a bike)?
Norm said:As well as flashing other cars who are driving with their fogs on at night, I use the fogs at night to "flash" my gratitude to other drivers. There's a lot of single track roads near my office and I like to acknowledge others who stop to let me through. Flashing with main beam is a pain at night, ruining vision for many seconds, using the fogs acknowledges their actions without blinding them.
My motor-bike training included a question from the instructor "Why hold the brake when already stationary at traffic lights". The answer, of course, is to illuminate the brake light.
very-near said:The only time I have seen a car driver switch off their fog lights is when they have either emerged from fog, or have seen other drivers do the same first.
I had the misfortune to be dazzled by a cyclist using an incorrectly aligned HID kit when I was driving through Nottingham in the works van a few years ago and it left a big hole in my vision for a few minutes afterwards. How do I explain that to the kids mother I have just run them over because I was blinded by an inconsiderate road user on a cycle as I passed them ?.
High beam should be used as a warning, not a weapon.
theclaud said:Don't be mean, Smeggers. It's an inclusive affair, but it helps if you actually like cycling, and don't bang on to your companions about 4x4s for 70 miles...
bigtrike said:Does not the Highway code say that you should slow down or stop if dazzeled by oncomming lights.
So I supose you would say to the poor kids mother that you
1, Ignored the Highway code,
2, forgot comman sence and drove while blinded,
3, I fainted, m'Lord
4, frankly as a motorist I'm to important the kids should have got out of my way!
114
You MUST NOT
- use any lights in a way which would dazzle or cause discomfort to
other road users, including pedestrians, cyclists and horse riders
very-near said:It was upsidedown who suggested that deliberately dazzling passing motorists is a reasonable thing to do.
tdr1nka said:Upsidedown only said that he will flash a motorist that hasn't dipped their headlights upon seeing him.
A quick flash, just as drivers give each other as a warning of their presence, I admitted also doing the same in a later post.
One of the many good points of the Ay-Up mounting is that you can quickly & easily adjust the lamps independently or both at the same time.
upsidedown said:Yesterday was mildly foggy here, drivers seem to think that if visibility is less than a mile and a half they should put their fog lights on, AyUps set to stun soon sort that.
very-near said:I'd like to think I bring a bit of balance to rationale of the unbalanced![]()
very-near said:Did it occur to you that if there wasn't quite so much venom for anyone who dares admit they own a 4x4 on here, I'd never had made anywhere near as much an issue of it. I'd like to think I bring a bit of balance to rationale of the unbalanced![]()
theclaud said:Did it occur to you, Linfling, that what unites people on here is an interest in cycling? There's a big clue in the strapline. We can help with your irrational fears, but the first step is to recognise that you have a problem. Just take a deep breath and say it: my name is Linford and I'm scared of bicycles.
Origamist said:John Forester had a name for it: cyclist inferiority complex.
Perhaps we can come up with something a bit more catchy?!
User3094 said:£20.00 to a charity of your choice if you get Linf on a FNRTTC![]()