Nigel-YZ1
Guru
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Have been seeing a few ninjas lately. Including the one casually pootling along the wrong side of the road head on to everyone.
Good Luck.
Good Luck.
As a sensible person I mitigate the risk and commute with three lights front and rear but I really shouldn't need any of them and in using them I am at the minimum tacitly accepting a transference of responsibility from the dangerous to the potential victim thereof.
I suspect there's actually quite a few ninja's mowed down, it's just that we don't see the stats for it.e
Ninja's will, on average, cycle far fewer miles than most us here, so perhaps they actually do have a greater chance of an accident than the rest of us.
I saw some ninja's today, but I have no idea how many i didn't see.
It amazes me that the motorists of Britain aren't constantly stacking it into un-lit parked cars at night.
yes by dint of shining a light on them. They would be more easily seen, from a greater distance and less prone to the last minute swerve to not hit them if they were lit as well.
its not about them being invisible per-se but the reckless and unneccesary abdication of any sort of responsibility for their own safety to the good practice and reflexes of other people.
why are we happy to slag off dangerous selfish idiotic car drivers but ok to find feeble excuses and cop outs for cyclists acting just as irresponsibly - the upshot of it going wrong is invariably going to be the same either way.
2153145 said:Sure cyclists can use lights to make it easier but cars do have lights with which their drivers can see stuff so what is the problem?
2153171 said:Of course it is but driving slowly enough to stop in the distance we can see, that should be quite comfortable lit or unlit.
2153199 said:As a sensible person I mitigate the risk and commute with three lights front and rear but I really shouldn't need any of them and in using them I am at the minimum tacitly accepting a transference of responsibility from the dangerous to the potential victim thereof.
2153199 said:As a sensible person I mitigate the risk and commute with three lights front and rear but I really shouldn't need any of them and in using them I am at the minimum tacitly accepting a transference of responsibility from the dangerous to the potential victim thereof.
2153796 said:The accepting of the transfer of responsibility occurred in 1920 something when the CTC agreed that cyclists should have a rear light rather than just painting a bit of the rear mudguard white. Since then it has got worse and will probably continue to do so. Drivers have been absolved of responsibility for not seeing cyclists because the legal rear light in use was not as bright as a brighter one. Others because the cyclist didn't have Hi-Viz clothing. Where do you think the line should be drawn here?
We can calculate this.
If we give the total number of Ninjas the value n and the number you saw the value s, then the resulting formula looks like this:
The number of Ninjas you failed to see was n - s.
Using a form of extrapolation of unknowns from approximated or imagined data that I devised myself, I can furnish you with the following totals:
n has the value 743
s has the value 12.
Applying simple subtraction to those results, we can see that you failed to see 731 Ninjas.
This is fewer than you would have failed to see on the same morning a year earlier, had I guessed at different (and higher) figures for that day.
I do try to help and I hope it is not entirely in vain.