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fenix.
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October 20, 2016 at 3:03 pm #26417
Jayden
I am aware at this time of year a lot of men and women commute to work when it’s dark. But do people go out in order to have a bike drive if it’s dark?
I am just not that confident at riding on the highways and usually use nature tracks near me and try to use the road less than possible. On the other hand, as I work during the day it only leaves me with Saturdays and Sundays that I find frustrating. I actually have a new few of close shaves when on the road which has unsettled me. Although I’m thinking of attempting an evening ride but finding my anxiety getting the better of me. -
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fenix
kil0ran wrote:
kil0ran wrote:One thing for the rear light – consider mounting it on offside seat stay, or on a bracket that moves it away from the centre-line of the bike. Drivers will assume light is central and give you more space.
Be careful with this. Mount the bike on a seat stay lower down and you could find the tyre, rim, mudguards blocking the view from pavement side. Not ideal.
When you’ve mounted all the lights prop the bike up and check it out from all directions. You don’t want to find you’re invisible from a certain angle.
TypeVertigo
I live in a country generally
I live in a country generally considered not friendly toward cyclist traffic, coupled with subpar street lighting.
My advice to you would be to invest in very good lights. All-out brightness is nice for a front light, but not the last word; instead look at how adaptable the light and its battery are in terms of power and burn time. That said, I’d recommend something with at least 600 lumens for riding at speed along poorly lit or unlit roads.
My own front light is a Cat Eye Volt 1200. Tilted 10 degrees down, I use it at half power most of the time when riding at night, switching on to the full 1200 lumens on pitch-black roads to great effect. The thing excels at balancing endurance and brightness; at half power it’s rated for five hours’ burn time per full charge.
For rear lights, I run four blinkers (saddlebag, rear rack, and one per seatstay), plus an LED arm band on my left arm (traffic in my country drives on the right). Yes, overkill maybe, but a more visible cyclist tends to have better odds of actually surviving, I’d like to think.
Jack Osbourne snr
I’ve just navigated 15 miles
I’ve just navigated 15 miles on unlit roads completely unknown to me until tonight. Mix of b-roads, quiet A-roads and a few miles of fast A-road that was nearly dual carriageway.First time in 20 years I’ve been on several miles of unlit road and I loved every minute of it.
Found myself naturally riding in my usual daytime position about 3ft out from the kerb or verge and as others have said noticed I was being passed much wider than I’m used to on the streets of Glasgow during daylight hours.
Lights? 2x Hope Vision One on mid power was plenty to see with at 18-20mph. Approximately 300 lumens in total.
At the back a Smart lunar 2 on flash and a Planet X Lunar 1 copy on solid kept everyone at a safe distance.
Apart from one overtake at a pinch point on the illuminated urban section of my ride, I had no issues whatsoever.
graybags
Subject to no ice, I’d also
Subject to no ice, I’d also thoroughly recommend early morning rides, getting on the road for about 5.45/6.00am means significantly less traffic and then back home by 7.30 in time for the sun rise, ace !
alexb
I do a fair bit of night
I do a fair bit of night riding. Most often with “the Fridays”, the Friday night ride to the Coast group. Theuir rides for this year are over, but look out for them on Facebook or here: http://fridaynightridetothecoast.blogspot.co.uk/p/welcome.html
They’re a CTC group that ride from (usually) London, to the coast (usually) leaving at midnight and arriving in the early morning, just in time for breakfast. The pace is slow, so this is not a group for the racers, but it is well-organised, with a mid-way rest and refreshment stop, and very sociable.
If you’ve always fancied the Dunwich Dynamo, but been put off by the distance, this is a good group to try.
But yes, night riding is generally a lot less stressful and I have been doing a lot of late night riding since I was a teenager (some 30 years ago) using what were even then, terrible battery powered lights.
I’ve moved on to good, high quality dynamo lights and they are now so good I can’t really see the point in buying battery-powered lights. Yes, they might be more powerful, but the decent dynamo lights out there are more than good enough for the job.
kil0ran
Best option for night riding
Best option for night riding is dynamo lighting. Wheel plus light easily doable for under £100 and you’ll get completely reliable lighting. A big plus is if you go with a German light and mount it at the fork crown you’ll be able to see the road, be seen by other drivers, and not dazzle oncoming traffic. Probably overkill on roads with street lighting but they really come into their own out in the country.
One thing for the rear light – consider mounting it on offside seat stay, or on a bracket that moves it away from the centre-line of the bike. Drivers will assume light is central and give you more space.
Shades
I commute, once or twice a
I commute, once or twice a week, out into the countryside. Around this time of year I switch to the winter bike and keep away from the busier B road I use in the summer. Takes longer but I feel more comfortable in the dark on the lanes, although I keep away from any lanes used as ‘rat runs’. I’ve got a 800 Lumen light which means cars see me coming before they actually see me (loom of the light). It has a dim function as well. Bit of ‘reflectives’ as well so you stand out. Makes me appreciate the summer more!
wycombewheeler
Riding in the dark not a
Riding in the dark not a problem, as long as you have good lights. I use exposure strada at the front.Fewer cars means drivers rarely have to wait to pass so less likely to be frustrated.
Headlights of cars give you a good idea where they are when approaching from behind. And you can tell if that sharp bend has an oncoming car.
But good lights absolutely essential on unlit roads, hitting a badger at 30mph doesnt bear thinking zbout.
mike the bike
I tend to do my daily fitness ride early in the morning and it’s just wonderful. Before 6:30 the roads round here are blissfully empty and the quiet is a joy. I often see foxes, badgers and deer and enjoy that much more than spotting forty-two-ton trucks, white vans and school-run mums. And, as a bonus, there’s always that feeling of superiority you get, knowing most people are still in bed.
Even now, with the ride being mostly in the dark, I wouldn’t swap.
FatAndFurious
I’m fortunate enough to live
I’m fortunate enough to live out in the countryside where traffic is almost absent at night.
Whilst wonderful in that respect, the biggest risk I’ve found is that of startled nightlife. Often the only clue that you just missed something is a panicked scrabbling heard in the hedgrerow at the side of the road.
Because it’s properly dark here, headlights anounce a vehicle’s arrival well in advance. This means I can ride in the middle of the road to give myself more of an escape path if something does make a dash for it.
gunswick
Look out for potholes, drain
Look out for potholes, drain covers which may have moved (due to HGV’s or buses etc) even on routes you know.If your helmet has a visor on, take it off to increase your peripheral vision up front.
As said 2 lights front (no flash, though I do sometimes use Cateye’s hyper constant mode). For unlit roads you need 700 or 800 lumen lights as the minimum really IMO. Rear have one flash and one constant. I also have Cateye helmet lights (little round blob shaped ones) which can flash or steady (white on the front, red on the rear).
Reflectives and high viz are useful. Clear glasses to keep wind and debris out.
Remember to look around you and don’t get tunnel visioned by your front light(s).
Enjoy it!
StraelGuy
With the Exposure Diablo that
With the Exposure Diablo that almost never happens
.tritecommentbot
Oh and watch you don’t gun it
Oh and watch you don’t gun it into the back of grey cars parked in cycle lanes.
Ahem.
madcarew
Personally I enjoy night
Personally I enjoy night riding, and I’ve done a few enduros (200mile + raoad races)which start at 1 or 2 am, and they are really fun. However, the traffic situation in NZ is very different to Europe. Having said that, I hate urban riding at night, and in the UK when riding at night I tended to use A roads with a decent shoulder. I had way to many close shaves on tiny little B roads during the daytime and at night.
CXR94Di2
I find night rides seem to go
I find night rides seem to go faster, I dont know why? Get the best lights you can afford, nothing better than a fully lit road in the pitch black, see all the potholes and animal eyes staring at you.
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