- This topic has 16 replies, 17 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 4 months ago by
alansmurphy.
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February 9, 2017 at 11:17 pm #26768
wknight
I have seen this several times now. Please don’t ride with only a red light on your helmet. As you tip your head forward, if you are wearing a rucksack, your red light is invisible from the rear.
I came up on a cyclist today and told him he was invisible. He pointed to the red light and I pointed to his rucksack and said it was hiding it. His other red light wasnt working
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alansmurphy
Out tonight for 35 or so
Out tonight for 35 or so miles, light on helmet, seatpost (times 2 in case one fails), rear stay and one around the ankle.
None of them cost the earth but you’d have to have one hell of an excuse to miss (or should that be hit) me…
STiG911
matthewn5 wrote:Commuting by bike in London I see riders in winter with the tiniest of rear lights, those £5 single LED jobs, barely visible at the best of times, even with new batteries. Wearing black. Good luck being seen on a busy road through a wet windscreen. Not that I expect motorists to pay any attention of course, but jeez.Very much this – lights don’t cost the earth next to that posh phone in you pocket, so why skimp on cheap tat?
Or just have a light at one end – usually the back. Yesus.
Al__S
Remember that legally the
Remember that legally the requirement is that a light is attached to the bike, between 350mm and 1500mm from the ground, centrally or offside (right hand side).
No issue with having additional lights, but for legal purposes you’re riding without a light if you don’t meet that standard with at least one light.
Need to have a reflector too- mudguard mounted ones are ideal.
The _Kaner
What about ‘man-bun’ lights,
What about ‘man-bun’ lights, pretty sure there is a need for those too!
davel
VonPinkhoffen wrote:
VonPinkhoffen wrote:Bikebikebike wrote:If you have a very long beard, then it can obscure your front light. More of a problem around the trendy parts of east London.I’m just about to launch a kickstarter for my new cycling specific beard light range “LightyBeard” – works on everything from a “Castaway” full beard to designer stubble.
Only $89.99 for 25 lumens of fashionable beard lighting magic! Order today! Ships in 2021!*
*Probably. Unless I get drunk and blow all the cash on hookers and blow. Again.
Take my money! I Iove all this combining-two-things-into-one innovation. It’s so now and so crowdfund!
As soon as I get off my arse and patent my rear mech-mudguard ‘mechguard’ I’ll be a bazillionaire. Either that or my app that makes your Di2 tap out the velominati rules in morse code.
When I get them both working I’ll combine them all
DaveE128
The one I see most often is
The one I see most often is people on mountain bikes with rear mudguards and seat post mounted lights, where the mudguard obscures the light from directly behind. I find other people’s lack of spatial awareness puzzling sometimes!Leviathan
I’m just about to launch a
I’m just about to launch a kickstarter for my new cycling specific beard light range “BeardyLight” – works on everything from a “Castaway” full beard to designer stubble.
Only £89.99 for 25 lumens of fashionable beard lighting magic! Produced in the UK. Order today! Or visit our boutique shop in Shoreditch.
rjfrussell
Beware just being anywhere
Beware just being anywhere near Donald Trump. He sucks all light and hope out of the world.
matthewn5
I see riders in London in
Commuting by bike in London I see riders in winter with the tiniest of rear lights, those £5 single LED jobs, barely visible at the best of times, even with new batteries. Wearing black. Good luck being seen on a busy road through a wet windscreen. Not that I expect motorists to pay any attention of course, but jeez.
VonPinkhoffen
Bikebikebike wrote:If you have a very long beard, then it can obscure your front light. More of a problem around the trendy parts of east London.I’m just about to launch a kickstarter for my new cycling specific beard light range “LightyBeard” – works on everything from a “Castaway” full beard to designer stubble.
Only $89.99 for 25 lumens of fashionable beard lighting magic! Order today! Ships in 2021!*
*Probably. Unless I get drunk and blow all the cash on hookers and blow. Again.
hawkinspeter
Bikebikebike wrote:If you have a very long beard, then it can obscure your front light. More of a problem around the trendy parts of east London.It’s when you get it caught in your front wheel that things get a bit hairy.
alexb
On a slightly more serious
On a slightly more serious note, in reasonably heavy traffic, lights at rucksac level, or higher up make the cyclist look further up the road than they actually are, compared to other cyclists. It’s an odd optical illusion that I’ve seen several times.
Also, the combination of dark clothes and only a single rear light with no reflectives in lots of city traffic can make it hard to work out where the cyclist is, especially on rainy nights when there are lots of distracting reflections etc. I hate driving at night in traffic for this reason.
Bikebikebike
If you have a very long beard
If you have a very long beard, then it can obscure your front light. More of a problem around the trendy parts of east London.
brooksby
Don’t forget cyclists
Don’t forget cyclists (generally in the city) with a red light on their seatpost, who forget that a longer coat will completely obscure it.
And people who have a red light in the pocket of their rucksack, but then put a Hump cover or similar over it, so they end up with a diffuse glow like ET’s belly…
psling
dottigirl wrote:Ditto some saddle bags.Blimey dottigirl, you must be really short if your saddlebag obscures your helmet light…

(ps I do know what you’re saying though!)
Ditto hoods on jackets.
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