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reflective tape
Today I put some white reflective tape front,
and some red rear, on a bike. Pointing a 38lm flashlight at it from ~1.5m makes for a very visible reaction. The only downside was that the tape gave the impression of not really sticking to the bike. On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 |
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#2
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reflective tape
On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 12:44:47 PM UTC-5, Emanuel Berg wrote:
Today I put some white reflective tape front, and some red rear, on a bike. Pointing a 38lm flashlight at it from ~1.5m makes for a very visible reaction. The only downside was that the tape gave the impression of not really sticking to the bike. On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 I put reflective tape on the frame and rims of the bike I used on Paris Brest Paris. It was some silvery white reflective tape. I covered the entire frame, except the headtube. And strips between every other spoke. When car headlights were shined on the bike, when driving into the garage, the bike lit up like a beacon. It was very noticeable when lights hit it. From any angle. |
#4
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reflective tape
On Tue, 09 Oct 2018 19:44:23 +0200, Emanuel Berg
wrote: On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. Careful with acetone. It will attack some paints and any plastics: http://www.plasticsintl.com/plastics_chemical_resistence_chart.html Click the "Acetone" check box - "Show Selected" If all you want to do is remove the grease, something milder like alcohol, mineral spirits, or naphtha should be sufficient. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#5
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reflective tape
Jeff Liebermann wrote:
Careful with acetone. It will attack some paints and any plastics: http://www.plasticsintl.com/plastics_chemical_resistence_chart.html Click the "Acetone" check box - "Show Selected" If all you want to do is remove the grease, something milder like alcohol, mineral spirits, or naphtha should be sufficient. OK, thanks. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 |
#6
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reflective tape
On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 6:43:28 PM UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 10/9/2018 5:42 PM, russellseaton1 wrote: On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 12:44:47 PM UTC-5, Emanuel Berg wrote: Today I put some white reflective tape front, and some red rear, on a bike. Pointing a 38lm flashlight at it from ~1.5m makes for a very visible reaction. The only downside was that the tape gave the impression of not really sticking to the bike. On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 I put reflective tape on the frame and rims of the bike I used on Paris Brest Paris. It was some silvery white reflective tape. I covered the entire frame, except the headtube. And strips between every other spoke. When car headlights were shined on the bike, when driving into the garage, the bike lit up like a beacon. It was very noticeable when lights hit it. From any angle. I like the stuff, although I haven't indulged to anything like that same degree. I've got it on pedals, a spot or two on a crank arm or two, some dots on the spoke bed surface of some bike's rims, etc. But you have to keep it clean. And treat it as an extra measure, not as an alternative to legal requirements. Applied correctly in Ontario, it meets the requirement that a bicycle display reflectors front and rear. My bike has strips of reflective white tape about 10" by 1" on each fork blade, and reflective red tape the same size on each seat stay. I cleaned the surfaces with alcohol before applying the tape. -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO |
#7
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reflective tape
On 16/10/2018 3:35 PM, wrote:
On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 6:43:28 PM UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 10/9/2018 5:42 PM, russellseaton1 wrote: On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 12:44:47 PM UTC-5, Emanuel Berg wrote: Today I put some white reflective tape front, and some red rear, on a bike. Pointing a 38lm flashlight at it from ~1.5m makes for a very visible reaction. The only downside was that the tape gave the impression of not really sticking to the bike. On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 I put reflective tape on the frame and rims of the bike I used on Paris Brest Paris. It was some silvery white reflective tape. I covered the entire frame, except the headtube. And strips between every other spoke. When car headlights were shined on the bike, when driving into the garage, the bike lit up like a beacon. It was very noticeable when lights hit it. From any angle. I like the stuff, although I haven't indulged to anything like that same degree. I've got it on pedals, a spot or two on a crank arm or two, some dots on the spoke bed surface of some bike's rims, etc. But you have to keep it clean. And treat it as an extra measure, not as an alternative to legal requirements. Applied correctly in Ontario, it meets the requirement that a bicycle display reflectors front and rear. My bike has strips of reflective white tape about 10" by 1" on each fork blade, and reflective red tape the same size on each seat stay. I cleaned the surfaces with alcohol before applying the tape. In Quebec the reflective tape can be used in lieu of wheel protectors and pedals but in the case of the front and rear reflectors there is no exclusion for actual reflectors. Doesn't make any sense but some cases have been reported where tickets were issued. And the fines have increased from $15 per reflector to $85. Just a heads up if you ride across the border. |
#8
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reflective tape
On Tuesday, October 16, 2018 at 4:22:01 PM UTC-4, duane wrote:
On 16/10/2018 3:35 PM, wrote: On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 6:43:28 PM UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 10/9/2018 5:42 PM, russellseaton1 wrote: On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 12:44:47 PM UTC-5, Emanuel Berg wrote: Today I put some white reflective tape front, and some red rear, on a bike. Pointing a 38lm flashlight at it from ~1.5m makes for a very visible reaction. The only downside was that the tape gave the impression of not really sticking to the bike. On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 I put reflective tape on the frame and rims of the bike I used on Paris Brest Paris. It was some silvery white reflective tape. I covered the entire frame, except the headtube. And strips between every other spoke. When car headlights were shined on the bike, when driving into the garage, the bike lit up like a beacon. It was very noticeable when lights hit it. From any angle. I like the stuff, although I haven't indulged to anything like that same degree. I've got it on pedals, a spot or two on a crank arm or two, some dots on the spoke bed surface of some bike's rims, etc. But you have to keep it clean. And treat it as an extra measure, not as an alternative to legal requirements. Applied correctly in Ontario, it meets the requirement that a bicycle display reflectors front and rear. My bike has strips of reflective white tape about 10" by 1" on each fork blade, and reflective red tape the same size on each seat stay. I cleaned the surfaces with alcohol before applying the tape. In Quebec the reflective tape can be used in lieu of wheel protectors and pedals but in the case of the front and rear reflectors there is no exclusion for actual reflectors. Doesn't make any sense but some cases have been reported where tickets were issued. And the fines have increased from $15 per reflector to $85. Just a heads up if you ride across the border. IIRC, Ontario Canada requires BOTH a front facing white reflector and white reflective tape, plus a red rear facing reflector plus the red reflective tape. Cheers |
#9
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reflective tape
On 16/10/2018 5:44 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Tuesday, October 16, 2018 at 4:22:01 PM UTC-4, duane wrote: On 16/10/2018 3:35 PM, wrote: On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 6:43:28 PM UTC-4, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 10/9/2018 5:42 PM, russellseaton1 wrote: On Tuesday, October 9, 2018 at 12:44:47 PM UTC-5, Emanuel Berg wrote: Today I put some white reflective tape front, and some red rear, on a bike. Pointing a 38lm flashlight at it from ~1.5m makes for a very visible reaction. The only downside was that the tape gave the impression of not really sticking to the bike. On the casette saddle-stay side, I had to clean the stay with acetone before it would stick at all. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 I put reflective tape on the frame and rims of the bike I used on Paris Brest Paris. It was some silvery white reflective tape. I covered the entire frame, except the headtube. And strips between every other spoke. When car headlights were shined on the bike, when driving into the garage, the bike lit up like a beacon. It was very noticeable when lights hit it. From any angle. I like the stuff, although I haven't indulged to anything like that same degree. I've got it on pedals, a spot or two on a crank arm or two, some dots on the spoke bed surface of some bike's rims, etc. But you have to keep it clean. And treat it as an extra measure, not as an alternative to legal requirements. Applied correctly in Ontario, it meets the requirement that a bicycle display reflectors front and rear. My bike has strips of reflective white tape about 10" by 1" on each fork blade, and reflective red tape the same size on each seat stay. I cleaned the surfaces with alcohol before applying the tape. In Quebec the reflective tape can be used in lieu of wheel protectors and pedals but in the case of the front and rear reflectors there is no exclusion for actual reflectors. Doesn't make any sense but some cases have been reported where tickets were issued. And the fines have increased from $15 per reflector to $85. Just a heads up if you ride across the border. IIRC, Ontario Canada requires BOTH a front facing white reflector and white reflective tape, plus a red rear facing reflector plus the red reflective tape. Cheers Here there is no mention of front facing white tape or rear facing red tape. I know people that use this in lieu of reflectors due to issues mounting the reflectors but this doesn't meet the requirement. It may be enough for a particular policeman to let you go. They did make allowances for clipless pedals or wheels where spoke reflectors wouldn't work by allowing reflective tape. This is the code: 232. Every bicycle must carry (1) one white reflector at the front; (2) one red reflector at the rear; (3) one amber or white reflector on each pedal; (4) on the front wheel, an amber or white reflector attached to the spokes and visible on both sides of the bicycle, an amber or white reflective strip attached to each side of the fork, a tire with reflective sidewalls or a rim with a continuous reflective strip around the entire circumference of the wheel on both sides; and (5) on the back wheel, a red or white reflector attached to the spokes and visible on both sides of the bicycle, a red or white reflective strip on each seat stay, a tire with reflective sidewalls, or a rim with a continuous reflective strip around the entire circumference of the wheel on both sides. Despite the first paragraph, a bicycle need not carry the reflector required under subparagraph 3 of that paragraph if the cyclist wears a reflective band around each ankle or shoes with reflective strips. Any equipment or object placed on a bicycle that blocks a prescribed reflector or its substitute must carry a reflector or a reflective strip. A trailer towed by a bicycle must carry two red reflectors at the rear, as far apart as practicable, or a red reflective strip placed as close to horizontal as possible across the width of the trailer. 1986, c. 91, s. 232; 2010, c. 34, s. 45; 2018, c. 7, s. 43. 233. At night, every bicycle must also carry, a white headlight or light and one red tail-light, both of which may be flashing. 1986, c. 91, s. 233; 2018, c. 7, s. 44. 233.1. No bicycle dealer shall sell, offer for sale, rent or offer for rent a bicycle unless the bicycle complies with the requirements of the first paragraph of section 232. However, if the bicycle carries clipless pedals or does not have pedals, the prohibition set out in this section does not apply as regards the reflectors required under subparagraph 3 of the first paragraph of section 232. |
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