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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
Im looking for a few different light kinds.
Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. Turn signal lights you can use instead of sticking your arm out. Im not as concerned about looking goofy as much as the difficulty and risk associated with taking ones hands off the bar and sticking there arm out. Lights at the end of handle bars for increased side visability Ive found indications of each my search but dont know enough of what key words to use to find them for sale anywhere. -- -------------------------- Posted via cyclingforums.com http://www.cyclingforums.com |
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#2
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
Oops, guess I should have put this in the equipment forum
-- -------------------------- Posted via cyclingforums.com http://www.cyclingforums.com |
#3
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 20:31:31 +1050, Truepurple wrote:
Im looking for a few different light kinds. Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. There are brakepads which have a built in LED which lights up when braking.. |
#4
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
Truepurple writes:
Im looking for a few different light kinds. Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. Never seen these. You could fit a microswitch into one or both of your brake-levers... Turn signal lights you can use instead of sticking your arm out. Im not as concerned about looking goofy as much as the difficulty and risk associated with taking ones hands off the bar and sticking there arm out. I've seen these - once - they didn't work very well. But what 'risk' is there in making a handsignal? Lights at the end of handle bars for increased side visability Retro-reflectors in the spokes work extremely well, because the pattern of movement is extremely distinctive and drivers immediately recognise a bicycle (reflectors on pedals are good for the same reason). Sticking extra lights on means more batteries, more weight, more maintenance and more to go wrong. -- (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ Error 1109: There is no message for this error |
#5
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
"Truepurple" wrote in message
... Im looking for a few different light kinds. Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. Turn signal lights you can use instead of sticking your arm out. Im not as concerned about looking goofy as much as the difficulty and risk associated with taking ones hands off the bar and sticking there arm out. Lights at the end of handle bars for increased side visability Ive found indications of each my search but dont know enough of what key words to use to find them for sale anywhere. Canadian Tire here in Canada used to sell these. Unfortuntely, there wasn't any tricky brake light activation..I think it was manual. Nevertheless, you DID get turn signals and a brake light with a switch for either handlebar side. I think both switches together was the brake light or something. They weren't of the greatest quality, but they worked o.k. Try www.canadiantire.ca. I have no idea if they still sell them, but it's something. Cheers, Scott.. |
#6
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 20:31:31 +1050, Truepurple wrote:
Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. Something recently advertised were LED lights on the pads. The utility of this is open to debate. Turn signal lights you can use instead of sticking your arm out. Im not as concerned about looking goofy as much as the difficulty and risk associated with taking ones hands off the bar and sticking there arm out. Risk? Lights at the end of handle bars for increased side visability Available from Nashbar and other places, road or mountain bars, about $20. they even have a flash mode which would work as a turn signal, if you wanted. -- David L. Johnson __o | A mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems. _`\(,_ | -- Paul Erdos (_)/ (_) | |
#7
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 19:04:30 +0800, Mathias Koerber wrote:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 20:31:31 +1050, Truepurple wrote: Im looking for a few different light kinds. Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. There are brakepads which have a built in LED which lights up when braking.. found them: Promax Ipad: https://shop.sunrisecyclery.com/item/10319/ |
#8
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
"Truepurple" wrote in message ... Im looking for a few different light kinds. Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. Brake lights on cars are effective because drivers are trained to know what they mean. Nobody would know how to interpret brake lights on a bike. It would be foolish and dangerous to depend on them to influence the behavior of following traffic. Turn signal lights you can use instead of sticking your arm out. Im not as concerned about looking goofy as much as the difficulty and risk associated with taking ones hands off the bar and sticking there arm out. Same argument as above. If anything, moreso: to the extent that drivers are trained to interpret blinking lights on bikes, it's to interpret them as "slow moving traffic," not as a turn signal. If you can't handle your bike with one hand, practice is indicated. Lights at the end of handle bars for increased side visability As someone else noted, reflectors on moving parts are more likely to be effective for this. The small single-LED lights mentioned in another post are available, but they aren't very bright -- and in the glare of automobile headlights, will be washed out completely compared to good reflectors. If you really want side-mounted lights, you'd do better to get multiple-LED blinkies and clip them to your clothing or helmet or something facing sideways. RichC |
#9
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 13:35:18 GMT, Simon Brooke
may have said: Truepurple writes: Im looking for a few different light kinds. Break lights that come on when you stop on a bike. Never seen these. You could fit a microswitch into one or both of your brake-levers... I saw a kit somewhere, but was not impressed with the setup. Turn signal lights you can use instead of sticking your arm out. Im not as concerned about looking goofy as much as the difficulty and risk associated with taking ones hands off the bar and sticking there arm out. I've seen these - once - they didn't work very well. But what 'risk' is there in making a handsignal? In traffic around here, you may not get that arm back from a left-turn arm signal. Still, given the number of things already on the handlebars of most non-roadie bikes in the area of the grips, mounting a switch where it would not require taking a hand off the bar might be a challenge. I can't recall seeing a bicycle in this area with a functional turn signal setup. Lights at the end of handle bars for increased side visability Retro-reflectors in the spokes work extremely well, because the pattern of movement is extremely distinctive and drivers immediately recognise a bicycle (reflectors on pedals are good for the same reason). Sticking extra lights on means more batteries, more weight, more maintenance and more to go wrong. Tirefly lights also seem to work well, and are effective from a considerable angle. I've seen a local night cyclist who had three of those per wheel. I only saw him in motion, so I don't know how the two extras were mounted; I presume that one was on the valve stem as usual. He used three different colors per wheel. This would not have been a good setup to try to mix with functional brake lights or turn signals, though. -- My email address is antispammed; pull WEEDS if replying via e-mail. Yes, I have a killfile. If I don't respond to something, it's also possible that I'm busy. Words processed in a facility that contains nuts. |
#10
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Break lights turn lights and handle bar lights
Whats a retro reflector and how does it differ from a regular reflector?
Ive found lights that turn on from the motion of stopping. But I forgot where I saw the link. Plus it was in euros or something and didn't include alot of details about how it worked. Heres something else I found. http://brakelite.fws1.com/page10.html Which seems pretty interesting but its hard to understand how it would work from the website or even how much the light would cost. I found the bike handle plugs but there no good. They each use two batteries that cost $3 each at walmart yet only last 50 hours. I'm not about to pay $12 every 50 hours of night riding. I hope I can find a light that uses better batteries. I suppose I could attach lights to my clothing or something but that doesn't seem like it would look as good. Plus on my handbar it would be the leading edge of my bike which would be more affective then in the middle on my helm. Any other leads or tips for solutions to the three things I mentioned that anyone could offer would be great. -- -------------------------- Posted via cyclingforums.com http://www.cyclingforums.com |
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