The one you quoted talked about oncoming. I agree that in daylight this is less of an issue than following.
You may have a point here. It may well be that those of us that have had problems have been followed by someone with their light badly out of line.
This I can well understand. I stopped cycling because of how I started to react to every car that got too close.
Yeah, point taken. I did switch my mental picture when I wrote that.
Pain in the eyes is not an opinion. It's something my body does.
While I see your point this is the same argument that saw the introduction of WRBs. Ignore the minorities.
"Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin (1706-90)
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending to much liberty than those attending too small a degree of it." - Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)
"Motorcycling is not inherently dangerous. It is, however, EXTREMELY unforgiving of inattention, ignorance, incompetence and stupidity!" - Anonymous
"Live to Ride, Ride to Live"
mate you sir are a fuckwit, i actually have worn corrective lenses since the age of ten,
you go on and on about research about full beam not having affect on peoples eyes, well i would suggest by the number of people on here saying otherwise that your research is well and truely flawed. as for riding for 31 yrs you are shy of a few on what i have been riding.
as for lowering my headlight so the full bean is lower, that aint gonna help my night riding which i do quite a lot of. it is self absorbed arrogant fuckwits like yourself that get other motorists pissed off with motorcyclists
And here.
A "fuck you" bright light is bloody hard to judge the speed of as well. So not only do I not know how far away they are, I also can't tell how fast they are approaching.
Hopefully (for you) an oncoming (or waiting) vehicle won't decide you're far enough away and going slow enough to pull across in front of you. They'll see you alright, but you will need a cautious driver to make the right decisions in the absence of clarity about your speed and distance.
I'd take a triangle of lights over high beam any day. For that matter I'd take low beam and good roadcraft on my part over high beam as well.
Last edited by chasio; 4th July 2013 at 21:37. Reason: Slight wording change
Well said ...
Some of the work the Motorcycle Safety Advisory Council has commissioned and is currently being undertaken right here in NZ, which will be world leading in its determination, is quantifying and road testing for NZ conditions triangular and "T" shaped lighting configurations where dipped headlights working in conjunction with additional forward facing white daytime running lights can improve the conspicuity of motorcyclists.
Running high beams is unsafe for all road users. If you're like me, which a lot of the population are, and have less than perfect eye sight high beams creates a blinding hazard for me whether it is cars or motorcyclists running them. It significantly reduces my ability to properly and safely ride my bike. It is a dumb idea.
The research citing increased visability of motorcyclists running high beam scored an own goal. Of course it increases conspicuity, but it does so in a dangerous manner. No person in their right mind would advocate using an unsafe practice to improve safety outcomes. No, they wouldn't... Really... ...
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Old enough to know better
(but doing it anyway!)
Does this mean other colours will not be considered for legal status? I can understand colours like Red, Pink, Amber/Orange etc due to them either representing function lights or being mistaken for said lights, but colours like Blue & green etc I see no reason not to allow them also i.e. that blue glow some vehicles have at the edge of their headlights provide enough of a difference to make people notice
Science Is But An Organized System Of Ignorance"Pornography: The thing with billions of views that nobody watches" - WhiteManBehindADesk
Sweet cheers, wasn't so much about any implication it was more to do with the fact you specifically mentioned "white" & knowing what sort of imbeciles write legislation like "hey we should make it illegal for cars to park in bus stops" then go & make it illegal for even busses to stop at bus stops(rectified now)
Science Is But An Organized System Of Ignorance"Pornography: The thing with billions of views that nobody watches" - WhiteManBehindADesk
The only beam some bikers are interested in is Jim.
"Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]
The research shown is seriously flawed, I would assume it was undertaken by someone who went out to prove hi beam is safe in daylight (ie. not an impartial test) it doesn't address problems like fixation, depth or speed perception.
Since I drive a small car that runs the same type of bulb that my R6 uses, would you be okay with me running hi beams all the time on that.
Not to mention the added effects of road rage, if you're splitting or filtering and shining your hi beam in each cars mirror as you pass you will find a much higher incidence of angry drivers cutting you off or chasing you after you pass.
If you are worried about visability, triangle or 'T' shaped running lights have been proven to help, and you can wear your hi vis (which some people are so convinced works it is illegal to ride without hi vis in some countries)
As a law abiding and courteous road user...my opinion is high beam when/where necessary ie: My bike My rules I choose when/where necessary.
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