Spook_ie wrote: » Actually, the day glow portion of a HI viz garment works better in sunlight
FinnC wrote: » Anyway basically all I'm saying is when I hear people trying to justify cyclists breaking red lights it just makes me cringe a bit.
07Lapierre wrote: » Glad to hear people are not falling for this nonsense! Hi-Viz? in Summer? on what have been some of the brightest/warmest days we've had so far.
FinnC wrote: » Non cyclists hating on all cyclists and cyclists hating on all motorists.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Also, what's the obsession with comparing numbers jumping red lights about anyone?
Hurrache wrote: » Despite casting over and over, you still won't find anyone taking your bait ewc78. People just don't care that you find people not on bikes in cycle lanes.
07Lapierre wrote: » Most cycle lanes have a crappy road surface, have sign post poles in the middle of them, guide cyclists off the road, onto the pavement and then back onto the road again and were designed to simply keep bicycles out of the way of cars!
TaurenDruid wrote: » No, that's not what that research shows. Please stop claiming it is. That's a study of two road junctions, junctions with LUAS tracks. They show that 67.4% of those who broke those red lights were cars. 12.6% were cyclists. Absent figures for the totals using those junctions, and the totals breaking the red lights, they're actually fairly devoid of meaningful information. They also recorded things like "time after the red light was displayed" - but mysteriously the cycling blog doesn't report those figures. I wonder why? Yes, cars break the lights. No, they shouldn't break the lights, but they do. In the vast majority of cases, it's cars speeding up to get through a light on amber, or the first couple of seconds of red. Again - tot disputing that's wrong, not disputing that it happens. But compare that to almost any other traffic light situation, where a large majority of cyclists will just continue straight on through a red light, if there's no easily visible actual motor traffic coming towards them. Pedestrians? Even other cyclists? Going through... And that's 10 seconds, 20 seconds, even longer, after a light has turned red.
TaurenDruid wrote: » That's a study of two road junctions, junctions with LUAS tracks. They show that 67.4% of those who broke those red lights were cars. 12.6% were cyclists. Absent figures for the totals using those junctions, and the totals breaking the red lights, they're actually fairly devoid of meaningful information.
In the vast majority of cases, it's cars speeding up to get through a light on amber, or the first couple of seconds of red. Again - tot disputing that's wrong, not disputing that it happens. But compare that to almost any other traffic light situation, where a large majority of cyclists will just continue straight on through a red light, if there's no easily visible actual motor traffic coming towards them. Pedestrians? Even other cyclists? Going through...
SeanW wrote: » I suspect you don't spend much time in Irish city centres then ... red light jumping and riding on the footpath is the rule, not the exception in our major city centres.
Pinch Flat wrote: » It's gas the way the thread started off with people being outraged with cyclists on paths and has morphed into a thread moaning about cyclists legal right in using the roads. Bit disappointed "road tax", helmets or insurance didn't come up. I'll check back later.
07Lapierre wrote: » A cyclist running a red light is a muppet and a danger to him/herself. A motorist running a red light is a bigger muppet AND a potential death sentence (or at best, serious injury) TO THEMSELVES and also any pedestrians or other road users.There is also the cost of any material damage to property/road furniture etc. Yet Cyclists who run red lights are seen as a major, MAJOR, danger/hazard on our roads? Just doesn't make sense.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » True enough, endemic levels of red light jumping, the vast majority of which is done by motorists in Irish city centre.http://kerrycyclingcampaign.org/but-all-drivers-break-the-lights/
Thelonious Monk wrote: » I personally have no problem with that, you would be easy to pass, as long as it's not a car
SeanW wrote: » Re-read the dictionary. Negligent actions in the run-up to an accident don't make it any less accidental. Intent matters. Either the crash was caused on purpose or it wasn't. It's really very simple. There's no such thing as Schroedinger's collision, that was accidental and on-purpose at the same time. It's one or the other. There is no in-between.
SeanW wrote: » Which makes Irish motorists among the best in the world at not killing people. Demonstrably so. And by a VERY large margin.
SeanW wrote: » Because the question is bull****. Public policy is not made on the basis of individuals, it is made on the basis of society as a whole. That's why every society tolerates road deaths. Usually far more than Ireland. Given that you are probably a left-wing collectivist yourself, you should understand that. FWIW I have lost relatives on the road, under varying circumstances. But I still take the roads on foot and by car as the case requires, as and when I want or need to. Because I know the risks and accept them. It could all be over for any of us tomorrow. But I am satisfied that the risk-reward ratio for walking or driving as needed is favourable. As do most, all over the world.
SeanW wrote: » Every time you hijack a thread, you start with your pointless platitudes about speed, and you keep hammering the point.
SeanW wrote: » Now, maybe you think that punishing all those awful, evil motorists who sail past cow pastures at 55kph in "core urban areas" is going to save any number of lives, but I for one am deeply skeptical. Look over the examples I provided of what Irish transport planners call "urban areas" and you'll see why I take your figures on "urban speeding" with a massive grain of salt. Both Ireland and Canada are Western societies with a strong English influence and many political, cultural, legal and ideological similarities. It IS relevant. Your kind always complain that motorists are not regulated enough, that more rules, more regulation and more restrictions are needed for motorists and their cars. Well guess what, places like Canada a lot of that, and MORE people die.
SeanW wrote: » You are aware of penalty points right? And their effect on drivers licenses and insurance?
SeanW wrote: » And many of the lawbreakers who do that probably come home to whine on boards about lawbreaking motorists ...
ewc78 wrote: » Sure I run in the cycle lanes all the time
Hurrache wrote: » C'mon, I didn't specifically say that.
ewc78 wrote: » But you specifically said I mentioned kids pulling wheelies on footpaths.
Well, as long as said kid doesn't pull any mad wheelies. Evidently wheelies seem to trigger rage in some people, and jealously in others.
Hurrache wrote: » With all the absence of high vis you still managed to see all these people. I've always found this very strange.
Hurrache wrote: » People complain about people on footpaths, people complain about kids doing wheelies on roads, ergo people would explode by people doing wheelies, on footpaths. Nothing wrong with that conclusion, and it's in keeping with the general nonsense-ness of the whole last few pages.
galwaytt wrote: » 3 times since the weekend locally I have come across cyclists (rurally) not wearing high viz - one had it folded an on their carrier. Another not wearing a hi-viz whilst weaving in & out of a 60km/h carriageway outside a marked hard shoulder ...because they had their headphones on AND was either taking a selfie or live streaming as they - careened - along the road. And I met a cyclist who obviously thinks they're a pedestrian (otherwise explain why you're cycling against traffic on the wrong side of the road). The fine weather we've enjoyed has seen hi-viz in particular cast aside for some reason. I ride a 365kg motorcycle most of the time. It's big, heavy, makes a noise to announce it's presence, has mandatory headlight on always - and I wear hi-viz on that - even RoR advises to do so - but I do it to enhance my visibility to others. For Learners and N-plate holders it's legally mandatory by reason of fine and penalty points - so you could be doing that for 4 years. But people on 10kg bicycles see themselves as invincible it seems and don't seem to see the need for them. Great to see families and kids out cycling. But why aren't they wearing hi-viz & helmets as RoR says you should ? .
Hurrache wrote: » But imagine kids doing wheelies, on footpaths! It would be the third horseman of the apocalypse joining up with his buddies riding Covid-19 and racial tensions. We should be terrified as to what the 4th, and final, one would bring.