subeetrikerdon, thank you for the post. a lot of good thoughts. i have a lot of lights on my baby.
Get Horizontal"
by B. Jan Hoffman
43% of all motorcycle accidents occur as a result of an oncoming vehicle turning across the path of a rider. Drivers simply fail to recognize the motorcyclist's right of way. Their typical lament is "I just didn't see him". You might lament "How the hell is that possible, you were looking right at me, you zoned-out space cadet!"
Some motorcyclists may feel that drivers deliberately choose not to see us. They feel that drivers resent us because of our agility, acceleration, or designer leathers. Others suspect that some car drivers must be anally retentive psychopaths who compensate for their fear of flying by driving to kill.
In the urban rain forests of LA or New York, that may be true. But elsewhere, most drivers really don't see motorcycles. Well yes, their eyes see us, but the image doesn't register in the brain. Why is that?
Some intelligent doctor types have postulated that the brain is an organ which rejects, rather than gathers information. They believe that if all the information collected by the senses were to register, the brain would experience sensory overload and blow its fuses.
For example, all the billboards, signs and other visual messages along the road can't possibly register in the brains of car drivers. That would cause sensory overload. To prevent that, the brain tends to organize the world into systems; those which are important to the activity at hand, and those which aren't. The car driver's brain has learned to exclude the non-essentials, and to focus only on those objects which are a threat to survival. On the road, those objects are predominantly other cars. Because cars are much wider than they are tall, the brain systematizes threats as objects characterized by horizontal lines.
Things characterized by vertical lines are eliminated from consciousness as non-threatening, extraneous information. Trees, lamp standards, sign posts, bridge abutments, buildings; none of these vertical objects are liable to jump out in front of the driver to threaten his existence.
Along comes a motorcycle. The driver's eyes give it a quick visual scan and the brain determines that this too is a vertical object. No threat. No further focus required. Zone out. Continue replay of last nights debauchery.
The next thing you know, the driver turns left across your lane even though you can see him looking right at you!
In my early days of riding, an experienced rider hammered at me ceaselessly with the message that "You are invisible out there!" All I heard him say was "Be careful". I didn't understand at the time that he was saying "To most car drivers, you are literally invisible."
Anyone with experience on a bike knows that he was right. Many a novice rider has departed the corporal world because he rode his bike the way he drove his car; as if he could actually be seen.
My advice is, if you don't want to be horizontal, look horizontal. How do we do that? One way is to use running lights. Many Japanese bikes have orange running lights up front integrated into the signal light housing. That gives some sense of horizontal perspective to car drivers. Some Harleys have a pair of white driving lights alongside of the headlight. That's more effective due to the increased candlepower.
I've often lamented the lack of stock running lights on unfaired airheads. A single headlight does not give a sense of perspective, and therefore tends to disappear into the background. I replaced the stock signal lights on the front of my Roadster with 4" round signal/running lights. They immediately and dramatically improved the etiquette of the other users of the road. Some Airheads have disparaged the aesthetics of my "police" lights. I find the impromptu installation of a Buick grill even less attractive.
I've also converted the rear signal lights to signal/running lights. As with the additional front lights, they made an immediate improvement in the etiquette of other road users.
I realized the importance of rear running lights when I was following a friend home from Barley Therapy one dark evening. To my surprise, rather than focusing on his GS tail light and spacing myself accordingly, I soon found myself gauging my distance from the rear end of the car ahead of him.
His pathetic little taillight simply dissolved into the brighter lights of the car, and his bike effectively disappeared.
If this can happen to me, you can be sure it will happen to car drivers, who are not attuned to motorcycles.
So, get horizontal. Convert your signal lights into signal/running lights. If you are going to apply reflective tape to your bike, jacket or helmet, make horizontal or diagonal lines rather than vertical ones.
Most of all, negotiate our streets and highways as if you are invisible.
Read more: Why car drivers don't 'see' bikers and cyclists (Harley, ride, motorbike) - Motorcycles, Scooters, ATVs, Boats, Watercrafts, Snowmobiles - City-Data Forum
subeetrikerdon, thank you for the post. a lot of good thoughts. i have a lot of lights on my baby.
Stallion #406 // 2013 Tri-Glide
You have a lot of good info that you have shared with us!
Let me add something to your statement! I have a modulating headlight that blinks about 6 times a second if I have it on low beams and twice as fast on brights! It is just a blur of a bright flashing lights coming right at ya'!
NOBODY HAS EVER PULLED OUT IN FRONT OF ME BECAUSE THEY ABSOLUTELY SEE ME AND MANY THINK THAT IT MIGHT BE AN EMERGENCY VEHICLE!!!! Many times when I pull up behind someone they pull-over to let me go by!
Let me stop screaming my message! It makes my voice hurt! Seriously! This will save your life!!!! I hear people say "I don't like them" all the time. How do you like dead!
I to think that the modular headlight is a good idea. It definetely stands out. Now the problem that you imply is people reacting to your lights. I drive an emergency vehicle and what some people due can be dangerous to other drivers reacting to my car. They are good you just still must be careful.
Stallion #406 // 2013 Tri-Glide
Thanx for the effort subeetrikerdon, we hear the message time and time again, but it still fails to make an impression. I read your post from start to finish and found it most informative. I agree, can't have enough lights... Even though my trike is yellow, is bigger than a bike, and has bunches of bling and shiny bits, I STILL have car-drivers who will start to encroach on my space.
I'm in the process of running white lights on both guards (forward facing) and a stop light on the trunk at eye-level to the cars behind. I already have tombstones AND horizontal LED lights on the rear, but there is never enough light in my opinion. Thanx again for the friendly reminder
:wave4:I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it
Excellent post! Thank you.
Great article - Thanks!
A thought on the modulating headlight. It may be a regional thing, but around here in SW Missouri/NW Arkansas folks flash thier lights as a sign for the other driver to go ahead. It's like saying "Go on, I'll wait for you." We have had 2 accidents in the past year where the car driver said they thought the bike was flashing his headlight as a sign for the car driver go, so they went, and ran over the bike.
Don - 2004 GL1800 Champion trike, 2018 Can Am Spyder RT Limited
2 wheeler: 2013 Triumph Bonneville T100
FORR Local 11, AMA, MRF, Mid-South MILE Committee
Maybe I will build in some sequenced LED light strips.. maybe they will mistake me for a UFO and run away to avoid being abducted.
ol'newby
Or they might mistake your ride for the trike version of KITT and think your'e David Hasselhoff.:eek:
Don - 2004 GL1800 Champion trike, 2018 Can Am Spyder RT Limited
2 wheeler: 2013 Triumph Bonneville T100
FORR Local 11, AMA, MRF, Mid-South MILE Committee