Lights and Gadgets for Safety
#26
Full Member
I read a study years ago that stated that people noticed a bicycle faster when the cyclist was wearing bright socks and shoes and the pedaling motion drew attention to the rider faster than the clothing. wish I could find that article again
#27
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 3,921
Bikes: Trek 1100 road bike, Roadmaster gravel/commuter/beater mountain bike
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2259 Post(s)
Liked 1,680 Times
in
921 Posts
Not going to tell you what you should do, but just what I do:
Bright headlight on handlebar. Steady on at dark, flashing during daylight hours.
One bright red taillight on rear seat stay. Flashing during the day, steady on at night.
Two smaller but equally bright red taillights on each seat stay on either side of the top of the rear wheel. Usually don't use them during daylight,, but both on flashing at night. Using two flashing taillights in conjunction with a steady on taillight means I can get their attention but also they can judge distance and my speed from the steady on taillight.
Lots of red reflective tape down each seat stay, on the back & sides of the tubes. This is the same DOT-approved red/white reflective stickers used on trailers.I just used some of the red portions here. Also a strip around the bottom of the seat stays and each end of the chain stays.
Red reflective tape on the back of my underseat bag.
White reflective tape around each side of the fork near the fork ends and again higher up near the top of the fork.
Nice wide strip of white reflective tape around the top of the downtube.
Wheel lights in the spokes, green and multicolored on the front wheel, red and multicolored in the rear wheel. Primarily for side visibility.
Normally wear brightly colored shirts or jerseys while riding day or night.
White reflective tape on each side of my helmet near the front, red reflective tape in different spots on the rear. May be hard to do based on the shape of the helmet.
One very bright LED blinkie on the rear of my helmet. Has three modes, fast flash, slow flash, or steady on. I usually use fast flash.
Bright headlight on handlebar. Steady on at dark, flashing during daylight hours.
One bright red taillight on rear seat stay. Flashing during the day, steady on at night.
Two smaller but equally bright red taillights on each seat stay on either side of the top of the rear wheel. Usually don't use them during daylight,, but both on flashing at night. Using two flashing taillights in conjunction with a steady on taillight means I can get their attention but also they can judge distance and my speed from the steady on taillight.
Lots of red reflective tape down each seat stay, on the back & sides of the tubes. This is the same DOT-approved red/white reflective stickers used on trailers.I just used some of the red portions here. Also a strip around the bottom of the seat stays and each end of the chain stays.
Red reflective tape on the back of my underseat bag.
White reflective tape around each side of the fork near the fork ends and again higher up near the top of the fork.
Nice wide strip of white reflective tape around the top of the downtube.
Wheel lights in the spokes, green and multicolored on the front wheel, red and multicolored in the rear wheel. Primarily for side visibility.
Normally wear brightly colored shirts or jerseys while riding day or night.
White reflective tape on each side of my helmet near the front, red reflective tape in different spots on the rear. May be hard to do based on the shape of the helmet.
One very bright LED blinkie on the rear of my helmet. Has three modes, fast flash, slow flash, or steady on. I usually use fast flash.
Likes For Milton Keynes:
#28
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 23,208
Mentioned: 87 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 18880 Post(s)
Liked 10,640 Times
in
6,050 Posts
Varia radar.
Likes For Seattle Forrest:
#29
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Posts: 6,709
Mentioned: 35 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6082 Post(s)
Liked 9,233 Times
in
3,987 Posts
Not going to tell you what you should do, but just what I do:
Bright headlight on handlebar. Steady on at dark, flashing during daylight hours.
One bright red taillight on rear seat stay. Flashing during the day, steady on at night.
Two smaller but equally bright red taillights on each seat stay on either side of the top of the rear wheel. Usually don't use them during daylight,, but both on flashing at night. Using two flashing taillights in conjunction with a steady on taillight means I can get their attention but also they can judge distance and my speed from the steady on taillight.
Lots of red reflective tape down each seat stay, on the back & sides of the tubes. This is the same DOT-approved red/white reflective stickers used on trailers.I just used some of the red portions here. Also a strip around the bottom of the seat stays and each end of the chain stays.
Red reflective tape on the back of my underseat bag.
White reflective tape around each side of the fork near the fork ends and again higher up near the top of the fork.
Nice wide strip of white reflective tape around the top of the downtube.
Wheel lights in the spokes, green and multicolored on the front wheel, red and multicolored in the rear wheel. Primarily for side visibility.
Normally wear brightly colored shirts or jerseys while riding day or night.
White reflective tape on each side of my helmet near the front, red reflective tape in different spots on the rear. May be hard to do based on the shape of the helmet.
One very bright LED blinkie on the rear of my helmet. Has three modes, fast flash, slow flash, or steady on. I usually use fast flash.
Bright headlight on handlebar. Steady on at dark, flashing during daylight hours.
One bright red taillight on rear seat stay. Flashing during the day, steady on at night.
Two smaller but equally bright red taillights on each seat stay on either side of the top of the rear wheel. Usually don't use them during daylight,, but both on flashing at night. Using two flashing taillights in conjunction with a steady on taillight means I can get their attention but also they can judge distance and my speed from the steady on taillight.
Lots of red reflective tape down each seat stay, on the back & sides of the tubes. This is the same DOT-approved red/white reflective stickers used on trailers.I just used some of the red portions here. Also a strip around the bottom of the seat stays and each end of the chain stays.
Red reflective tape on the back of my underseat bag.
White reflective tape around each side of the fork near the fork ends and again higher up near the top of the fork.
Nice wide strip of white reflective tape around the top of the downtube.
Wheel lights in the spokes, green and multicolored on the front wheel, red and multicolored in the rear wheel. Primarily for side visibility.
Normally wear brightly colored shirts or jerseys while riding day or night.
White reflective tape on each side of my helmet near the front, red reflective tape in different spots on the rear. May be hard to do based on the shape of the helmet.
One very bright LED blinkie on the rear of my helmet. Has three modes, fast flash, slow flash, or steady on. I usually use fast flash.
j/k

Likes For Koyote:
Likes For holytrousers:
#31
Newbie
Join Date: Sep 2022
Posts: 1
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
35 years ago someone marketed a flag that attached to the seat stay and stuck out horizontally about 18". I bought something similar 6 or 7 years ago, but it didn't last. Neither flag could damage a car, but every car that passed me gave me ample clearance. I keep meaning to jury-rig something similar....
#32
Newbie
When I was doing a lot of motorcyle touring, I had a few extra lights (front and rear). The fronts were mounted asymmetrically; one mounted low on the right fork leg, the other lower than and to the left of the main headlight. My main purpose was to see better during the night, but I received many comments on how the bike stood out in traffic during the day as well. I suspect it was because it looked different than anything else out there.
As far as bicycle lights, I only ride during the day, but I still want to stand out. Many riders use daytime lights- while they do help a lot, I’m not convinced that (car) drivers register them as much as they used to.
I placed a piece of yellow kapton tape over the clear lens of my bike lights- the yellow/ amber light really makes it stand out from others. Looks like an old-school fog light (or all French cars back in the 70s and 80s).
As far as bicycle lights, I only ride during the day, but I still want to stand out. Many riders use daytime lights- while they do help a lot, I’m not convinced that (car) drivers register them as much as they used to.
I placed a piece of yellow kapton tape over the clear lens of my bike lights- the yellow/ amber light really makes it stand out from others. Looks like an old-school fog light (or all French cars back in the 70s and 80s).
#34
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: 25 miles northwest of Boston
Posts: 28,767
Bikes: Bottecchia Sprint, GT Timberline 29r, Marin Muirwoods 29er, Trek FX Alpha 7.0
Mentioned: 109 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4985 Post(s)
Liked 3,111 Times
in
2,063 Posts
lots of riders using lights, including flashing lights, yesterday

#35
Palmer
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Parts Unknown
Posts: 7,801
Bikes: Mike Melton custom, 1982 Stumpjumper, Alex Moulton AM, 2010 Dawes Briercliffe, 2017 Dahon Curl i8, 2021 Motobecane Turino 1x12
Mentioned: 33 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1313 Post(s)
Liked 1,179 Times
in
712 Posts
I keep meaning to jury-rig something similar....
Pool noodle:

I was thinking you'd say that all the cars were using it as target practice, ripping up the flag and snapping the flag stick.
The commercial one I saw had hard plastic triangle 'teeth' on the end to scratch car paint.
Last edited by tcs; 10-31-22 at 08:46 AM.