View Single Post
  #10  
Old July 24th 03, 02:36 AM
David L. Johnson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Entering the queue at a stop sign

On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 18:20:50 +0000, Rick Onanian wrote:

My question: Going straight when there's a right-turn-only lane. This is a
situation where I feel both danger and my slowing powered-vehicle drivers.
Consider:
-that I may have to violate the right-turn-only lane, which is dangerous
in two ways. One, traffic expects me to turn right. Two, oncoming traffic
visibility is often blocked by a vehicle turning left.
-if I don't do that, I have to cross that right-turn-only lane, into the
straight/left-turn lane. This means merging into potentially much faster
vehicular traffic, and then forcing them to wait behind.


You need to ride in the right-most lane that is consistent with your
direction of travel. If you slow someone down a bit, that is far better
than getting hit by someone turning right because you were going straight
in a right-turn lane.

Use the lanes like a vehicle -- you are riding one.


Then there's the issue of my terrible clipless pedals that I can never
seem to get into. Now I'm holding up traffic AND embarassing myself. Gotta
get something better than Wellgo R4; maybe something in an SPD, or for
ultra- cool looks, egg beaters or m2Racer Orbs...


Side issue. I did this with double toe straps and cleats, on a fixed
gear. Don't let clipping in get in the way of negotiating traffic.


--

David L. Johnson

__o | "What am I on? I'm on my bike, six hours a day, busting my ass.
_`\(,_ | What are you on?" --Lance Armstrong
(_)/ (_) |


Ads
 

Home - Home - Home - Home - Home