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#71
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
AMuzi writes:
On 4/11/2019 8:34 PM, Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:33:38 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/10/2019 10:33 PM, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 21:25:24 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/10/2019 8:04 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 7:48:01 PM UTC-4, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 1:01:00 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Tuesday, April 9, 2019 at 11:39:10 AM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: For six or seven years, the loudest and best financed bike lobbying organizations have been saying we need "protected" bike lanes everywhere. They say it's obviously inadequate to have just a paint stripe separating bikes from cars; we need at _least_ posts, and preferably a line of parked cars. You know, so the bicyclists are totally hidden from motorists until the motorist crosses the bike lane to access a street or driveway. Segregation skeptics have been saying for just as long that the "protection" vanishes precisely where the conflicts are worse. And the design adds new surprises to traffic interactions. Surprises in traffic are NOT good. And there have been crashes, just as predicted. A mile of "protected" bike lane put in Columbus, Ohio a few years ago went from 1.5 car-bike crashes per year to 13 crashes (IIRC) in the year it was installed. And here's the latest one: https://sf.streetsblog.org/2019/04/0...e-mixing-zone/ The solution? "Protected" intersections everywhere! https://vimeo.com/86721046 I haven't seen any cost estimates for this new cycling nirvana. That would be interesting. - Frank Krygowski Bike lanes have sufficient "protection" by lines on the street. In many places you have broken glass in the lane and you have to pull out into the full lane. Yesterday there were heavy gusting winds and on the downhills I had to use the entire lane to be able to retain full control. The problem with far too many painted strip bike lanes is that they put the bicyclist smack dab in the door zone of parked cars. I've seen bike lanes that go partway onto the on ramp of a 100 kph 60 mph highway where bicycles are NOT permitted. The problem is that any motorist using such an on ramp does NOT expect to see a bicyclist there. I use the through traffic lane in those areas and ignore the painted bicycle lane entirely. That's also not to mention painted bicycle lanes that end suddenly especially those that do it on a downhill. Cheers Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Or just let the bicycles share the lane with the motor vehicles? It's legal here. It's what I do. It works. Remember, I'm the guy who doesn't have cars cut across my path, despite the lack of magic DRLs. Well, I had supposed that building bike lanes was actually beneficial to the cyclist. Otherwise why would your duly elected leaders build them? Rather like the great Wall of America that your leader is intent on building will make the U.S. safe from those poor misbegotten people in South America. Strangely we don't have those things here and I don't find it difficult to ride here :-) In fact, as I have written, the only time I have felt in real danger was when I ran a stop sign and someone was coming the other way. It was a three way cross and I didn't see anyone so just kept going.... I hadn't noticed a pickup which came over the brow of a little rise. I went off the road (very quickly) and crashed in a bed of nettles :-) Don't be obtuse. Nearly everyone here likes immigrants, who are not the same as illegal entries. Even loopy-left Trudeau understand that problem: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47874012 An interesting statement as I read at www.christianpost.com that: Average Americans believe that immigrants have had more of a negative than beneficial impact on the crime rate, the economy, social and moral values, and job opportunities, according to the recent Gallup poll. The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? Not so simple an example. That began with harassment of pilgrims and the Orthodox church else Europeans would not have bothered. And eventually moved on to the crusaders' sack of Constantinople (Orthodox at the time). |
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#72
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
AMuzi wrote:
On 4/11/2019 8:34 PM, Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:33:38 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/10/2019 10:33 PM, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 21:25:24 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/10/2019 8:04 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 7:48:01 PM UTC-4, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 1:01:00 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Tuesday, April 9, 2019 at 11:39:10 AM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: For six or seven years, the loudest and best financed bike lobbying organizations have been saying we need "protected" bike lanes everywhere. They say it's obviously inadequate to have just a paint stripe separating bikes from cars; we need at _least_ posts, and preferably a line of parked cars. You know, so the bicyclists are totally hidden from motorists until the motorist crosses the bike lane to access a street or driveway. Segregation skeptics have been saying for just as long that the "protection" vanishes precisely where the conflicts are worse. And the design adds new surprises to traffic interactions. Surprises in traffic are NOT good. And there have been crashes, just as predicted. A mile of "protected" bike lane put in Columbus, Ohio a few years ago went from 1.5 car-bike crashes per year to 13 crashes (IIRC) in the year it was installed. And here's the latest one: https://sf.streetsblog.org/2019/04/0...e-mixing-zone/ The solution? "Protected" intersections everywhere! https://vimeo.com/86721046 I haven't seen any cost estimates for this new cycling nirvana. That would be interesting. - Frank Krygowski Bike lanes have sufficient "protection" by lines on the street. In many places you have broken glass in the lane and you have to pull out into the full lane. Yesterday there were heavy gusting winds and on the downhills I had to use the entire lane to be able to retain full control. The problem with far too many painted strip bike lanes is that they put the bicyclist smack dab in the door zone of parked cars. I've seen bike lanes that go partway onto the on ramp of a 100 kph 60 mph highway where bicycles are NOT permitted. The problem is that any motorist using such an on ramp does NOT expect to see a bicyclist there. I use the through traffic lane in those areas and ignore the painted bicycle lane entirely. That's also not to mention painted bicycle lanes that end suddenly especially those that do it on a downhill. Cheers Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Or just let the bicycles share the lane with the motor vehicles? It's legal here. It's what I do. It works. Remember, I'm the guy who doesn't have cars cut across my path, despite the lack of magic DRLs. Well, I had supposed that building bike lanes was actually beneficial to the cyclist. Otherwise why would your duly elected leaders build them? Rather like the great Wall of America that your leader is intent on building will make the U.S. safe from those poor misbegotten people in South America. Strangely we don't have those things here and I don't find it difficult to ride here :-) In fact, as I have written, the only time I have felt in real danger was when I ran a stop sign and someone was coming the other way. It was a three way cross and I didn't see anyone so just kept going.... I hadn't noticed a pickup which came over the brow of a little rise. I went off the road (very quickly) and crashed in a bed of nettles :-) Don't be obtuse. Nearly everyone here likes immigrants, who are not the same as illegal entries. Even loopy-left Trudeau understand that problem: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47874012 An interesting statement as I read at www.christianpost.com that: Average Americans believe that immigrants have had more of a negative than beneficial impact on the crime rate, the economy, social and moral values, and job opportunities, according to the recent Gallup poll. The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? Not so simple an example. That began with harassment of pilgrims and the Orthodox church else Europeans would not have bothered. Ok, then the dark ages up to the KKK. David Duke professes to be a Christian. Most Americans are not racists in my opinion and experience and I don’t think some survey in some dogmatic web page proves different. -- duane |
#73
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
John B. wrote:
On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 20:49:08 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/11/2019 8:34 PM, Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:33:38 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/10/2019 10:33 PM, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 21:25:24 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/10/2019 8:04 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 7:48:01 PM UTC-4, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 1:01:00 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Tuesday, April 9, 2019 at 11:39:10 AM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: For six or seven years, the loudest and best financed bike lobbying organizations have been saying we need "protected" bike lanes everywhere. They say it's obviously inadequate to have just a paint stripe separating bikes from cars; we need at _least_ posts, and preferably a line of parked cars. You know, so the bicyclists are totally hidden from motorists until the motorist crosses the bike lane to access a street or driveway. Segregation skeptics have been saying for just as long that the "protection" vanishes precisely where the conflicts are worse. And the design adds new surprises to traffic interactions. Surprises in traffic are NOT good. And there have been crashes, just as predicted. A mile of "protected" bike lane put in Columbus, Ohio a few years ago went from 1.5 car-bike crashes per year to 13 crashes (IIRC) in the year it was installed. And here's the latest one: https://sf.streetsblog.org/2019/04/0...e-mixing-zone/ The solution? "Protected" intersections everywhere! https://vimeo.com/86721046 I haven't seen any cost estimates for this new cycling nirvana. That would be interesting. - Frank Krygowski Bike lanes have sufficient "protection" by lines on the street. In many places you have broken glass in the lane and you have to pull out into the full lane. Yesterday there were heavy gusting winds and on the downhills I had to use the entire lane to be able to retain full control. The problem with far too many painted strip bike lanes is that they put the bicyclist smack dab in the door zone of parked cars. I've seen bike lanes that go partway onto the on ramp of a 100 kph 60 mph highway where bicycles are NOT permitted. The problem is that any motorist using such an on ramp does NOT expect to see a bicyclist there. I use the through traffic lane in those areas and ignore the painted bicycle lane entirely. That's also not to mention painted bicycle lanes that end suddenly especially those that do it on a downhill. Cheers Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Or just let the bicycles share the lane with the motor vehicles? It's legal here. It's what I do. It works. Remember, I'm the guy who doesn't have cars cut across my path, despite the lack of magic DRLs. Well, I had supposed that building bike lanes was actually beneficial to the cyclist. Otherwise why would your duly elected leaders build them? Rather like the great Wall of America that your leader is intent on building will make the U.S. safe from those poor misbegotten people in South America. Strangely we don't have those things here and I don't find it difficult to ride here :-) In fact, as I have written, the only time I have felt in real danger was when I ran a stop sign and someone was coming the other way. It was a three way cross and I didn't see anyone so just kept going.... I hadn't noticed a pickup which came over the brow of a little rise. I went off the road (very quickly) and crashed in a bed of nettles :-) Don't be obtuse. Nearly everyone here likes immigrants, who are not the same as illegal entries. Even loopy-left Trudeau understand that problem: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47874012 An interesting statement as I read at www.christianpost.com that: Average Americans believe that immigrants have had more of a negative than beneficial impact on the crime rate, the economy, social and moral values, and job opportunities, according to the recent Gallup poll. The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? Not so simple an example. That began with harassment of pilgrims and the Orthodox church else Europeans would not have bothered. That is largely true but a bit of history seems to show that perhaps the underlying reason for the middle-east crusades was largely financial - to gain a kingdom. And yes, "he Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon" were formed in 1119 as a monastic order for the protection of the pilgrims... And soon became one of the, if not the, wealthiest organization(s) in the world (at that time) which was basically their downfall. . -- cheers, John B. Most alt right groups profess Christianity. Using Christianity to claim righteousness is nothing new. Some Christian web site is not a valid source of data in my opinion. -- duane |
#74
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On 4/11/2019 10:05 PM, John B. wrote:
On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 20:49:08 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/11/2019 8:34 PM, Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:33:38 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/10/2019 10:33 PM, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 21:25:24 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/10/2019 8:04 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 7:48:01 PM UTC-4, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 1:01:00 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Tuesday, April 9, 2019 at 11:39:10 AM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: For six or seven years, the loudest and best financed bike lobbying organizations have been saying we need "protected" bike lanes everywhere. They say it's obviously inadequate to have just a paint stripe separating bikes from cars; we need at _least_ posts, and preferably a line of parked cars. You know, so the bicyclists are totally hidden from motorists until the motorist crosses the bike lane to access a street or driveway. Segregation skeptics have been saying for just as long that the "protection" vanishes precisely where the conflicts are worse. And the design adds new surprises to traffic interactions. Surprises in traffic are NOT good. And there have been crashes, just as predicted. A mile of "protected" bike lane put in Columbus, Ohio a few years ago went from 1.5 car-bike crashes per year to 13 crashes (IIRC) in the year it was installed. And here's the latest one: https://sf.streetsblog.org/2019/04/0...e-mixing-zone/ The solution? "Protected" intersections everywhere! https://vimeo.com/86721046 I haven't seen any cost estimates for this new cycling nirvana. That would be interesting. - Frank Krygowski Bike lanes have sufficient "protection" by lines on the street. In many places you have broken glass in the lane and you have to pull out into the full lane. Yesterday there were heavy gusting winds and on the downhills I had to use the entire lane to be able to retain full control. The problem with far too many painted strip bike lanes is that they put the bicyclist smack dab in the door zone of parked cars. I've seen bike lanes that go partway onto the on ramp of a 100 kph 60 mph highway where bicycles are NOT permitted. The problem is that any motorist using such an on ramp does NOT expect to see a bicyclist there. I use the through traffic lane in those areas and ignore the painted bicycle lane entirely. That's also not to mention painted bicycle lanes that end suddenly especially those that do it on a downhill. Cheers Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Or just let the bicycles share the lane with the motor vehicles? It's legal here. It's what I do. It works. Remember, I'm the guy who doesn't have cars cut across my path, despite the lack of magic DRLs. Well, I had supposed that building bike lanes was actually beneficial to the cyclist. Otherwise why would your duly elected leaders build them? Rather like the great Wall of America that your leader is intent on building will make the U.S. safe from those poor misbegotten people in South America. Strangely we don't have those things here and I don't find it difficult to ride here :-) In fact, as I have written, the only time I have felt in real danger was when I ran a stop sign and someone was coming the other way. It was a three way cross and I didn't see anyone so just kept going.... I hadn't noticed a pickup which came over the brow of a little rise. I went off the road (very quickly) and crashed in a bed of nettles :-) Don't be obtuse. Nearly everyone here likes immigrants, who are not the same as illegal entries. Even loopy-left Trudeau understand that problem: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47874012 An interesting statement as I read at www.christianpost.com that: Average Americans believe that immigrants have had more of a negative than beneficial impact on the crime rate, the economy, social and moral values, and job opportunities, according to the recent Gallup poll. The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? Not so simple an example. That began with harassment of pilgrims and the Orthodox church else Europeans would not have bothered. That is largely true but a bit of history seems to show that perhaps the underlying reason for the middle-east crusades was largely financial - to gain a kingdom. And yes, "he Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon" were formed in 1119 as a monastic order for the protection of the pilgrims... And soon became one of the, if not the, wealthiest organization(s) in the world (at that time) which was basically their downfall. Uh, sorta. Their fatal move was lending Philip of Avignon more money than he could ever repay and burning de Molay at the stake seemed his best choice at the time. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#75
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On 11/04/2019 10:54 p.m., John B. wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 01:34:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:33:38 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/10/2019 10:33 PM, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 21:25:24 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/10/2019 8:04 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 7:48:01 PM UTC-4, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 1:01:00 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Tuesday, April 9, 2019 at 11:39:10 AM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: For six or seven years, the loudest and best financed bike lobbying organizations have been saying we need "protected" bike lanes everywhere. They say it's obviously inadequate to have just a paint stripe separating bikes from cars; we need at _least_ posts, and preferably a line of parked cars. You know, so the bicyclists are totally hidden from motorists until the motorist crosses the bike lane to access a street or driveway. Segregation skeptics have been saying for just as long that the "protection" vanishes precisely where the conflicts are worse. And the design adds new surprises to traffic interactions. Surprises in traffic are NOT good. And there have been crashes, just as predicted. A mile of "protected" bike lane put in Columbus, Ohio a few years ago went from 1.5 car-bike crashes per year to 13 crashes (IIRC) in the year it was installed. And here's the latest one: https://sf.streetsblog.org/2019/04/0...e-mixing-zone/ The solution? "Protected" intersections everywhere! https://vimeo.com/86721046 I haven't seen any cost estimates for this new cycling nirvana. That would be interesting. - Frank Krygowski Bike lanes have sufficient "protection" by lines on the street. In many places you have broken glass in the lane and you have to pull out into the full lane. Yesterday there were heavy gusting winds and on the downhills I had to use the entire lane to be able to retain full control. The problem with far too many painted strip bike lanes is that they put the bicyclist smack dab in the door zone of parked cars. I've seen bike lanes that go partway onto the on ramp of a 100 kph 60 mph highway where bicycles are NOT permitted. The problem is that any motorist using such an on ramp does NOT expect to see a bicyclist there. I use the through traffic lane in those areas and ignore the painted bicycle lane entirely. That's also not to mention painted bicycle lanes that end suddenly especially those that do it on a downhill. Cheers Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Or just let the bicycles share the lane with the motor vehicles? It's legal here. It's what I do. It works. Remember, I'm the guy who doesn't have cars cut across my path, despite the lack of magic DRLs. Well, I had supposed that building bike lanes was actually beneficial to the cyclist. Otherwise why would your duly elected leaders build them? Rather like the great Wall of America that your leader is intent on building will make the U.S. safe from those poor misbegotten people in South America. Strangely we don't have those things here and I don't find it difficult to ride here :-) In fact, as I have written, the only time I have felt in real danger was when I ran a stop sign and someone was coming the other way. It was a three way cross and I didn't see anyone so just kept going.... I hadn't noticed a pickup which came over the brow of a little rise. I went off the road (very quickly) and crashed in a bed of nettles :-) Don't be obtuse. Nearly everyone here likes immigrants, who are not the same as illegal entries. Even loopy-left Trudeau understand that problem: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47874012 An interesting statement as I read at www.christianpost.com that: Average Americans believe that immigrants have had more of a negative than beneficial impact on the crime rate, the economy, social and moral values, and job opportunities, according to the recent Gallup poll. The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? My comment was in response to the chap that wrote "Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break". I assumed that he must be anti Christian. -- That was me. I'm anti using "christian" websites as scientific data sources. |
#76
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On 4/12/2019 9:56 AM, Duane wrote:
On 11/04/2019 10:54 p.m., John B. wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 01:34:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com?Â* Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? My comment was in response to the chap that wrote "Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break". I assumed that he must be anti Christian. -- That was me.Â* I'm anti using "christian" websites as scientific data sources. John was talking about results of a survey. It's perhaps telling that you reject the "scientific" data without looking at any details of the survey - who did it, how it was conducted, what the details of the responses were, etc. Does that not demonstrate _your_ bias? I can't find the specific survey John referred to, but it seems similar to this one: https://www.christianpost.com/news/w...lues-prri.html I'm not seeing anything that proves tremendous bias in that survey. -- - Frank Krygowski |
#77
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On 4/12/2019 6:41 AM, Duane wrote:
AMuzi wrote: Not so simple an example. That began with harassment of pilgrims and the Orthodox church else Europeans would not have bothered. Ok, then the dark ages up to the KKK. David Duke professes to be a Christian. Thank Lenin and Stalin and Mao (as opposed to God) that the atheists are all blameless! -- - Frank Krygowski |
#78
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On 4/11/2019 10:34 PM, John B. wrote:
On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 21:02:34 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/11/2019 6:51 PM, John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 16:15:03 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/11/2019 2:52 PM, wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 11:16:40 PM UTC-5, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 20:36:42 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Oh, you're not an American obviously. If you were from the USA you would know that Interstates are only for motor vehicles. Bicycles are not allowed on Interstates. Well, I've got a U.S. passport, or aren't USians considered "Americans" these days? And Yes, I do know about "Interstate" highways and we have generally the same thing here, 6 or 8 lane highways with limited, in the sense that there aren't many, access but here they can be used by anyone. Then we have "toll Roads" which are normally restricted to 4 or more wheel vehicles. I doubt if you have a USA passport or are an American citizen. Or have not spent much if any time in the USA. YOU wrote "Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes." And I wrote that Americans, citizens of the USA, know that the USA has Interstates that are only for motor vehicles. Exactly what you suggested in your written comments. No one from the USA would suggest building motor vehicle only lanes because every American already knows they exist. About as stupid and ignorant a comment as suggesting "Lets build the Eiffel Tower." Obviously, the Eiffel Tower was already built. Just like motor vehicle only Interstates have already been built in the USA. So why suggest something that is already in operation? Are you going to suggest traffic lights and stop signs next? Mr Slocumb, retired USAF, probably intended that as humor. Cynicism, cynicism. It is difficult to be humorous about the small minority of the population who ride bicycles for pleasure and almost certainly own an automobile in addition to their bicycle, demanding special treatment at tax payer's expense.. Who resist any and all suggestions that they should provide proof of riding ability and knowledge of traffic before riding on public roads, that froth at the mouth at the thought that, like other users of public roads, they should "register" their vehicles or have their vehicles inspected to see that the vehicles are safe to use on public highways and that knowingly disobey traffic laws, That generally act as though they are 6 years old trundling their little bicycle, with the training wheels, up and down the family driveway, but demand the right to use public roads. I assume you know that many of us posting here don't share the attitudes you complain about. However, I do object to some of your ideas. We can discuss, mostly in terms of cost vs. benefit. As one example, I've lived in two or three cities with bike registrations - sometimes supposedly mandatory, sometimes voluntary. Turns out it was never worth the bureaucracy and expense. This is a discussion group. We can discuss. Frank, I've read your posts where you said (admitted?) to running a stop sign or light. I read here the anguished outcries when someone talked about licensing bicycles. I've seen people riding a "fixie" in Bangkok traffic, a bike with no brakes at all and even Sheldon mentions those who ride a fixie on the road with no brakes. We had a bloke here some years ago that used to talk about pulling wheelies on public roads. There have been innumerable stories about miserable. lousy brakes but a suggestion for safety inspections is unacceptable. . We had a discussion fairly recently about bicycles paying road tax and the group was solidly against it - buy a bike and use the roads free? I read that something like 50% of bicycle accidents are solo accidents but the thought of some sort of test to ensure that the cyclist is responsible, competent, and does know the highway laws is abhorrent to all. I read people talking about "taking the lane" and "my lane" as though they were guaranteed a lane for their own... but every state I've driven in has had, as part of the highway code, a rule that one should not impede other traffic. I could go on... and on.... and on. Yep, that post proved you could go on and on and on. Should we take all your points on in one post, or break them up into threads? Everyone I know does less-than-legal stops at stop signs, whether in motor vehicles or on bikes. (Personally, I never run red lights.) Tell us what you would do about that stop sign problem. Arrest every car driver whose wheels are still slightly moving? Or just arrest every such bicyclist? AFAIK, ever since one nutcase left this discussion group, nobody here has defended brakeless bikes, show-off wheelies, drunken riding, riding without lights, etc. Licensing bikes doesn't work. It costs far too much to administer and has roughly zero benefit. Countless jurisdictions proved that. If you want some jurisdiction to try it yet again, work up a detailed budget proposal. Mandatory bike safety inspections would be similar. The cost would be astronomical, the benefits roughly zero. (Look up the percentage of bike injuries due to equipment failure, and think what percentage of those failures would be snagged by an annual inspection.) (Heck, my state doesn't even inspect cars!) Cyclists already pay the near-mythical "road tax" because most road construction is NOT funded by gas tax. And try computing the dollar cost of road damage caused by bicycles, compared to cars and (especially) heavy trucks. See https://streets.mn/2016/10/24/yes-bi...ir-fair-share/ and http://wwbpa.org/2011/10/who-pays-for-our-roads/ and https://frontiergroup.org/reports/fg/who-pays-roads ... and so on. I have certainly not argued against cyclists knowing and following traffic laws. I've said many times that ALL kids should get multiple training sessions in schools - that knowing the rules of the road is a hell of a lot more valuable than knowing the rules of Dodge Ball. But I leave it to you to explain how you'll administer and fund "bike licenses" and official tests for the same. And you may believe you remember about a rule that one "should not impede other traffic" but you obviously haven't read the text of the law in my state or many others. Check out section C of 4511.55: http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/4511.55 Nor have you read the results of significant court cases: http://www.ohiobike.org/index.php/selz-case and https://www.ohiobikelawyer.com/bike-...ase-revisited/ Now which of those issues do you want to discuss in detail? -- - Frank Krygowski |
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On 4/11/2019 10:49 PM, John B. wrote:
On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 21:08:11 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/11/2019 6:19 PM, John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 12:03:16 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/11/2019 10:43 AM, wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 9:17:14 PM UTC-7, jbeattie wrote: And where does it end, and at what public expense? https://i.pinimg.com/originals/f6/63...568b113132.jpg And what is the net benefit to cyclists? Segregated facilities can be a nightmare with high traffic volumes -- apart from the cleaning issues. What I never understood about the SCV was why people weren't riding back when I commuted everywhere in the '70s and early '80s. I didn't even own a car for most of that time. Sunny weather, wide streets, moderate traffic volumes -- probably way better than now, and nobody rode to work. I assume ridership has increased and that the cities can justify the expense of special facilities. -- Jay Beattie. Was that a bridge across a Freeway? If you're referring to the photo Jay linked, I believe it's a conceptual drawing for a really, really safe bike facility. It's an elevated tube with weather protection, only for bicyclists. It would be really, really, really safe. But Jay is negligent in promoting that version! Anyone can see that the eastbound cyclists can crash into the westbound ones. When, oh when, will we realize we need two parallel tubes everywhere - for safety??? Of course there are problems with roads everywhere. Along the beach in Alameda they tried putting the bike lane two way along the beach side. This puts the parking lane outside. So people park and throw their doors open into traffic. And passengers throw their doors open into the bike lane. And the two way traffic on the bike lane puts Joe Pretend Racer one the same path that a 3 year old on a balance bike is riding. Can you see any practical way of improving it? Jay's tubular bike path - or actually, the much better twin-tube version - will go a long way toward _finally_ making biking safe... Until we can build an entire parallel universe for bike riders. Take heart, safety fans! Elon Musk is working on it! What you really need is a separate tax structure for cyclists, to pay for their special paths. And if we don't want to use the "special paths," we don't have to pay? Fine by me. Why ever not? After all, the idea of toll roads, where you pay to use the highway, dates back at least 2.700 years and there are currently "Toll Roads" all over the U.S. Ohio has the Ohio Turnpike that the Wiki says you must pay $18.75 to drive on :-) Coincidentally, the hour-long drive I most frequently make could be done by that turnpike, or by other roads. I almost never use the Turnpike. Doing so would save me perhaps four minutes. It's not worth even a $2 toll. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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Making "protected" bike lanes safe
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 10:41:30 -0000 (UTC), Duane
wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 20:49:08 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/11/2019 8:34 PM, Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 22:55:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote: John B. wrote: On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:33:38 -0500, AMuzi wrote: On 4/10/2019 10:33 PM, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 21:25:24 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 4/10/2019 8:04 PM, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 7:48:01 PM UTC-4, John B. wrote: On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at 1:01:00 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Tuesday, April 9, 2019 at 11:39:10 AM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: For six or seven years, the loudest and best financed bike lobbying organizations have been saying we need "protected" bike lanes everywhere. They say it's obviously inadequate to have just a paint stripe separating bikes from cars; we need at _least_ posts, and preferably a line of parked cars. You know, so the bicyclists are totally hidden from motorists until the motorist crosses the bike lane to access a street or driveway. Segregation skeptics have been saying for just as long that the "protection" vanishes precisely where the conflicts are worse. And the design adds new surprises to traffic interactions. Surprises in traffic are NOT good. And there have been crashes, just as predicted. A mile of "protected" bike lane put in Columbus, Ohio a few years ago went from 1.5 car-bike crashes per year to 13 crashes (IIRC) in the year it was installed. And here's the latest one: https://sf.streetsblog.org/2019/04/0...e-mixing-zone/ The solution? "Protected" intersections everywhere! https://vimeo.com/86721046 I haven't seen any cost estimates for this new cycling nirvana. That would be interesting. - Frank Krygowski Bike lanes have sufficient "protection" by lines on the street. In many places you have broken glass in the lane and you have to pull out into the full lane. Yesterday there were heavy gusting winds and on the downhills I had to use the entire lane to be able to retain full control. The problem with far too many painted strip bike lanes is that they put the bicyclist smack dab in the door zone of parked cars. I've seen bike lanes that go partway onto the on ramp of a 100 kph 60 mph highway where bicycles are NOT permitted. The problem is that any motorist using such an on ramp does NOT expect to see a bicyclist there. I use the through traffic lane in those areas and ignore the painted bicycle lane entirely. That's also not to mention painted bicycle lanes that end suddenly especially those that do it on a downhill. Cheers Perhaps the solution is to go the other way and build motor vehicle only lanes. This would do essentially the same thing as the bicycle only lanes of separating the big fierce motor vehicles from the small meek bicycles. -- cheers, John B. Or just let the bicycles share the lane with the motor vehicles? It's legal here. It's what I do. It works. Remember, I'm the guy who doesn't have cars cut across my path, despite the lack of magic DRLs. Well, I had supposed that building bike lanes was actually beneficial to the cyclist. Otherwise why would your duly elected leaders build them? Rather like the great Wall of America that your leader is intent on building will make the U.S. safe from those poor misbegotten people in South America. Strangely we don't have those things here and I don't find it difficult to ride here :-) In fact, as I have written, the only time I have felt in real danger was when I ran a stop sign and someone was coming the other way. It was a three way cross and I didn't see anyone so just kept going.... I hadn't noticed a pickup which came over the brow of a little rise. I went off the road (very quickly) and crashed in a bed of nettles :-) Don't be obtuse. Nearly everyone here likes immigrants, who are not the same as illegal entries. Even loopy-left Trudeau understand that problem: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47874012 An interesting statement as I read at www.christianpost.com that: Average Americans believe that immigrants have had more of a negative than beneficial impact on the crime rate, the economy, social and moral values, and job opportunities, according to the recent Gallup poll. The survey, conducted June 4-24 and released Friday, showed that 58 percent of Americans believe the crime situation is worst because of immigrants, while 46 percent say this people group has negatively impacted the economy in general. -- cheers, John B. Christianpost.com? Give me a ****ing break. Why, can you deny that the Christians are some of the most impartial and unprejudiced folks in the history of mankind? -- You mean like the crusaders? Not so simple an example. That began with harassment of pilgrims and the Orthodox church else Europeans would not have bothered. That is largely true but a bit of history seems to show that perhaps the underlying reason for the middle-east crusades was largely financial - to gain a kingdom. And yes, "he Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon" were formed in 1119 as a monastic order for the protection of the pilgrims... And soon became one of the, if not the, wealthiest organization(s) in the world (at that time) which was basically their downfall. . -- cheers, John B. Most alt right groups profess Christianity. Using Christianity to claim righteousness is nothing new. Some Christian web site is not a valid source of data in my opinion. How about a Moslem web site? Or a Buddhist site? Or Black Power site? Or a bicycle advocate site? -- cheers, John B. |
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