The lesson is.... Bike vs car, car wins every time. Doesn't matter who is mad or how loud your horn is.
Thanks for the constructive feedback.????????You were trying to pass him?????
What are you riding???
Is that a YSR50?
Not arguing with that. Agree all the time.The lesson is.... Bike vs car, car wins every time. Doesn't matter who is mad or how loud your horn is.
If you're passing, you need to pedal more quickly. When he started to move you should have been by him and slowing down. Never sit beside or slightly behind a car for any length of time, unless you're trying to pull in behind them. Pass them let them see you, and then slow down if you need to. Otherwise, give them room to pull in. That goes whether you're driving a bike, car or truck. Don't get so upset and quick with the finger. Some people are fricken nuts and will try and run you down.
Bet his wife gave him hell.
You ever been in or behind a car or bike that pulls out to pass, and it seems like it must be a pedal bike or car, and they're running out of energy for the pass? One thousand and one, one thousand and two, one thousand and three, one thousand and four, one thousand and five, one thousand and six . . . they're just starting to pull up beside you now . . . one thousand and twenty . . . they've almost completed the pass - you'd better not speed up now or it will throw them off, and they'll have to start over.Pedal much quicker than this.
Trying to pass?????
Not to mention all the people I see wearing headphones or in-ears while driving. Both ears.Horn doesn't help for a car that is well-insulated from the outside world with the driver having the radio blasting inside. Can't count on it. Not even if you are driving a fire truck. The most reliable countermeasure is to stay out of the way.
A lot of riders do that too. I value hearing what is around me on a bike, but many like to crank the tunes and zone out.Not to mention all the people I see wearing headphones or in-ears while driving. Both ears.
I always use earplugs too. External speakers aren't so bad (helmet speakers, bike speakers etc), where it really gets dodgy is IEM's. Now you isolate from outside noises and pump music into the quiet side to ensure you have very little chance of hearing what is going on around you.I use earplugs for protection and play some tunes but I can still hear everything important around me.
Ear plugs work because they lower all sounds before they get to your inner ear. Simplified, instead of 100 dB at the outside of the ear canal, now you have ~75. Your ear is quite happy processing at the new level. If you now insert music at 85 dB on the quiet side it is ~10 dB above things coming from outside and you can have trouble identifying the outside noise.I'm actually surprised about how well regular ear plugs work. For me they got rid of the majority of wind/road noise, but I can still hear traffic pulling in around me, and also any type of particular mechanical noises on the bike. Weird, but it sure made for less tiring rides when droning on the highway.
Count me in. There are plenty of options on the market that allow ambient noise to filter in however.but many like to crank the tunes
Count me in. There are plenty of options on the market that allow ambient noise to filter in however.