Author Topic: Interesting Read  (Read 1365 times)

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Offline tomfieb

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Offline Pat Calkins "Corn Dog"

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Re: Interesting Read
« Reply #1 on: February 01, 2013, 11:04:47 AM »
I would have liked to have read that article, but someting in that web page didn't agree with my browser.  Couldn't get it to load properly and display before my browser rejected it. 

Must be some come kind of script that my browser didn't like.  Oh well.  Maybe next time. 
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Offline Alan

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Re: Interesting Read
« Reply #2 on: February 01, 2013, 12:46:46 PM »
While the page displays fine in my browser, this site is kinda "script-happy".  I scanned Google in case the article had been re-posted elsewhere but only found links to the original page.  Interestingly, it was just as likely to be linked from bicycling sites as motorcycling sites since it has to do with cagers being able to see us.  The article does have a link to a PDF of an "original article" - a lot of the concepts are the same between the two articles.

The author is a fighter pilot and it is posted on a cyclist site.   It does apply to motorcycling and is a good read.  The article ends with these tips:

Drivers:
  • Slow down on the approach of a roundabout or junction. Even if the road seems empty. Changing speed will allow you to see vehicles that would otherwise be invisible to you.
  • A glance is never enough. You need to be as methodical and deliberate as a fighter pilot would be. Focus on at least 3 different spots along the road to the right and left. Search close, middle-distance and far. With practise, this can be accomplished quickly, and each pause is only for a fraction of a second. Fighter pilots call this a “lookout scan” and it is vital to their survival.
  • Always look right and left at least twice. This doubles your chance of seeing a vehicle.
  • Make a point of looking next to the windscreen pillars. Better still, lean forward slightly as you look right and left so that you are looking around the door pillars. Be aware that the pillar nearest to you blocks more of your vision. Fighter pilots say ‘Move your head – or you’re dead’.
  • Clear your flight path! When changing lanes, check your mirrors and as a last check, look directly at the spot which are going to manoeuvre.
  • Drive with your lights on. Bright vehicles or clothing is always easier to spot than dark colours that don’t contrast with a scene.
  • It is especially difficult to spot bicycles, motorbikes and pedestrians during low sun conditions as contrast is reduced.
  • Keep your windscreen clean – seeing other vehicles is enough of a challenge without a dirty windscreen. You never see a fighter jet with a dirty canopy.
  • Finally, don’t be a clown – if you are looking at your mobile telephone then you are incapable of seeing much else. Not only are you probably looking down into your lap, but your eyes are focused at less then one metre and every object at distance will be out of focus. Even when you look up and out, it takes a fraction of a second for your eyes to adjust – this is time you may not have.


Cyclists and motorcyclists:
  • Recognise the risk of being in a saccade. High contrast clothing and lights help. In particular, flashing LED’s (front and rear) are especially effective for cyclists as they create contrast and the on-off flashing attracts the peripheral vision in the same manner that movement does. There’s nothing wrong with leaving these on during the day. (Especially if they are rechargeable)
  • The relatively slower speed of bicycles means that they will be closer to a point of collision if a vehicle begins to pull into their path. Turn this to advantage – when passing junctions, look at the head of the driver that is approaching or has stopped. The head of the driver will naturally stop and centre upon you if you have been seen. If the driver’s head sweeps through you without pausing, then the chances are that you are in a saccade – you must assume that you have not been seen and expect the driver to pull out!
  • Recognise that with a low sun, a dirty windscreen or one with rain beating against it drivers are likely to have less of a chance of seeing you.
  • Cycle instructors have been saying it for years: Ride in a position further out from the kerb as a driver is more likely to be looking in this location. See: How to make your next bike ride safer than the last. (bicycling-related)
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