For some reason the Harley guys like to burn their Daymakers on high beam with the 'fog' lights going all the time. They can be blinding in the daytime.
When loud pipes alone, aren't enough.For some reason the Harley guys like to burn their Daymakers on high beam with the 'fog' lights going all the time. They can be blinding in the daytime.
Skooter,I don't run really bright lights in the daylight anymore. Too bright a light, even in the daytime, can mess up a person's judgement as to distance and speed. It has happened to me. A moto coming at me with high beams and/or bright aux lighting and I can't accureately judge distance and speed. And I figure I am much better at it than your average brain dead cager.
In my not so humble opinion, it's not that they don't see us - it's that they don't realize how close we are because of our smaller size. And from personal experience, too bright of lights can interfere with that judgement also.
I would vary that just a little. There are 2 needs for light; seeing and being seen. Each serves a purpose but one doesn't do the other necessarily well. Mount the lights high-and-wide for SEEING. Mount them lower to BE SEEN. Low end up with your beam buried in the pavement close to the front of the bike. Good for others looking for vehicles* but not so good for you to see something in time to react. Vice versa.As I mentioned in the thread that this split from, you are better served by adding auxiliary lights on the forks and possibly on mirror mounts as opposed to flashing a bunch of lumens in the eyes of oncoming drivers. The extra lights do not have to be especially bright but they are noticed and the separation helps the other guy judge your distance and speed.
Of course, there is no substitute for assuming that you are still absolutely invisible or that he is deliberately trying to kill you.
Agreed. "Seeing" is in relation to riding when it is dark. No question that extra lumens, appropriately directed, are beneficial. Also obvious that high beams and blazingly brilliant auxiliary lights are to be dimmed or extinguished when encountering oncoming traffic or closely following another vehicle.I would vary that just a little. There are 2 needs for light; seeing and being seen.
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