The Well Dressed Ebiker

I picked one of these up in Europe.....but I don't think they are available in North America (maybe online):

https://www.abus.com/eng/Mobile-Security/Bike-Safety-and-Security/Helmets/Urban/Pedelec

Has integrated taillight and integrated rainfly which works surprisingly well.
 
mikebikerad said:
I picked one of these up in Europe.....but I don't think they are available in North America (maybe online):

https://www.abus.com/eng/Mobile-Security/Bike-Safety-and-Security/Helmets/Urban/Pedelec

Has integrated taillight and integrated rainfly which works surprisingly well.


Cool. Now can look like a real cyclist! (I prob got that wrong.)
12605529_433384200191931_5471222185891755237_o.jpg
 
http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/cambridge-news/one-womans-campaign-boost-cyclists-12350581 8) You don't get to be 89 without being visible. :wink:
Janet, 89, is Cambridge's 'high-vis' cycling champion
Janet Slade, a former pottery teacher at Long Road College is offering out free high-vis jackets to Cambridge cyclists
An 89-year-old woman is campaigning for greater road safety by offering free high-visibility vests to Cambridge cyclists.

Hard-of-sight retired art teacher, Janet Slade, was inspired to do something about the high number of road cycle accidents in Cambridge after seeing cycle causalities during a recent hospital trip.
Speaking to drivers and cyclists confirmed her suspicions that drivers and pedestrians just ‘couldn’t see’ the cyclists coming.

So, since last November, she has ventured out into the city’s streets with her shopping trolley to offer free neon visibility vests to any cyclist who will listen. Janet hands out the vests any time she goes shopping or visits the hospital, where she says “hundreds of people go by all in black”.
Speaking to the News, Janet, who is currently recovering from cataract surgery, added: “I went into hospital for another reason and they were saying they have wards full of people who have been in accidents.
“I hear the ambulances every day and I guessed that many of the calls out were for accidents. Then I met some ambulance crew and they said ‘yes you are right,’ so here’s the wards taken up with people who are invisible.

“I’m in my 90th year this year and I still have the advantage of age and ability, physical ability, to walk about with a shopping bag and trolley full of visibility vests and if I see a shadowy figure in black fleet before me and prop a bike against a wall, I say ‘you all in black, yes? ...well nobody can see you and all the drivers complain.’”
Janet says about half of cyclists she approaches will take a vest, and while none of the good people of Cambridge have ever been rude to her, some are taken aback.
“Some say ‘really, how much? I haven’t got any money now’ and I say ‘look take the so and so thing put it on, wear it: it’s a Christmas present.
“I simply go around being a busybody to people and challenge them,” she said. “I just hope to be completely logical about people’s dress code.”

When the idea was first sparked in Janet’s mind she went into a cycle shops in the city to look at jackets, but left dismayed at the price tag of upwards of £30. She now bulk buys vest in 50s from her local Wilcos at £1.49 a piece.
As well as highlighting the need to be seen on the road, she believes cyclists should consider wearing white boots, just as she does.
In fact she wears as many white things as she can to stay visible, because she can’t see well due to macular degeneration.
She thought of the idea after seeing two teenagers with white boots.
"If you have got white boots you can be seen on a dark rainy day, you can be seen at night and you can be seen in the early morning light,” she said.
 
Hehe... Just noticed this thread moved (?) to forum "Other Toxic Discussions". Clearly the Well Dressed Ebiker is a threat... to somebuddy... :wink:
 
[youtube]E3Zi66XZs8o[/youtube]
 
Win a People’s Poncho!:
https://amsterdamcyclechic.wordpress.com/2016/12/27/win-a-peoples-poncho/

31075153244_6bae469d83_z.jpg


Christmas isn’t over yet!

The People’s Poncho is a fast-growing UK-based rainwear brand – and their specialty is, yes, you guessed it: the poncho.

It’s all about the details with these ponchos. 100% waterproof, lightweight, high-quality Japanese fabric. Reflective piping. Zippered front pocket. Three-button sleeves. Peaked hood.

Best bit: handy handlebar straps that fit any bike. Bam.

Want to win this beautiful, bike-friendly poncho? Of course you do.

Just tell us your favourite thing about the rain (in the comments below) and you’ll be in the contest. Contest ends Friday, December 30.

It’s that easy.

Here’s to a happy (and dry) 2017!

xoxo

Amsterdam Cycle Chic and The People’s Poncho

Christmas isn't over yet!
 
[youtube]ImtVT-Lx2T4[/youtube]
 
LockH said:
Hehe... Just noticed this thread moved (?) to forum "Other Toxic Discussions". Clearly the Well Dressed Ebiker is a threat... to somebuddy... :wink:

Somebuddy with a "small brain". [sigh]
 
LockH said:
The fingers said:

Hehe... Yah. My first thought. Better sort that out..


"Foldable paper bike helmet for bike share riders wins James Dyson Award":
http://www.treehugger.com/bikes/foldable-paper-bike-helmet-wins-james-dyson-award.html

Includes:
For her work, Shiffer was selected as the international winner of the James Dyson Award 2016, and the EcoHelmet could be available through vending machines at bike share stations as early as this year, at an estimated cost of about $5.

... and:
The cardboard material is coated with a biodegradable water resistant solution that can stand up to being exposed to rain for up to three hours, and yet can be easily recycled when the user is done with it.

ecohelmet.jpg.662x0_q70_crop-scale.jpg


[youtube]Bu0Lb0C0UzY[/youtube]
 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/pro-tec-plans-recall-bike-201949072.html :x Hope no one has one of these:
Pro-Tec Plans Recall After Its Bike Helmet Fails Consumer Reports' Tests
Consumer ReportsJanuary 27, 2017
Pro-Tec says it will recall its City Lite bike helmet after Consumer Reports notified the company of failures found during one of CR's routine tests. Since the helmet may still be available for sale for a short time while the recall is being finalized, we’ve rated it a Don’t Buy: Safety Risk.
The company’s swift response is critical, since a functioning helmet is the best way cyclists can protect themselves from head injuries—especially potentially fatal ones. But a helmet can only provide suitable protection if it works as designed.

The Pro-Tec City Lite’s helmet retention system—the chin straps and buckle that should keep the helmet securely on your head in the event of an accident—failed to work properly in three out of the four City Lite helmets we tested. In one case, the buckle broke; in two others, a strap detached from the body of the helmet.
That kind of failure can cause the helmet to come off of your head or get pushed out of position during an accident, explains John Galeotafiore, Consumer Reports’ Associate Director of Product Testing. “If the helmet is not in the right place,” he says, “it’s not going to work.”

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has a standard to evaluate the strength and holding power of the bike helmet chin strap. Consumer Reports’ chin strap test is modeled after, but not identical to, the CPSC's standard. We use a weight to tug at the retention system, simulating what might happen during an accident.

Consumer Reports puts every helmet through the same series of tests. Of the 21 helmets we evaluated this year, the Pro-Tec City Lite helmet was the only one that failed our chin strap strength test.
“It’s not something we see often,” says Galeotafiore.
As is our practice when we discover a safety risk during product testing, we notify the appropriate agency, in this case the CPSC, along with the manufacturer. We are not aware of any injuries related to chin strap performance on the Pro-Tec City Lite helmet and have not found mentions of problems with this particular chin strap in user reviews on various websites or on the CPSC's SaferProducts.gov website.
Because of our test results and the results of the company’s additional internal testing, which confirmed the problem, Pro-Tec intends to recall the City Lite helmet. According to a statement provided to Consumer Reports, the company “will coordinate with the U.S. CPSC on a recall, and will work with them on an appropriate remedy.”
It could take up to several weeks for the recall to be finalized as Pro-Tec works with the CPSC to determine a remedy and communicate the company’s plans to retailers and customers. This is all part of a comprehensive process designed to protect consumers from potentially unsafe products.
“Providing safe products is Pro-Tec’s highest priority,” the company said in its statement.

Bottom line: Wearing a helmet when you’re riding a bike is essential. If you already own a Pro-Tec City Lite helmet, you should replace it as soon as possible and continue to use it only if you do not have access to another helmet and need to ride your bike.
At CR we believe using this helmet despite its flaws is better than riding without any helmet. Pro-Tec, however, told us that while the company implements the recall, it will advise consumers not to use the helmet at all, citing previous CPSC guidance. Consumers who own a City Lite helmet should also contact Pro-Tec at 562-484-6338, a company spokesperson told us, adding that “Pro-Tec will then get back in touch with those customers once the recall details are finalized.”

In our latest bicycle helmet ratings, we recommend 15 helmets for adults. The two that got the highest scores are the Scott Arx Plus ($125) and the Cannondale Quick ($40). Our updated helmet ratings will be released this summer.
 
LockH said:
Can an ebiker have enough magnets?

"Ansuo AZ - 200 No-battery Magneto-electric Bike Taillight"... seen here:
http://206.72.193.212/bike-lights/pp_575363.html

20161109172149_87104.jpg


Sneaky folks... must be a battery in there somewhere, correct? :wink:

Ah magnetos... so reliable cause they have so few moving parts compared to alternators... that's why they still use them in cessnas, well at least for the sparkplugs firing part... But to make that wheel spin, you need a batttery, or your legs...
 
(by LockH » Mon Oct 12, 2015)
LockH said:
Lumos - A Next Generation Bicycle Helmet!
[youtube]pEu8tY6C0Q0[/youtube]

http://www.lumoshelmet.co/

Update:Cycling helmet with indicators beats Tesla Model 3 to design award
("The Lumos helmet receives the Transport Design award from the Design Museum after successful crowdfunding in 2015"):
http://road.cc/content/news/216942-cycling-helmet-indicators-beats-tesla-model-3-design-award

Starts off:
The Lumos Bicycle Helmet (link is external) has won the prestigious Beazley Designs of the Year (link is external) award for Transportation, beating off two other cycling products as well as the Tesla Model 3, at the Design Museum in London.
https://designmuseum.org/exhibitions/beazley-designs-of-the-year
 
[youtube]_b2qWa8sPkQ[/youtube]

Desc. on YT:
Published on Jan 5, 2016

The newest activity tracking device may not even be a device. Austin-based software design firm Chaotic Moon Studios has created a concept prototype for tech tattoos, a circuit that you can wear on the surface of your skin. The components are attached with conductive paint, and can monitor health and activity stats, authorize charges for purchases, disable/enable yer ebike and many other potential applications.
 
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