Reflections on reflecting

The awful story of Rachel Leek has forced me to spend quite a bit of time lately reconsidering my approach to riding my bike at night.

Leek was killed while riding around 2:15 a.m. Oct. 16 in the 1000 block of Tennessee.

In no way am I passing judgment about fault, but I noted the police report said it appeared her bicycle did not have a rear or front reflector and that each pedal had one reflector present but that each pedal also was missing a reflector and that it was impossible to determine which direction the reflectors were facing when the accident occurred.

First, the law, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation:

(a) Every bicycle when in use at nighttime shall be equipped with a lamp on the front which shall emit a white light visible from a distance of at least five hundred (500) feet to the front and with a red reflector on the rear of a type approved by the secretary of transportation which shall be visible from all distances from one hundred (100) feet to six hundred (600) feet to the rear when directly in front of lawful lower beams of head lamps on a motor vehicle. A lamp emitting a red light visible from a distance of five hundred (500) feet to the rear may be used in addition to the red reflector.

(b) Every bicycle shall be equipped with a brake which will enable the operator to make the braked wheels skid on dry, level, clean pavement.

(c) No person shall sell a pedal for use on a bicycle, unless such pedal is equipped with a reflector of a type approved by the secretary of transportation which is visible from the front and rear of the bicycle to which it is attached during darkness from a distance of two hundred (200) feet, and no person shall sell a new bicycle, unless it is equipped with pedals meeting the requirements of this subsection.

Note the wording of (c). It doesn’t mandate reflectors on pedals IN USE. It specifies the sale of pedals, though there are dozens of pedals for sale without reflectors and dozens of new bikes for sale without reflectored pedals — or any pedals at all.

Anyway, that’s the law.

Personally, I wouldn’t feel safe just meeting the legal requirements.

I have the brightest head- and taillights I can afford, and I left the reflectors on my spokes, too, though many bikes are sold without them and many “serious cyclists” take them off posthaste.

I don’t have reflectors on my pedals, but my bike shoes have reflective heels that, in my opinion, are more visible than reflectors on the pedals would be.

Much of my cycling outerwear has reflective bits, too.

I don’t exactly look like a Christmas tree, but I can see and be seen quite well, I think.

I think.

Is it enough? Hard to tell.

I’m not going to go all O Tannenbaum, because I think you can do too much. I’ve been blinded by cyclists with poorly adjusted — and, truth be told, probably too-bright — headlights, and I think creating too much of a spectacle of yourself can be counterproductive. In my mind, I envision a drunk driver seeing a lit-up cyclist, doing the drunk squint, peering over the wheel trying to make sense of the illuminated rider ahead, veering and … well, you get the idea.

I used to roll on tires with reflective sidewalls, but — and I’m no rubber snob — they were awful tires, and, much like reflectors on the spokes, they only illuminate when the bike is dead in an oncoming car’s headlights. In other words, they only illuminate when it’s too late to do the cyclist any good.

That said, a few years ago, I bought a roll of industrial-strength reflective tape I had meant to put on strategic spots on my bike. I never got around to it, but I dug it out the other day and plan to apply it before the week’s over.

I’m saving up for a new headlight, too, and I have my eyes on a better and brighter taillight.

I figure I can’t do anything about everybody else on the road, but I sure can do something about me.

Comments

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  1. samowen (anonymous) says…

    people need to understand the logic behind removing reflective devices from bikes. anyone serious about commuting on a bicycle will know that having wheel reflectors on a bike increases rotational mass on your wheels and throws off spoke tension, slowing you down and affecting the true of your wheels, and other included front and rear or pedal reflectors frequently get in the way of cable routing, adding fenders or racks, and toe clips to bikes.

    so that, in a nutshell, explains why people ride bikes without reflectors.

    that being said, there is no excuse for riding a bike around this dimly lit town without headlights or especially taillights. the planet bike superflash can be seen from outer space its practically so bright and retails at every bike shop in town for well under 30 bucks, a small price to pay for being safe.

    what it boils down to is the failure of the lawrence police department to properly police the streets after dark from distracted or inebriated drivers as well as the complete lack of education on the part of the city of lawrence as to the policies regarding the sharing of the roads between pedestrians, cyclists, and motorists. i would LOVE to see KU make a mandatory part of orientation something about learning how lawrence is a cycling friendly town, and how motorists should share with cyclists and also, hold cyclists to a high standard of sharing the road back.

    then maybe we wouldn't have so many frat boys in SUV's yelling at cyclists perfectly within their own right to get on the sidewalk, and we wouldn't have cyclists riding janky ass schwinns with no lighting home at night trying to drive drunk drivers (lets face it, drunk drivers are inevitable).

    protect yourselves people.

  2. samowen (anonymous) says…

    *dodge drunk drivers

    oh, and for the record, as the author said, most reflective sidewalled tires are shite too.

    and lawrence's main educational push about the sharing of the roads seems to be PSA's online no one looks at, or bike route signs or share the road signs that motorists frequently ignore assuming they could understand that "bike route" means bikes on the road and not just on the sidewalk next to the road in the first place.