Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:
Then, in my opinion, you're exactly wrong. I ride on roads with speed bumps every day and see that they work well. I guess we'll agree to disagree on that.
Then I expect you'll really like the real traffic calming concepts. They work much better and don't beat your bike up.
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:
Rural areas are a whole different problem. Opus asked about Garland, an urban maze of streets much like a lot of the DFW metroplex.
I'm not talking rural. Think terrain. NW San Antonio. The routes that can go anywhere need bridges or cuts if you don't want to climb 10%-20% grades on a daily basis and/or have 45+mph roads occupying the available routes.
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:
If you think you can singlehandedly train all the auto drivers, then go for it. Personally, I don't think you're going to get it done.
Have you tried it? I have for years. It is far more effective than I would have ever dreamed. You show up there pretty much every day and they get used to you. Stick a camera on your bike pointing back at them and they get used to you *really* quickly. Especially when frames from your daily commute movie indicting specific vehicles get published... And on long stretches of that commute I only saw other cyclists 2 times in 5 years. So yes. It most certainly works.
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:
If you insist on taking the shortest route, no matter how bike unfriendly it is, more power to you. But most cyclists, like me, would gladly ride a longer route if it was safer. I ride 12.5 miles to work when the shortest route is just over 11 miles. 12 mph? I did suggest 30 mph, didn't I?
Only one mile? I would love that. On my old 32 mile daily commute through NW S.A. there were only two detours that could take me through about 1/2 mile of what you describe but they would respectively add about 3 and 5 miles to my route and were far more dangerous than travelling the 45-70 mph roads I was on - especially crossing all of the connector roads between neighborhoods (that I was travelling on).
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am: Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:Oh! and I love the designated bike routes here in S.A. 2 ft wide with water diversion bumps and drainage grates regularly spaced so you have to dodge out into traffic. But they are trying to help by putting a sign by the bike killers letting you know that you have to dodge out into traffic so you get run over.
I wrote bike routes, not bike lanes, didn't I?
They are designated bike routes. On 45 mph roads. It is far safer to just ignore the bike lane when riding them.
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:
I wasn't talking about ebikes. I was talking about ECV's, neighborhood cars, or whatever you want to call them, those tiny three or four wheel plug in to recharge vehicles that should be a large part of our urban traffic, but aren't, because there aren't safe commute streets for them.
Ah. Safety isn't the reason for the restriction with NEVs. Check the history of the fed laws involving how/why the class was created. It was specifically to allow people who didn't have a driver license to travel using them, as with a farm vehicle, thus limited, local mobility. The original fed law only allowed insurance and license plates to be required. Tx and other states ignored the fed law and require a DL, voiding the entire legal purpose behind their existence. Get Tx to obey fed law and you'd see them used much more. Like the tiny electric scooters that S.A. banned a few years ago. They were fabulous, created far less inconvenience than a bicycle and were selling like mad. Of course the crooked auto dealer/developer 'owned' city council just had to ban them as a result.