Can't get left turn arrow!
Can't get left turn arrow!
I don't know what traffic lights are like in other states, but I assume they are like the ones in Pennsylvania, where there are sensors under the road to tell whether a vehicle is waiting in a particular lane. I have been having the problem of not being able to trigger the left turn arrow at intersections when I am the only vehicle waiting to turn left. My Ninja 500 weighs around 400 pounds, maybe this is not enough to trigger the light. Anyone have suggestions on how to trigger the left turn arrow?
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- Ninja Geoff
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You need to put your steel (aluminum won't work) sidestand right smack on the outline of the sensor. The wire is just inside that crack they dug into the asphalt. No guarantees for other places, but I haven't found a light yet here in my town that won't change if you put the sidestand directly on the sensing wire. For most lights, you need to put the stand down and leave it there. Otherwise, the sensor will think that a vehicle was there, then drove away.
Just watch the lights to your left or right and be ready to snap that sidestand up, hit first gear and ride away when it's your turn.
Just watch the lights to your left or right and be ready to snap that sidestand up, hit first gear and ride away when it's your turn.
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I have this problem too, but the thing is, I can't put down the kickstand with my foot, I have to use my hand (the little piece of metal that sticks out for your foot broke off), so it's a little more difficult to put the kickstand down at a light. I just wait, eventually it changes.
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Almost all sensors use burried coils that sense changes in a magnetic field to trip the lights, not weight.what happened to the weight sensors they used to put in the road?
The key is to position the bike right over one of the burried sensor wires. You can often tell where these are by looking for rectangular or circular lines or cutouts on the street surface. If the sensor lines are not visible, you can probably assume that they start a few inches back from the limit line.
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hmm odd cause when I took drivers ed 12 years ago they said if you are on a moto and stop at one of these lights your moto might not weigh enough to trip the sensor. They never said anything about metalic that it had to do with weight. Maybe thats just in michigan? or it could be it was what they started with and then changed to magnetic reading?XM23 wrote:Almost all sensors use burried coils that sense changes in a magnetic field to trip the lights, not weight.what happened to the weight sensors they used to put in the road?
The key is to position the bike right over one of the burried sensor wires. You can often tell where these are by looking for rectangular or circular lines or cutouts on the street surface. If the sensor lines are not visible, you can probably assume that they start a few inches back from the limit line.