Riding in Town question
Riding in Town question
Well, I am out and about riding now, but am having one big problem. Stoplights. The sensor pads around here don't seem to pick up my bikes weight. I often have to wait for 5 minutes at the light out of my subdivision for some car to come up behind me and change the light (either that or run it, which I won't do). It is frustrating. Anyone else have this problem, and do those sensors have a "sweet spot" that I can roll over to get the light changed?
Thanks,
Matt
Thanks,
Matt
- Wizzard
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Presuming that you are referring to left turn lights that happens around here often as well . The trick for me is to plan my routes where the majority of my turns will be right hand ones . Which is legal here altho I do not know if it is there where you live .
It is far better for me to go even a half mile out of my way if it is more convenient as well as safer .
Kind regards, Wizzard
It is far better for me to go even a half mile out of my way if it is more convenient as well as safer .
Kind regards, Wizzard
"Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, throughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming --- ' WOW, WHAT A RIDE!!!! ' " - Author Unknown
- dr_bar
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Well, unless you have a different system than we do, it's not activated by weight, but by the
metal of your bike or car. What happens is that they install an induction loop into the
pavement. When a car drives over an induction loop, it disturbs the loop's electromagnetic
field. This changes the total inductance of the loop circuit, and triggers the switch to change
the light. With all the plastic on todays bikes, it is sometimes hard to cause the trigger
to work. If you can see the lines in the road where the coil is laid, try to drive right up the
wires path as opposed to splitting the difference between two lines of wire. Let me know
if this works in your area...
metal of your bike or car. What happens is that they install an induction loop into the
pavement. When a car drives over an induction loop, it disturbs the loop's electromagnetic
field. This changes the total inductance of the loop circuit, and triggers the switch to change
the light. With all the plastic on todays bikes, it is sometimes hard to cause the trigger
to work. If you can see the lines in the road where the coil is laid, try to drive right up the
wires path as opposed to splitting the difference between two lines of wire. Let me know
if this works in your area...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Four wheels move the body.
Two wheels move the soul!"
"Four wheels move the body.
Two wheels move the soul!"
bounce up and down on the bike, helps get the metal closer to the wire. or if you have a center stand push it down just to get more metal near the ground or even your side stand can help.
ive been seeing alot of things on ebay that supposed to trigger lights. they are small domino sized things that dont need power. i have no idea if they work im tempted to try because my bike doesnt trigger any road sensor. my apartments have a gate that will not see my bike at all. im stuck waiting for a car when i want to just leave home.
ive been seeing alot of things on ebay that supposed to trigger lights. they are small domino sized things that dont need power. i have no idea if they work im tempted to try because my bike doesnt trigger any road sensor. my apartments have a gate that will not see my bike at all. im stuck waiting for a car when i want to just leave home.
03 katana 600
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I have the same problem with my 79 Suzuki, which is odd considering the bike is all metal. But I guess most of the weight (eng + tranny) is non-ferrous so that would make a difference. I'll try the centrestand trick sometime, but I doubt that would make enought of a difference. Maybe I should just bolt a steel plate to the underside of the bike. 

- rubthebuddha
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In Minnesota, where I live, there's a new law that lets bikers who don't trigger a light to go through an intersection provided they've waited a "reasonable" time and there's no traffic.
It's a new law, and a lot of people don't understand it yet ... including some cops.
It's a new law, and a lot of people don't understand it yet ... including some cops.
For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H.L. Mencken
- flynrider
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I run across a lot of intersections where my bike won't trigger the light. About a dozen years ago, a friend showed me a trick that has worked every time. As you approach, look for the lines on the road where the induction loop wire is buried (usually a rectangular pattern). Roll your bike to a stop so that it's right next to one of the buried lines. Put bike in neutral, drop the kickstand and set it right on top of the line. That should trigger the light (assuming you don't have a plastic kickstand
).

Bikin' John
'93 Honda CB750 Nighthawk
'93 Honda CB750 Nighthawk