Thread: Roundabouts
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Old 07-21-20 | 10:58 PM
  #27  
Litespud
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Joined: Oct 2017
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From: Chapel Hill NC

Bikes: 2000 Litespeed Vortex Chorus 10, 1995 DeBernardi Cromor S/S

Originally Posted by 79pmooney
I used to ride a bunch of them in my commute into Boston many years ago. Boston traffic, so no, I never had to deal with a car stopping for me. Boston drivers don't do that. (Or at least didn't then.) The three o n my commute were at the bottoms of small hills in both directions so I could see everybody, pick my spot and enter going fast. I'd "park" myself on the bumper of a car knowing this was the one place n a Massachusetts roundabout that there wold be no other cars. I trusted that being on a fix gear, my reflexes would give me a few spare feet as soon as I saw that brake light come on. Yes, I was in my 20s, a bike racer and that was a little crazy but it worked very well. No close calls.

Ben
as a Euro, roundabouts are second nature to me. Here in the US, it gets a little trickier, because disturbing numbers of people appear to have no idea how they work. Here in Chapel Hill, your average driving test doesn’t even go through a roundabout, yet they’re becoming a common feature. Here’s a bit of Boston for you Ben: There’s a big roundabout (like, big enough that you could forget that you’re on a roundabout, but roundabout rules apply) immediately south of Jamaica Pond in Jamaica Plain. AFAIK, its the single most “fender-bendered” location in the entire state of MA (and that’s saying something!), to the point that they considered removing it. I used to use it regularly in a car, and it was always a bit of a free-for-all, and I saw my share of fender-benders on it - I never had to cycle through it (thank god). I used to commute on a fixie from Brighton to the South End. I must’ve been mental.....😟

Last edited by Litespud; 07-21-20 at 11:08 PM.
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