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Scooters in bike lanes?

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Old 12-19-06, 11:34 AM
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Originally Posted by UmneyDurak
Oh yes you are right, little poor me is the reason people do stupid and violent stuff.
Actually it is a reason. It's people like you who give bicycling a poor reputation outside the bicycling community. F-bombs and middle fingers which lead to road rage... yea, and you wonder why you don't respect on the road. It takes 100 good bicyclists to make up for the one bad one.

If you or anyone else is this frustrated or full of hatred when riding a bike where you have to act like that, I rather see you walking or taking a cab.
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Old 12-19-06, 12:13 PM
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Originally Posted by pletcgm
So you wouldn't mind a 400 pound scooter in the bike lane?
I don't mind cars in the bike lane... as long as they behave. They should signal, merge, and get on with whatever they are doing.

Now parking in the BL is a different situation all together.
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Old 12-19-06, 01:19 PM
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You know, perhaps the solution to all this is a 15 mph speed limit in bike lanes, and allow anyone traveling that speed or slower in the bike lane, and not allowing anyone moving faster than 15 to be in it. Maybe they should be called something other than bike lanes, like slow lanes (I thought of slane for short, but that has an unfortunate homophone).

Maybe we need a new thread to brainstorm for alternative names?
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Old 12-19-06, 02:21 PM
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Originally Posted by UmneyDurak
So I was on a training ride today. I stopped at a red light, it turns green and this scooter zips by me on my right. ...
To me, the close-gapped passing on the outside is the real problem, rather than the scooter's use of the bike lane.
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Old 12-19-06, 02:35 PM
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Originally Posted by John E
To me, the close-gapped passing on the outside is the real problem, rather than the scooter's use of the bike lane.
I agree. This close, on-the-right passing was not mentioned in the original post, hence my response. General use of bike lane by scooter, I couldn't care less. Anyone passing me on the right or too close at a given speed differential, I'm going to be irritated.
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Old 12-19-06, 03:27 PM
  #31  
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I would say that every mamy pamby cyclist who does not stand up for themselves whether it be to selfish, already road raged drivers, tragically uncool 'scooterists', or even cops who don't know traffic law, are more of a danger than frustrated bikers who express their displeasure. You show weakness, these people will marginalize you even more that you are now.
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Old 12-19-06, 03:33 PM
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What is there to stand up to? How is one being marginalized?

Actually I think one is more marginalized by supporting the thinking that the bike lane is your special space to defend instead of the thinking that the entire road is yours to share.

Al
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Old 12-19-06, 03:59 PM
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I am talking about NYC streets, not even bike lanes. If you let motorists do as they please, then they will do as they please. I do not advocate loud cursing verbal exchanges, but they happen. I politely ask people to not endanger me. Quite often they don't even realize that walking on a bike path 3 abreast is rude/dangerous. Asking drivers not to drive like selfish idiots or not park in bike lanes etc. In NYC there is a bike-ped/car/cop war going on, we certainly are marginalized.

I fully agree with your 2nd sentance Noise.
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Old 12-19-06, 08:37 PM
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Originally Posted by caloso
Good for you for catching the guy. Next time, you might give him the Team Cinzano treatment.
I don't follow racing all that close. Care to elaborate?
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Old 12-19-06, 08:40 PM
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Originally Posted by gpsblake
Actually it is a reason. It's people like you who give bicycling a poor reputation outside the bicycling community. F-bombs and middle fingers which lead to road rage... yea, and you wonder why you don't respect on the road. It takes 100 good bicyclists to make up for the one bad one.

If you or anyone else is this frustrated or full of hatred when riding a bike where you have to act like that, I rather see you walking or taking a cab.
Damn it takes 100 cyclists to offset me? I am a BADASS! I mean I knew my badness was worth two MAYBE three cyclists, but a hundred!
I am not full of hatred. Where did you get that crazy idea? Why should I walk just because you have this delusion that anything I do makes ANY difference on general attitude towards cyclists.

Last edited by UmneyDurak; 12-19-06 at 08:50 PM.
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Old 12-19-06, 08:41 PM
  #36  
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Originally Posted by Helmet Head
You know, perhaps the solution to all this is a 15 mph speed limit in bike lanes, and allow anyone traveling that speed or slower in the bike lane, and not allowing anyone moving faster than 15 to be in it. Maybe they should be called something other than bike lanes, like slow lanes (I thought of slane for short, but that has an unfortunate homophone).

Maybe we need a new thread to brainstorm for alternative names?
But then I won't be able to ride in them!
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Old 12-19-06, 10:58 PM
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Team Cinzano treatment is a reference to Breaking Away. The Italians put a frame pump into Dave's front spokes, sending cartwheeling into the ditch.
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Old 12-19-06, 11:34 PM
  #38  
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Originally Posted by nycm'er
I am talking about NYC streets, not even bike lanes. If you let motorists do as they please, then they will do as they please. I do not advocate loud cursing verbal exchanges, but they happen. I politely ask people to not endanger me. Quite often they don't even realize that walking on a bike path 3 abreast is rude/dangerous. Asking drivers not to drive like selfish idiots or not park in bike lanes etc. In NYC there is a bike-ped/car/cop war going on, we certainly are marginalized.

I fully agree with your 2nd sentance Noise.
NYC,

I understand there is a bike/ped/cop war in NYC and frankly, all three sides are 100% wrong in this. The part you can control is how the bicyclist acts. The bike couriers have a bad rep in NYC and it is rightfully earned. Sad to say, this does reflect on all bicyclist.

I won't even get into the Critical Mass argument.

You can do your part by obeying all the traffic laws and promoting safetys.

Politely asking people is fine, but using profanities and banging on car doors out of frustration simply is bad bicycling. There are too many haters riding bicycles who do just that. And with all the carjackings, going up to someone's car and banging on it isn't the wise thing to do.

Close calls do happen with cars but it's part of the chances we take when we cycle. Yea, there are a few jerks who yell at me while I ride. And I totally ignore them because giving them a reaction is exactly what they want. But I don't label all car drivers bad based on a behaviors of a few. In fact, the vast majority of car riders always gives me plenty of room.

The only case I can remember that was a major problem over the past 10 years was an incident in Austin Texas during my tour in 2005 where there was road construction, no shoulder, thin lanes, and jersey walls and I had to take the whole lane for about two miles... pissing off countless cars. I had the legal right to do that though so I don't feel bad about it. But man... were they pissed.....

Cheers and stay safe.
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Old 12-20-06, 01:24 AM
  #39  
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Originally Posted by caloso
Team Cinzano treatment is a reference to Breaking Away. The Italians put a frame pump into Dave's front spokes, sending cartwheeling into the ditch.
Ah I see. I would never do that. Then I would have to replace my pump, such a hastle.
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Old 12-20-06, 01:13 PM
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Originally Posted by UmneyDurak
But then I won't be able to ride in them!
If you're moving faster than 15, you shouldn't be in the bike lane if it's adjacent to a curb or in the door zone, as most bike lanes are.

If there was no bike lane, would you ride a motorcycle or drive a car at 15+ mph so close to the edge with only a couple of feet of shy space? I hope note. There is no magic in the BL stripe that somehow makes it a good idea to do so on a bike.
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Old 12-20-06, 01:46 PM
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Originally Posted by Helmet Head
If you're moving faster than 15, you shouldn't be in the bike lane if it's adjacent to a curb or in the door zone, as most bike lanes are.
The door zone is one thing, and specific conditions prevail, but in general, I'm quite comfortable riding ~20 MPH two feet from the curb/edge.
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Old 12-20-06, 01:57 PM
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You do not see how I feel you are letting bad drivers off the hook? Scooters or drivers that buzz you in a wide outside lane or bike lane?
Please tell me GPS how the bikers in NYC are "100% wrong". Hearing that all sides of the Bike/ped/cop/car war are 100% wrong is interesting, I assume that makes a certain someone in Leesville NC, a lot MORE right. I am not really sure if you are comparing Leesville with NYC, but I have never heard of it, so I can't comment on your apparent utopia. Also, is the NYC that you speak of, with the bike couriers who are giving other cyclists a bad name, is that some time warp reference to the Mayor Koch days? In short, I am not really sure what you are talking about when you give advice on how to ride here, or where you think bad blood between drivers and cyclists comes from.

I bang on hoods and smack windows and flip mirrors, because the driver was about to maim me in some flippant yet horrendous way. I am not sure about car-jacking, I know they happen, but I have heard about quite a few more cyclist deaths at the hands of drivers, drunk or in a hurry, or just plain old 'didn't see them'. Is it "Bad bicycling" to let a selfish driver know that 1. you are next to them when their actions do not seem to show it. And 2. Alert them to you fear or panic that they are going to harm you.
To be truthful, I willfully break certain traffic laws here: I run lights, because it is 100% safer than waiting at a light as if I were some 250hp, 3 ton cage, that is going to drag race all the other idiots 3 blocks to the next red light. Instead, I run the light after careful checking for legal pedestrians and traffic that has the right of way. I don't ride on sidewalks, I dont ride the wrong way, I dont do anything that directly threatens other users of the roadway. If I do something stupid, I go and apologize, crazy right? I know all cyclists are not angels, that doesn't mean that you should cower in response to cars acting as if you are using THEIR road. I also know that not standing up for your rightful space on the roadway, is going to result in less rights, more injuries, and more deaths.
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Old 12-20-06, 02:10 PM
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Originally Posted by Speedo
The door zone is one thing, and specific conditions prevail, but in general, I'm quite comfortable riding ~20 MPH two feet from the curb/edge.
I'm comfortable doing it too. I just think it's taking unnecessary risks, though you can probably get away with it for hundreds if not thousands of miles without incident. 2 feet is not much evasion space, should you need it. It's also not much buffer space from potential hazards suddenly emerging from that side.

What's hard to know is how big a risk it is. How often do you suddenly need more than 2 feet? How often does something pop out suddenly from the right that causes you to need to move left to evade (perhaps right as you are about to be passed by a bus)?

In the motorcycle manual, they talk about the need for lateral buffer space. The higher the speed, the greater the need. That's the point. When stopped at light, you hardly need any lateral buffer space at all... This applies to cyclists just as much as to motorcyclists.
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Old 12-20-06, 02:16 PM
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Originally Posted by Helmet Head
If you're moving faster than 15, you shouldn't be in the bike lane if it's adjacent to a curb or in the door zone, as most bike lanes are.

If there was no bike lane, would you ride a motorcycle or drive a car at 15+ mph so close to the edge with only a couple of feet of shy space? I hope note. There is no magic in the BL stripe that somehow makes it a good idea to do so on a bike.
Apparently my sarcasm was lost on you.
Yes moving faster then 15mph totally entitles me to take a lane in 40-60 mph traffic. Anyway dude, go away and quit hi-jiking my thread. You don't know how I ride, so quit making generic assumptions.
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Old 12-20-06, 02:39 PM
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Originally Posted by UmneyDurak
Apparently my sarcasm was lost on you.
Yes moving faster then 15mph totally entitles me to take a lane in 40-60 mph traffic. Anyway dude, go away and quit hi-jiking my thread. You don't know how I ride, so quit making generic assumptions.
First, yes, you are entitled to share or even control (if too narrow to be safely shared) the rightmost traffic lane at 15 mph if it is unsafe to travel as close to the edge as a curb bike lane positions you, even if that requires 40-60 mph traffic to slow down and/or change lanes to pass you.

Second, this is not your thread; all threads belong to the community (and ultimately to Joe), not to the one who creates the OP. Besides, I'm not hijacking anything. All this is directly related to the issues you raised in the OP.

Third, I did not make assumptions about how you ride. If you don't believe me, note your inability to identify a single assumption that I made about how you ride.

Fourth, you're not as Umney as you may think, Durak.
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Old 12-20-06, 02:52 PM
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Originally Posted by UmneyDurak
So I was on a training ride today. I stopped at a red light, it turns green and this scooter zips by me on my right. I clipped in and started to ride, then something got to me. I caught up to the scooter on this slight incline and yelled at him to "Get the F*k off the bike lane." He replied something, but because of the wind and his full motorcycle helmet I had hard time hearing. He accelerated and I backed off. I caught up to him again on a red light, and repeated my polite statement. His response was that it is legal for scooters to be in bike lanes. This got me thinking was he right and I was a jack ass, or was I on the right. My computer max speed registered at 33.5 I am guessing he was going around 30mph up that incline since I caught up to him. Which to me indicates he should have been riding on the road.
https://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc21229.htm

They're actually SUPPOSED to ride in the bike lanes, unless they can't pass another vehicle in the lane safely. There's no guidance on whether or not they need to pass on the left or right. I couldn't find anything related to motorcycles in bicycle lanes.

Personally, that's not what I'd expect the law to say, and I think that the whole thing is confusing. I'm not sure if I'd be willing to therefore come down on the side of "bicycle lanes are evil" - but they certainly don't seem to help clarify things in this particular case.
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Old 12-20-06, 03:06 PM
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ohplease, 21229 applies to "Motorized Scooters", where are 50ccs and under, not the 250 cc "scooters" this thread is about.
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Old 12-20-06, 03:07 PM
  #48  
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Originally Posted by Helmet Head
First, yes, you are entitled to share or even control (if too narrow to be safely shared) the rightmost traffic lane at 15 mph if it is unsafe to travel as close to the edge as a curb bike lane positions you, even if that requires 40-60 mph traffic to slow down and/or change lanes to pass you.

Second, this is not your thread; all threads belong to the community (and ultimately to Joe), not to the one who creates the OP. Besides, I'm not hijacking anything. All this is directly related to the issues you raised in the OP.

Third, I did not make assumptions about how you ride. If you don't believe me, note your inability to identify a single assumption that I made about how you ride.

Fourth, you're not as Umney as you may think, Durak.
First what part of go away didn't you get?
Second, yeah it is my thread. If you want to continue your diatribe go start your own thread. God knows you started enough of them, on exact same topic. You are like a broken record.
Third, fine you just made generalised statements that don't really apply to me, and don't really have anything to do with the purpose of this thread.
Fourth, I see you felt the need to come down to personal insults. What I hit a nerve their sparky?

Last edited by UmneyDurak; 12-20-06 at 03:27 PM.
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Old 12-20-06, 03:12 PM
  #49  
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Originally Posted by ohplease
https://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc21229.htm

They're actually SUPPOSED to ride in the bike lanes, unless they can't pass another vehicle in the lane safely. There's no guidance on whether or not they need to pass on the left or right. I couldn't find anything related to motorcycles in bicycle lanes.

Personally, that's not what I'd expect the law to say, and I think that the whole thing is confusing. I'm not sure if I'd be willing to therefore come down on the side of "bicycle lanes are evil" - but they certainly don't seem to help clarify things in this particular case.
Hello thanks for posting this, but the "scooter" I was talking about does not fall under the definition of "motorized scooter".
Here is the DMV definition of "motorized scooter": https://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d01/vc407_5.htm
I also found this: https://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc22411.htm. Just found it funny.

Last edited by UmneyDurak; 12-20-06 at 04:20 PM.
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Old 12-20-06, 03:27 PM
  #50  
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Originally Posted by UmneyDurak
First what part of go away didn't you get?
No, no! A&S was totally boring in November and early December. Nothing but rational discussions by knowlegable people.

Let the flame wars begin!

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