Check
your policy.
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Collision Type #1:
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The Right Cross
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This
is one of the most common ways to get hit (or
almost get hit). A car is pulling out of a side
street, parking lot, or driveway on the right. Notice
that there are actually two possible kinds of
collisions here: Either you're in front of the
car and the car hits you, or the car pulls out
in front of you and you slam into it.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Get a headlight. If
you're riding at night, you should absolutely
use a front headlight. It's required by law,
anyway. Even for daytime riding, a bright white
light that has a flashing mode can make you more
visible to motorists who might otherwise Right
Cross you. Look for the new LED headlights which
last ten times as long on a set of batteries as
old-style lights. And helmet- or head-mounted
lights are the best, because then you can look
directly at the driver to make sure they
see your light.
2. Honk. Get
a loud
horn and
USE IT whenever you see a car approaching (or
waiting) ahead of you and to the right. If you
don't have a horn, then yell "Hey!" You may feel
awkward honking or yelling, but it's better to
be embarrassed than to get hit. Incidentally, the
UK requires bells on bicycles.
3. Slow down. If
you can't make eye contact with the driver
(especially at night), slow down so much that
you're able to completely stop if you have to.
Sure, it's inconvenient, but it beats getting
hit. Doing
this has saved my life on too many occasions to
count.
4. Ride further left. Notice
the two blue lines "A" and "B" in the diagram.
You're probably used to riding in "A", very
close to the curb, because you're worried about
being hit from behind. But take a look at the
car. When that motorist is looking down the road
for traffic, he's not looking in the bike lane
or the area closest to the curb; he's looking in
the MIDDLE of the lane, for other cars. The
farther left you are (such as in "B"), the more
likely the driver will see you. There's an added
bonus here: if the motorist doesn't see you and
starts pulling out, you may be able to go even
FARTHER left, or may be able to speed up and get
out of the way before impact, or roll onto their
hood as they slam on their brakes. In short, it
gives you some options. Because if you stay all
the way to the right and they pull out, your
only "option" may be to run right into the
driver's side door.Using this method has
saved me on three occasions in which a motorist
ran into me and I wasn't hurt, and in which I
definitely would have slammed into the driver's
side door had I not moved left.
Of course, there's a
tradeoff. Riding to the far right makes you
invisible to the motorists ahead of you at
intersections, but riding to the left makes you
more vulnerable to the cars behind you. Your
actual lane position may vary depending on how
wide the street is, how many cars there are, how
fast and how close they pass you, and how far
you are from the next intersection. On fast
roadways with few cross streets, you'll ride
farther to the right, and on slow roads with
many cross streets, you'll ride farther left.
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Collision Type #2:
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The Door Prize
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A
driver opens his door right in front of you. You
run right into it if you can't stop in time.If
you're lucky, the motorist will exit the car
before you hit the door, so you'll at least have
the pleasure of smashing them too when you
crash, and their soft flesh will cushion your
impact. One advocate has compiled a list of cyclists
killed by running into open car doors.
How to avoid
this collision:
Ride to the left. Ride
far enough to the left that you won't run into
any door that's opened unexpectedly. You may be
wary about riding so far into the lane that cars
can't pass you easily, but you're MUCH more
likely to get doored by a parked car if you ride
too close to it than you are to get hit from
behind by a car which can clearly see you.
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Collision Type #3:
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Red Light of Death
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You
stop to the right of a car that's already
waiting at a red light or stop sign. They can't
see you. When the light turns green, you move
forward, and then they turn right, right into
you. Even
small cars can do you in this way, but this
scenario is especially dangerous when it's a bus
or a semi that you're stopping next to. An
Austin cyclist was killed in 1994 when he
stopped to the right of a semi, and then it
turned right. He was crushed under its wheels.
How to avoid
this collision:
Don't stop in the blind
spot. Simply
stop BEHIND a car, instead of to the right of
it, as per the diagram below. This makes you
very visible to traffic on all sides. It's
impossible for the car behind you to avoid
seeing you when you're right in front of it.
Another
option is to stop at either point A in the
diagram above (where the first driver can see
you), or at point B, behind the first car so it
can't turn into you, and far enough ahead of the
second car so that the second driver can see you
clearly. It does no good to avoid stopping to
the right of the first car if you're going to
make the mistake of stopping to the right of the
second car. EITHER car can do you in.
If you chose
spot A, then ride quickly to cross the street as
soon as the light turns green. Don't look at the
motorist to see if they want to go ahead and
turn. If you're in spot A and they want to turn,
then you're
in their way. Why
did you take spot A if you weren't eager to
cross the street when you could? When the light
turns green, just go, and go quickly. (But make
sure cars aren't running the red light on the
cross street, of course.)
If you chose
spot B, then when the light turns green, DON'T
pass the car in front of you -- stay behind it,
because it might turn right at any second. If it
doesn't make a right turn right away, it may
turn right into a driveway or parking lot
unexpectedly at any point. Don't
count on drivers to signal! They
don't. Assume that a car can turn right at any
time. (NEVER pass a car on the right!) But try
to stay ahead of the car behind you until you're
through the intersection, because otherwise they
might try to cut you off as they turn right.
While we're not
advocating running red lights, notice it is in
fact safer to run the red light if there's no
cross traffic, than it is to wait legally at the
red light directly to the right of a car, only
to have it make a right turn right into you when
the light turns green. The moral here is not
that you should break the law, but that you can
easily get hurt even if you follow the law.
By the way, be
very careful when passing stopped cars on the
right as
you approach a red light. You run the risk of
getting doored by a passenger exiting the car on
the right side, or hit by a car that
unexpectedly decides to pull into a parking
space on the right side of the street.
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Collision Type #4:
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The Right Hook
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A
car passes you and then tries to make a right
turn directly in front of you, or right into
you. They
think you're not going very fast just because
you're on a bicycle, so it never occurs to them
that they can't pass you in time. Even if you
have to slam on your brakes to avoid hitting
them, they often won't feel they've done
anything wrong. This kind of collision is very
hard to avoid because you typically don't see it
until the last second, and because there's
nowhere for you to go when it happens.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Don't ride on the
sidewalk. When
you come off the sidewalk to cross the street
you're invisible to motorists. You're just
begging to be hit if you do this. Keith
Vick was
killed this way in Austin, TX in Dec. 2002.
2. Ride to the left. Taking
up the whole lane makes it harder for drivers to
pass you to cut you off or turn into you. Don't
feel bad about taking the lane: if motorists
didn't threaten your life by turning in front of
or into you or passing you too closely, then you
wouldn't have to. If the lane you're in isn't
wide enough for cars to pass you safely, then
you should be taking the whole lane anyway. Lane
position is discussed in more detail below.
3. Glance in your
mirror before approaching an intersection. (If
you don't have a handlebar or helmet mirror, get
one now.) Be sure to look in your mirror well
before you
get to the intersection. When you're actually
going through an intersection, you'll need to be
paying very close attention to what's in front of
you.
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Collision Type #5:
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The Right Hook,
Pt. 2
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You're
passing a slow-moving car (or even another bike)
on the right, when it unexpectedly makes a right
turn right into you, trying to get to a parking
lot,driveway or side street.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Don't pass on the
right. This
collision is very easy to avoid. Just don't pass
any vehicle on the right. If a car ahead of you
is going only 10 mph, then you slow down, too,
behind it. It will eventually start moving
faster. If it doesn't, pass on
the left when
it's safe to do so.
When passing
cyclists on the left, announce "on your left"
before you start passing, so they don't suddenly
move left into you. (Of course, they're much
less likely to suddenly move left without
looking, where they could be hit by traffic,
then to suddenly move right, into a
destination.) If they're riding too far to the
left for you to pass safely on the left, then
announce "on your right" before passing on the
right.
If several cars
are stopped at a light, then you can try passing
on the right cautiously. Remember
that someone can fling open the passenger door
unexpectedly as they exit the car. Also remember
that if you pass on the right and traffic starts
moving again unexpectedly, you may suffer #3,
the Red Light of Death.
Note that when
you're tailing a slow-moving vehicle, ride
behind it, not
in its blind spot immediately
to the right of it. Even if you're not passing a
car on the right, you could still run into it if
it turns right while you're right next to it.
Give yourself enough room to brake if it turns.
2. Look behind you
before turning right. Here's
your opportunity to avoid hitting cyclists who
violate tip #1 above and try to pass you on the
right. Look behind you before making a
right-hand turn to make sure a bike isn't trying
to pass you. (Also remember that they could be
coming up from behind you on the sidewalk while
you're on the street.) Even if it's the other
cyclist's fault for trying to pass you on the
right when you make a right turn and have them
slam into you, it won't hurt any less when they
hit you.
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Collision Type #6:
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The Left Cross
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A
car coming towards you makes a left turn right
in front of you, or right into you. This is
similar to #1, above. Austin
cyclists hit this way include Dr.
Lee Chilton, John
Howell (former
president of the Austin Cycling Association), andJanne
Osborne.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Don't ride on the
sidewalk. When
you come off the sidewalk to cross the street,
you're invisible to turning motorists.
2. Get a headlight. If
you're riding at night, you should absolutely
use a front headlight. It's required by law in
most countries, anyway.
3. Wear something
bright, even during the day. It
may seem silly, but bikes are small and easy to
see through even during the day. Yellow or
orange reflective vests really make a big
difference. Reflective leg bands are also easy
and inexpensive.
4. Don't pass on the
right. Don't
overtake slow-moving vehicles on the right.
Doing so makes you invisible to left-turning
motorists at intersections. Passing on the right
means that the vehicle you're passing could also
make a right turn right into you, too.
5. Slow down. If
you can't make eye contact with the driver
(especially at night), slow down so much that
you're able to completely stop if you have to.
Sure, it's inconvenient, but it beats getting
hit.
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Collision Type #7:
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The Rear End
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You
innocently move a little to the left to go
around a parked car or some other obstruction in
the road, and you get nailed by a car coming up
from behind.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Never, ever move
left without looking behind you first. Some
motorists like to pass cyclists within mere
inches, so moving even a tiny bit to the left
unexpectedly could put you in the path of a car.
Practice holding a straight line while looking
over your shoulder until you can do it
perfectly. Most new cyclists tend to move left
when they look behind them, which of course can
be disastrous.
2. Don't swerve in and
out of the parking lane if it contains any
parked cars. You
might be tempted to ride in the parking lane
where there are no parked cars, dipping back
into the traffic lane when you encounter a
parked car. This puts you at risk for getting
nailed from behind. Instead, ride a steady,
straight line in the traffic lane.
3. Use a mirror. If
you don't have one, go to a bike shop and get
one now. There are models that fit on your
handlebars, helmet, or glasses, as you prefer.
You should always physically look back over your
shoulder before moving left, but having a mirror
still helps you monitor traffic without
constantly having to look behind you.
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Collision Type #8:
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The Rear End, Pt.
2
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A
car runs into you from behind. This is what many
cyclists fear the most, but it's not the most
common kind of accident (except maybe at night,
or on long-distance rides outside the city).
However, it's one of the hardest collisions to
avoid, since you're not usually looking behind
you. The
best way to avoid this one is to ride on very
wide roads or in bike lanes, or on roads where
the traffic moves slowly. Austin cyclists Tom
Churchill and Andrew
Turner, and
probably William Sigtryggsson died this way. All
three of these incidents happened at night, and
at least two of them didn't have lights. Getting
rear-ended in the daylight is rare.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Get a rear light. If
you're riding at night, you absolutely should
use a flashing
red rear light. Bruce
Mackey (formerly of Florida, now head of bike
safety in Nevada) says
that 60%
of bike collisions in Florida are caused by
cyclists riding at night without lights. In
1999, 39% of deaths on bicycles nationwide
occurred between 6 p.m. and midnight. [USA
Today, 10-22-01, attributed to the Insurance
Institute for highway safety]
Bike shops have
red rear blinkies for $15 or less. These kind of
lights typically take two AA batteries, which
last for months (something like 200 hours). I
can't stress this item enough: If you ride at
night, get a rear light!
2.
Wear a reflective vest or a safety triangle. High
quality reflective gear makes you a lot more
visible even in the day time, not just at night. I
had a friend ride away from me while wearing one
during the day, and when she was about a quarter
mile away, I couldn't see her or her bike at
all, but the vest was clearly visible. At
night the difference is even greater. Bike shops
have vests and triangles for $10 to $15. Also,
when you hear a motorist approaching,
straightening up into a vertical position will
make your reflective gear more noticeable.
3. Choose wide streets. Ride
on streets whose outside lane is so wide that it
can easily fit a car and a bike side by side.
That way a car may zoom by you and avoid hitting
you, even
if they didn't see you!
4. Choose slow streets. The
slower a car is going, the more time the driver
has to see you. I navigate the city by going
through neighborhoods. Learn how to do this.
5. Use back streets on
weekends. The
risk of riding on Friday or Saturday night is
much greater than riding on other nights because
all the drunks are out driving around. If you do
ride on a weekend night, make sure to take
neighborhood streets rather than arterials.
6. Get a mirror. Get
a mirror and
use it. If it looks like a car doesn't see you,
hop off your bike and onto the sidewalk. Mirrors
cost $5-15. Trust me, once you've ridden a
mirror for a while, you'll wonder how you got
along without it. My paranoia went down 80%
after I got a mirror. If you're not convinced,
after you've used your mirror for a month, take
it off your bike and ride around and notice how
you keep glancing down to where your mirror was,
and notice how unsafe you feel without it.
7. Don't hug the curb. This
is counter-intuitive, but give yourself a little
space between yourself and the curb. That gives
you some room to move into in case you see a
large vehicle in your mirror approaching without
moving over far enough to avoid you. Also, when
you hug the curb tightly you're more likely to
suffer a right
cross from
motorists who can't see you.
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Collision Type #9:
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The Crosswalk Slam
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You're
riding on the sidewalk and cross the street at a
crosswalk, and a car makes a right turn, right
into you. Cars
aren't expecting bikes in the crosswalk, so you
have to be VERY careful to avoid this one. Devorah
Feldman was
hit in this type of collision, suffering
permanent injuries. This collision is so common
we've lost track of the number of people who've
told us they were hit this way, such asRay
John Ray.
How to avoid
this collision:
1. Get a headlight. If
you're riding at night, you should absolutely
use a front headlight. It's required by law,
anyway.
2. Slow down. Slow
down enough that you're able to completely stop
if necessary.
3. Don't ride on the
sidewalk in the first place. Crossing
between sidewalks can be a fairly dangerous
maneuver. If you do it on the left-hand side of
the street, you risk getting slammed as per the
diagram. If you do it on the right-hand side of
the street, you risk getting slammed by a car
behind you that's turning right. You also risk
getting hit by cars pulling out of parking lots
or driveways. These kinds of accidents are hard
to avoid, which is a compelling reason to not
ride on the sidewalk in the first place.
And another reason not to
ride on the sidewalk is that you're threatening
to pedestrians. Your bike is as threatening to a
pedestrian as a car is threatening to you.
Finally, riding on the sidewalk is illegal in
some places. (In Austin, those places are the
Drag, and downtown on 6th St. and on Congress).
If you do plan on riding on sidewalks, do it
slowly and EXTRA carefully, ESPECIALLY when
crossing the street between two sidewalks.
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Collision Type #10:
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The Wrong-Way
Wallop
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You're
riding the wrong way (against traffic, on the
left-hand side of the street). A car makes a
right turn from a side street, driveway, or
parking lot, right into you. They didn't see you
because they were looking for traffic only on
their left, not on their right. They had no
reason to expect that someone would be coming at
them from the wrong direction.
Even worse, you could be
hit by a car on the same road coming at you from
straight ahead of you. They had less time to see
you and take evasive action because they're
approaching you faster than normal (because
you're going towards them rather than away from
them). And if they hit you, it's going to be
much more forceful impact, for the same reason.
(Both your and their velocities are combined.)
How to avoid
this collision:
Don't ride against
traffic. Ride with traffic,
in the same direction.
Riding against
traffic may seem like a good idea because you
can see the cars that are passing you, but it's
not. Here's why:
-
Cars which
pull out of driveways, parking lots, and
cross streets (ahead of you and to the
left), which are making a right onto your
street, aren't expecting traffic to be
coming at them from the wrong way. They
won't see you, and they'll plow right into
you.
-
How the heck
are you going to make a right turn?
-
Cars will
approach you at a much higher relative
speed. If you're going 15mph, then a car
passing you from behind doing 35 approaches
you at a speed of only 20 (35-15).
But if you're on the wrong side of the road,
then the car approaches you at 50 (35+15),
which is 250% faster! Since they're
approaching you faster, both you and the
driver have lots less time to react. And if
a collision does occur, it's going to be ten
times worse.
-
Riding the
wrong way is illegal and you can get
ticketed for it. Bruce Mackey says that 25%
of cycling collisions are the result of the
cyclist riding the wrong way.
There's one possible exception
to riding the wrong way. When you're riding in
the country on narrow, high-speed roads, it may
be helpful to ride against traffic so you can
see what you're up against. Compared to city
traffic, country traffic is likely to have less
road space for bikes and cars to share. That
being the case, riding the wrong way allows you
to bail into the shoulder if a car doesn't see
you. You don't have problem #1 above because
side traffic is rare, and #2 is avoided because
you're riding primarily along one road and not
turning right.
Country traffic
is more likely to be sparse, which means that
you may have the ability to switch to the
"correct" side of the road when a car approaches
you from ahead. I did a 100-mile ride with a
friend once, continually switching from the
left-hand side of the road to the right-hand
side depending on whether traffic was
approaching us from ahead or behind, since a
vehicle passed us only once every several
minutes -- but when it passed us, it was doing
70mph+, and we wanted to be as far away from it
as we could. But remember that vehicles will
still approach you faster when you ride the
wrong way, and it's still illegal. It's your
choice.