Cyclists may be forced to ring their bells
By Jonathan Owen
Published: 10 September 2006
Taken from
HERE
Cyclists in busy urban areas may have to sound a bell almost continually as they cycle along under government plans to force them not only to have bicycle bells fitted, but to use them to warn pedestrians of their approach.
Although existing legislation makes bells a mandatory part of any new bike sold, people can remove them or choose not to use them. Under the proposals, cyclists would have to ensure their bikes carried working bells and would have to ring them every time they saw a pedestrian. Refusal to obey would be subject to on-the-spot fines or, in a worst-case scenario, two years in jail or a £2,500 fine.
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Slight problem I can see with mountain bikes is the lack of space on the handlebars. I don't have room for a 'bell'.
Now I can fit a nice siren / horn just below the handlebars and a switch will fit on the handlebars. And used in an emergency it would more than do it's job and would be heard a very long way off.
Reminds be of the picture of the early cars when someone had to walk in front warning everybody you were coming. When on a cycle-path it might be a good idea. The same for kids who use the safety of a path rather than the road to warn of they presence.
One article quotes 12 cycle related deaths with pedestrians in the last 5 years compared to 168 cyclists killed in the last 12 months on the roads.