As i read through this site i notice the amount of people new to ebikes, and cycling, buying a bike, thats great to hear, MY advice to all is buy a mirror as well to go with your new bike as you will find it a great use+help
The short answer is yes.My bike has the swept back sit up bars on. Do all the foregoing advantages still apply to these bars and if so what's the best choice?
Good points Flecc and all likely to help you get home in one piece and since you've been cycling nearly twice as long as me I think you've proven this .Strongly disagree Daz, motorcycles are irrelevant since they are rarely overtaken. As bikes are just about the slowest moving on the roads so the most overtaken, there's a responsibility to other road users involved and a need to be able to assess danger from the the rear. There is no refocussing, the mirror contains no image, one is looking at the actual object via reflection.
My mirror does many things for me:
It allows me to avoid the overtake point of a parked car at the same time as an approaching faster car.
As I near a bend, it warns me of the vehicle rapidly approaching which may try to pass at the most dangerous point and cut in on me.
It allows me to see the left turn flasher of a vehicle approaching fast from the rear which is likely to try to get past and turn left across my path.
It allows me to show courtesy by signalling a driver to pass when convenient, also reassuring that driver they've been seen.
None of these can be adequately done by a glance over the shoulder, since no trend is shown in a moment. A properly used mirror makes a cyclist a safe and responsible road user, and it helps to avoid many of the most common dangers cyclists face.
Can't see the difference with using a cycle mirror and a motor bike or car mirror. In my car and when I rode a motor bike my eyes are and were flickering to the mirror and back all the time, and you never need to refocus.Good points Flecc and all likely to help you get home in one piece and since you've been cycling nearly twice as long as me I think you've proven this .
I prefer a more 'positive' approach to dealing with cars behind me when cycling on the road - I make certain my maneuvers are very clear and decisive and leave no room for doubt in the drivers mind. Hesitant / slow / nervous riding is more likely to get you into trouble imo.
For instance with a parked car coming up and with traffic behind me I'll always start moving out early in advance and make it clearly understood that I'm going to go around the vehicle and the driver behind has no real option but to allow me to do so. It boggles my mind the number of cyclists that I see stay in tight to the curb until they're upon the parked car and then get themselves in a right pickle, worried that they'll put themselves into the path of a car as they try to go around it and nine times out of ten will have to stop or slow right down.
Be assertive, be predictable and you'll have to worry about what's behind you much less.
I also think that having a mirror tempts you into using it far more than you need to.
Oh and physiologically it's very difficult to keep your eyes distanced focused whilst moving your sight from in front of you to your mirror - it is akin to the whole 'relax your eyes and look past an object' thing. Normally you'll go from distance to close and to distance again as your eyes refocus on the distant object shown in the mirror. This normally takes around a second.
Apparently meets PPE model category I, directive 89/686/EEC, but then they say "Warning, doesn’t have the same protective effect as a helmet"Another thing I would like to know, now that we are talking about safety. Do anyone experience this ''helmet''??
https://www.ribcap.ch/en/