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#61
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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I don't want to sound rude, but there are quite a few Segway owners in these forums. Personally, I'd trust their judgment and experience as known everyday users of the device, as opposed to a single random unknown person carrying out scientific research in the name of debunking the value and safety of the Segway. I wouldn't call the stopping distance heavily debatable when we have a number of experienced users and owners here to testify based on personal, everyday use in a real pedestrian environment. And that's all aside from the first hand stories of collisions with Segways yielding little to no damage. I don't disagree that the Segway can be potentially dangerous when not used properly. But so can a plastic fork, or a baseball bat, or a bike, or anything anyone has a malicious use for. The bulk of the design in the Segway has been around safety, both for the rider, and pedestrians. The footprint of a Segway is no wider than the shoulders of the average person. It has the advantage of subconscious activation, once the user becomes accustomed to riding it, so motions and actions are as fluid and responsive as the person walking. Knowing as much as I've learned about how Segways operate, and from the experiences I've had riding them around for extended periods of time, and hearing stories from owners, I honestly believe there is no more harm in riding a Segway on the sidewalk than there is a jogger running, or a kid carrying a baseball bat. Sure, there are potential malicious uses, but the same goes for virtually anything in this world. But given the design safety, and operational nature of the device, even an intentional head-on collision won't do a terrible amount of damage, certainly far less than a kid wielding a baseball bat. |
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#62
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
How about we just ban everyone from the sidewalks if we are that focused on what we are trying to accomplish whether its running for a bus / train / cab / jogging etc.... Protect ourselves from ourselves kind of thing
AS I said before in some states there is a bike lane for bike riders to utilize. This is very dangerous --- yeah u keep the people on the sidewalk safe but if a tractor trailer / bus is moving quickly along side you you could get knocked off that bike espicially if the tractor trailer is moving in its lane unsafely (swirving)..... If I could get knocked off my bike by a passing vehicle while riding in the street whether its the same flow or opposite flow of traffic why would I want to ride a segway in the street..... Segways are more then safe enough to be riden on a sidewalk. Kids should not being playing on the sidewalk anyway without parental supervision. The Main point is that there is no safe place to do anything. Whether ure out jogging / excersing / biking / segway riding.... your main goal is to do everything safely and be aware of ure surroundings. Segways will not get banned from the sidewalks and sent to the streets, the streets are just as dangerous as the sidewalks even if ure operating carefully. |
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#63
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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I welcome anyone who would like to to fix the calculations to do so. The problem is that the calculation will never be accepted because then someone will argue that I neglected how the Segway will try to reverse itself. Either way, the force issue is a moot point. The most important point is that the Segway will increase sidewalk collisions. Quote:
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Think of it this way... I probably would not be allowed to ride a unicycle down the sidewalk of a city that doesn't allow bicycles on the sidewalk. I would be forced to ride my unicycle in the road. Obviously, I wouldn't ride the unicycle in the road, injury would be certain. Therefore, I can't use my unicycle for transportation. The legislators would say too bad, we're keeping the pedestrians safe. |
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#64
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
I am not a Segway user (although I must admit it looks like a lot of fun and if I had the extra bucks I'd probably buy one!). And I am not a master of the physics of motion and collision, nor do I claim to be. It seems to be logical and reasonable that, if a Segway rider has sufficient time to react, due to how a Segway responds (according to the Segway users who have participated in this thread), a collision can be avoided or at the very least minimized.
What happens in the scenario where a Segway rider rounds a corner and unexpectedly impacts a pedestrian? If the impact is what would stand a Segway up or tilt it backward, then since the impact has already taken place, wouldn't the potential injury to the pedestrian have already occurred? I am not taking a side of the argument here. I am just asking the question for the sake of debate. The reality is lawmakers will do what lawmakers do. They will make a law without truly understanding the law, the need for it or it's consequences. Segway users must make sure their lawmakers become informed. Visit your local and state lawmakers. Take your Segway and show them how safe it is. Better yet, show them how to use it!!! |
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#65
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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#66
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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#67
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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Segway users will pout, present an argument based on unscientific evidence and then become elitist and claim everyone else just doesn't get it. |
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#68
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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Second, the force depends on the amount of time the Segway is in contact with the person. How does half a second sound? (Note that assuming a longer time decreases the applied force, so I'm being very pessimistic here.) Finally, the Segway will almost certainly be braking itself during the collision, so a good portion of the total force will be transferred through its wheels to the ground rather than through its frame to the pedestrian. According to the video, it takes less than half a second to come to a full stop, even without running into something. If the Segway is also pushing the pedestrian during the entire time, a simplistic integration shows that more than three fourths of the momentum is dissipated through the wheels, so the momentum transferred to the person can be no more than about 125 kg*m/s. To do that in one half second requires less than 250 Newtons of force, or about 1100 pounds. Does that sound like a lot? It's not. It's about what you'd get if you rolled out of bed. For comparison, it's only a little more than twice the amount of force the 167-pound rider's feet would absorb if he jumped off the Segway. Quote:
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#69
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
I'm not a highly experienced Segway rider, but I rode the TechnoKats raffle Segway around the pits at IRI. You can't have much worse a traffic situation on your average sidewalk (even in large cities) than what you have in pits at FIRST events (people using power tools, scouts, very limited space, etc.) Despite probably having only about an hour of experience on the Segway, I felt I was totally in control of the machine and posed no risk to people around me in the pits. Could I go 15+ MPH in the parking lot outside? Sure. You can also probably run about 15 MPH if you sprinted. As mentioned in previous posts, just because you have the potential to travel rapidly doesn't mean that you'll do it. Also, the Segway is far more maneuverable at low speeds than a bicycle, and far more visible than the average pedestrian.
In any case, I'm skeptical there are really enough Segways on the road to warrant a change in traffic laws. </ramble> Last edited by Greg McCoy : 24-08-2004 at 16:00. |
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#70
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
OK ... this is it - I wanted to wait with this reply to an earlier post as I have been working on it for several days on and off (I do have a life outside of CD, albeit not too exciting) and it is not quite "ready" for publication ... but here it is ...
But first ... Mike, Judging by your recent post: Quote:
... I've had enough ... I'm finished with this debate ... ************************************************** ******** Quote:
... And now I will start back at the top of your post ... Quote:
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************************************************** ******** As the Segway is a new and unique application of technology, is very difficult for most of us to adequately explain the differences between it and some other motorized transportation devices. I will paraphrase from a post by a fellow Segway owner on SegwayChat.com who does a great job with this explanation... Quote:
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#71
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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#72
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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#73
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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Weight restrictions are not unprecedented, the state of Alabama also restricts operators to 170 pounds. |
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#74
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
No, it's not saying that.
What it is saying is that they're gonna measure the speed of that Segway with a guy on it weighing 170 pounds. You can weigh whatever you want when you personally drive a Segway...although sometimes it wouldn't be too healthy for the Segway itself. |
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#75
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Re: segway license, turn signals, and no sidewalks?
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