if you guys wanna dress up your sleds just run some neon strips under the boards and in the hood vents,,,lights are cool
Oh quit being a curmudgeon.......it wasn't a bad idea....seems like most people just don't want to spend the $$$$
Finally we are gonna have a discussion on hand signals or the equivalent, "ride lights?" Here's my take on the issue. Hand signals or these ride light signals actually do not heighten your awareness of traffic any better than no signals or no ride lights. The fact is these additional attempts (hand signals, ride lights) to create a safer riding experience do more harm than good because both methods are flawed and when they error occurs it has the potential to worsen the situation. Example: last rider in a group is using the light system correctly with green light on when a faster traveling group with no lights comes up behind the group with the lights. Oncoming traffic see's last sled in first group with green light on and lowers the caution level and resumes previous speed but is coming around a corner, or in heavy snow, over a hill or whatever the possible situation would allow and right in his face are more sleds when he believed there were not more sleds. If you lie and say the closed fist or green light will not change your riding than what was the benefit for the signal in the first place?
I've been riding sleds for over 25 years and have seen heavy traffic VERY often on weekends and it is the norm for groups to come up on groups ahead of them and last rider not knowing the group is even there. We see the threads all the time on here about problem in traffic in general and it's the nature of traffic. There is no way you can tell all riders how many are behind you all the time. Well, you now are probably saying well we can tell most groups accurately of whats going on and that is somewhat true but the odds of a mistake are greater than you would think and I for one would rather trust my own senses and continuously ride with lower odds of mistakes by eliminating potential errors by others.
I see this as a simple issue, you can either trust a system that is potentially flawed or always ride in a heightened sense of awareness. What do you really gain by thinking there are no more sleds in a group? Do you think you can now resume a faster speed, or hog more trail? Think about it, what do you really do differently when you see the closed fist or green light? If you do nothing that the signal was a waste and an opportunity for a sledder to loose control riding one handed. If you do change speed or lane position than you just increased the odds of an accident. Just what if you believe in your mind there could be a sled approaching at any second,,,you would stay in your lane, you would handle the sled in a manner which would allow you to not wreck or kill someone. Honestly, there is no benefit to knowing the group is gone unless you admit you would drive in a manner that would not accommodate other riders. Right now you are expected to control sled in all conditions and have no excuse except error if you make a mistake and with signals there is a higher level of potential mistake because you cannot know who is behind you. Lets say you have no hand signals, no ride lights and you pass a group of 5, 1/8th mile later another oncoming group startles you and you smash or have a close call because you thought the group had passed. Would the mistake be that of the sled operator or the oncoming group? Keep my analogy in mind and now add in hand signals or ride lights, you got the green signal that the group has passed and here's the other and you smash. What is the closed fist or green light telling you that you capable eyes are not telling you. Is it giving you permission to ride more aggressively. Actually it is telling you a group has passed but only for those in that group. Unless you are willingly going to lie and say you would not change your riding style after a closed fist or green light than you would have to admit that you gained no information that can allow for safer operation.
Hand signals and ride lights are of no value because they have a greater potential to give false information and the best info your brain can receive is the knowledge that sleds can be present at any time and to trust that only. There is no value to knowing when the last guy in a group has passed because there just may be another.
Bottom line, I still ride aggressively on trail. I'm not saying to ride like grandpa. I'm saying exactly what I said above and no more!