The build has attractive two-tone components, consisting of a button pad for playing four sounds, and a sound module with a 3 watt speaker and battery pack. A Seeed Studio XIAO SAMD21 is the heart of the operation, with the microcontroller paired with a DFPlayer Mini which handles sound duties. When one of the four buttons is pressed, the microcontroller loads the relevant sound off an SD card, and plays it out over the speaker. For power, the build uses a lithium rechargeable battery with a healthy 1200 mAh capacity, which can be readily recharged thanks to a TP4056 charger module with a USB-C port.

But the sound I would use would be a sample of screaming v-brake brakes. That is the one thing that makes pedestrians move out of the way. A normal bike bell (that I use today) hardly makes them notice me. If it where not for the bad performance and unpredictable behavior of worn out v-brakes, I would always have one on the back wheel to really let people know I am pedaling in their direction.


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Somewhere ages ago I saw/heard about a bike horn that used a water bottle shaped air tank that you could charge with the bike pump itself. The horn sounded like a semi truck. Pedestrians will definitely notice that.

I have an electric horn that makes the Emergency Broadcast Tone. It is an h-bike I.e. human powered. A bigger source of annoyance is uneducated ebike riders, who treat them as unlicensed electric motorcycles. Sharing the path and courtesy are unknown concepts to them. The bike path hills in cooperation with us h-bikers like to take them down a peg.

140 decibels is the equivalent sound of a jet engine and is 4 times louder than the nearest competitor. You can alert drivers of cars, buses, lorries & pedestrians to your presence. It has two sounds - a piercing 'road' mode (140dB) and a lower pitched car horn sound (121dB) for cycle paths. The remote trigger means it is safe and easy to use when braking, while being easy to install and remove thanks to the Garmin style mount, the dB140 fits all bikes. Completely weatherproof (although not submersible), the dB140 is a potentially life-saving accessory when riding in towns and cities.

To ensure a perfect fit with all handlebar sizes two mounts are included - one mount for bars with a diameter of 22-26mm with 4 differently sized spacers and a second dedicated for 31.8mm diameter bars (road bikes). You can use your spare mount on a different bike so you can easily swap the dB140 from one bike to another.

Featuring two horn modes; 140dB and 121dB respectively, the dB140 requires uses 2 x AAA batteries which last for up to 12 months of normal use (6x 1 second blasts per day). The dB140 makes riding in town safer and less stressful: no need to shout, no need to swerve, no more emergency braking.

According to ROSPA, 57% of cycle accidents occur because the "driver failed to look properly". To put this another way, if cyclists used horns to alert drivers to their presence it would prevent more than half of all serious cycle accidents.

The Garmin style mounts are compatible with virtually every diameter of round bar (22-26mm) and 31.8mm road bike handlebars with our 2 included brackets. Unfortunately, if you have flat aero bars then the mounts will not work. They must be round.

Very loud. I use one of the horns while on the road and cars actually hear it as they do move over, and the second horn for pedestrians while cutting through an alley way it makes them jump but they also move. Only thing I would change is to make the button glow in the dark or so it can be seen somehow at night.

For any crew member that is not an Assistant, the horn serves no practical purpose. However, Assistants that have chosen to progress in the Clown talent tree may gain useful support abilities when they honk their horn while having Clown Power.

Press Orp's Wail Tail up to warn pedestrians and fellow cyclists with the 76dB friendly sound. Press down for Orp's 96dB Loud sound for cars and traffic. In addition, Orp's LEDs fire every time the horn is actuated, so you can be seen and heard.

Sticking to the Kickstarter theme, a project that is set to meet its funding goals is the Loud Bicycle. This is a fair bit more expensive at around 50 for early funders. However, it does have one rather logical feature. It sounds like a car horn.

Unlike the Airzound, everything is contained inside a small unit that fits on your handlebars. Thanks to a trigger that can be fitted close to your hands, you can sound the horn without taking your hands off the bars or brakes.

im thinking of getting a horn becuase in the event that someone comes too close to me or begins to pull out in front of me because they havent seen me*, then i can warn them of my presense and hopefully avoid a collision . by doing that i dont need to use my film footage to report a collision either! ?

As already mentioned in the article and the previous comment, maintaining excellent situational awareness and being assertive with lane positioning, along with a generous dose of courtesy for fellow road users and pedestrians, are all highly effective measures to proactively avoid getting into sticky situations. If you are not equipped for high visibility or positioned in the blind spot of a car/bus/lorry or riding the ego of righteousness, 99% of the time you only have yourself to blame for getting into the predicament where a loud horn maybe your final act. Since no one is perfect (including me), I would consider installing a compact loud horn such as Hornit as a mitigation measure for the 1%.

This is not the case with the Hornit, a small cable runs from the hornit to the grip where a small button is attached, so it can be operated with your thumb while your hands have a firm grip of the handlebars, so the hornit would be my choice if I bought a horn.

For me, having the ability to warn other road users (mainly pedestrians to be honest) that a bike is approaching at between 10 and 15 miles per hour (about half the speed of a car) falls into the same camp as enabling other road users to see for themselves that a bike is approaching through the use of high vis clothing and fancy flashing lights etc. Why then, do we recommend one, while suggesting the other will make us all cycle like idiots?

Sadly my use of a horn will be more for pedestrians than cars. Those pedestrians that think its ok to automatically step into the road, earphones blaring without even looking in the direction of the incoming traffic. Sorry but to me that deserves a 140DB blast to scare the living bejeezus out of them.

It sounds like your road speed is inappropriate for the road conditions and so the onus is on you to respond by slowing down and keeping away from the curb. Otherwise, there is little difference between your behaviour and the impatient BMW driver who hovers two feet behind cyclists while hitting the horn.

If you find that many pedestrians are stepping into your path even when you are cycling at walking speed then I suggest you go with the flow, dismount, and push your cycle; or find an alternative route. Scaring people with a loud horn is just going to end badly.

A lit (but badly) cyclist was approaching the junction with horn blaring, but people, associating that amount of noise with cars, vans and trucks were looking back at the more distant traffic to see what the noise was about.

The horn was actually distracting their attention from their immediate surroundings, which is where the high speed, dimly lit, noisy cyclist was. He was then grumpy and rude as the pedestrians crossed in front of him.

My point was that the effect of the mega-horn was actually reducing pedestrian awareness of the nearby cyclist, as they were associating the sound with much more distant vehicles and thus directing their attention at those. An old fashioned bell or a shout would probably have been more effective.

Hello! This evening, my Mac started making tooting horn sounds every few minutes as if theres an error. I cant see an error anywhere. There is nothing unusual in the console (apart from the sandbox error when Im running mail but this is sporadic and not consequent with the tooting) and there is no visual error. Plus, my default alert sound is not a tooting horn. Does anyone know how I might discover what it is?

I recently talked with someone who had shut down her iMac and the next day a horn sound was playing about every two minutes while on the Desktop screen. It sounded kind of like a clown horn, it had two shorts beeps a pause and two beeps.

This sound was occuring in a new account we made, and it also appeared while on the login screen. We were about to test it in Recovery to see if it was a hardware issue, but she had to leave. While I am aware that there are many start up tones that indicate errors, I have never seen this before.

The word "c'mon" is a bad choice for an alert word, because you close your mouth to form the M and the C is a back-of-mouth sound that you can't say loudly. The N sound is a nasal sound, so the volume there is through your nose. e24fc04721

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