smeggy wrote:
Hi Blackdouglas.

smeggy wrote:
TBH, I thought I gave enough detail, perhaps my description wasn’t clear enough, perhaps you misunderstood me; other people on another forum appeared to understand the same text. It appears that you completely overlooked the subtleties buried in my text.
Maybe. We shall see.
smeggy wrote:
I did indeed consider all those points you mentioned.
(1) The laser was aimed at the bicycle but due to misalignment hit an object that was moving at 66mph.
Hence my comment of “beam missed it and swept across something else” (don’t forget, the monitored surface may not have been moving).
A very possible scenario. Which is why I don't understand why you think the 66mph bicycle is "misleading".
smeggy wrote:
(2) The laser was aimed at the bicyle but due to beam spread, an abject that was moving at 66mph intercepted the beam and was read instead.
Hence my numerous exclamation marks after “(stationary!!!)”
66mph does not equal stationary. What you said in your original post was that you thought the beam had missed the bicycle and slipped over a stationary object instead. This is indeed possible, however if an object moving at 66mph intercepted the beam at the time the reading was taken and was closer to the device than the bicycle then the LTI 20.20 would have acquired the closest target and displayed the speed of the CLOSEST target. This is more likely to happen at greater distances where the spread of the beam becomes important, and therefore perhaps not that likely in this case.
smeggy wrote:
(3) The laser beam was aimed at the bicyle but was reflected onwards to a secondary target which gave a reading of 66mph.
It’s well beyond chance that the gun will accept the secondary pulse reflected from the bike via a secondary surface, given that the primary reflection directly from the bike will be: earlier, stronger, (and most importantly) from the correct position.
This statement is wrong. You do not fully understand the workings of the LTI 20.20.
First of all you have made the assumption that there will be a direct reflection from the bike. There may not be. Depending on the angle that the laser strikes the bike and what it strikes. It might be the case that the laser strikes the bike so that the surface acts as a specular reflector. In this case very little light will be reflected back directly.
Of course small amounts of reflected light will be reflected back, but the LTI 20.20 won't accept returns that are too weak - otherwise it would never work. The air is full of particles that reflect soime light back to the device. You therefore need a significant return before the device can acquire a target.
Therefore the "earlier" bit can be FALSE if not enough light is reflected back from the first reflection. The "stronger" bit is irrelevant (because the LTI 20.20 always acquires the closest target), and the "correct direction" bit is also a red-herring because Scotchlite (tm) like surfaces will reflect the light back exactly frmo when it came causing it to arrive from exactly the same direction as the primary reflection.
In other words if the first reflection was primarily a specular reflection and the secondary reflection was from Scotchlite, then this scenario is VERY VERY possible.
In fact it is EXACTLY how the reading of the car doing 22mph was obtained.

smeggy"
There is no possible way you can achieve a non-erroneous slip reading from a push-bike, especially an extra 61mph (which is my original point, for reasons already stated).
[/quote]
The article does not say that it was. Indeed the 22mph reading from the car was not obtained via slip either. That is obvious from the photograph if you know how the LTI 20.20 works.
[quote="smeggy"]
Perhaps I should have said “The 66MPH cyclist simply does not work because there’s no point (or set of points that when swept) on the bike can indicate and maintain 66MPH for 0.3 seconds (8.6 meters)”, but I thought that was obvious.
[/quote]
It is obvious. What isn't obvious is why this makes the photograph misleading when (a) nowhere is it stated the reading was obtained via slip, and (b) when there are other scenarios which do make it possible.
[quote="smeggy wrote:
I said “invalid” in the context that the tester certainly did not get a sweep result from the bike, given that they claimed to have done, hence my comment of “who can say that these measurements on motor vehicles are not also invalid!”.
Could you point me to the bit in the article where that claimed to have got a sweep result from the bike please?