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34 requests
Product Description
Make your presence known to distracted drivers and pedestrians with the Hornit dB140 bike horn. The 140-decibel horn is accessible via a thumb trigger, so you can easily let other riders, pedestrians, and cars know where you are without having to take your hands off the handles Read More
Been using this for since 2014 on Indian Roads, its perfect! On my second one right now because the last one got crushed my a bus. But I definitely recommend this one.
I'm waiting for Tora to unveil what his bike horn was in one of his latest Youtube videos he's posted up for the CrossCurrent X (First Onboard Ride), but that's just me- I like how his sounds vs this one being so disruptive.
So I am interested in this, but is it possible to get something more like what a diesel locomotive uses? Maybe an air-compressor-driven train horn? In essence I want to be able to honk a horn that rattles the fillings of the person that likely just cut me off/caused me to almost die.
JakefromstatefarmIs the regular horn sound appropriate for a simple 'on your left' on the bike path, or is it shockingly loud? and the piercing tone, is it enough for cars in traffic to hear?
jzip71This is way too loud for use with other bikes or pedestrians. My kids had a Hornit installed before switching to a custom setup with actual car horns and a lithium battery. They used a bell or voice on trails, and Hornit for cars.
The standard horn sound is a requirement for use against cars. People in cars and on trails have no idea how to respond to the chirping rapid sound option. We found the chirping option to be useless due to confusion on the receiving end of the horn, hence the move to car horns. Earlier versions of the Hornit had only the chirp sounds.