A New Scooter/Motorcycle Horn Idea
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- jrsjr
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A New Scooter/Motorcycle Horn Idea
For a long time, I've been thinking that it would be really great if it were possible to design a horn that somehow was not extremely loud if you just needed to remind somebody that the light has just turned green or whatever, but would be extremely loud if you needed it. Apparently, some other folks were thinking the same way and came up with a solution that I really like.
Last edited by jrsjr on Tue Jun 19, 2012 7:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- JohnKiniston
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Honking except in an emergency situation is illegal in my state 
It's supposed to cut down on noise and road rage.
http://www.library.pima.gov/librarianfiles/?kbid=985

It's supposed to cut down on noise and road rage.
http://www.library.pima.gov/librarianfiles/?kbid=985
- PeteH
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Ah, I saw that project when it was on Kickstart. One of our local maxi-scoot guys got one of the first kits and installed it on his Burgman.
If I'm not mistaken, it also has a headlight modulator as well. Smart idea - a gentle tap on the horn (for scoots with less-than-Nautilus stock horns) sounds the stock horn, but holding the button down brings on the Stebel/Wolo air horn. Pulsing it is a good idea, too.
If I'm not mistaken, it also has a headlight modulator as well. Smart idea - a gentle tap on the horn (for scoots with less-than-Nautilus stock horns) sounds the stock horn, but holding the button down brings on the Stebel/Wolo air horn. Pulsing it is a good idea, too.
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- k1dude
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A half second is too long. It could be all over in a half second.
That's what happens when you let an electrical engineer try to design stuff. They should stick to drawing stick figures on paper. Now if a mechanical engineer had gotten involved it would have made far more sense.
That horn should be designed as a regular horn with a simple light press. It should only enter the "screaming" stage when you press down on the horn button HARD! Depending on the pressure exerted on the horn button is what should determine how loud the horn is. You can design it in a 2 stage loudness format or a single progressive loudness depending on pressure exerted. Either way is better than his half-second delay.
Pffft. Electrical engineers.
That's what happens when you let an electrical engineer try to design stuff. They should stick to drawing stick figures on paper. Now if a mechanical engineer had gotten involved it would have made far more sense.
That horn should be designed as a regular horn with a simple light press. It should only enter the "screaming" stage when you press down on the horn button HARD! Depending on the pressure exerted on the horn button is what should determine how loud the horn is. You can design it in a 2 stage loudness format or a single progressive loudness depending on pressure exerted. Either way is better than his half-second delay.
Pffft. Electrical engineers.

- Edwub
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Love it. Two horns is really ideal.
I'd jump on this, if it looked like there was any way to make it work with a Blur.
Looking at Nathaniel's Stebel install, it doesn't look like there'd be any space for a second horn : (
http://www.flickr.com//photos/nathaniel ... 9596/show/
I'd jump on this, if it looked like there was any way to make it work with a Blur.
Looking at Nathaniel's Stebel install, it doesn't look like there'd be any space for a second horn : (
http://www.flickr.com//photos/nathaniel ... 9596/show/
- Syd
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It could be interpreted that way, I guess, but I think a quick beep of the stock horn to inform the driver ahead of you that the light has changed so they should stop texting and go is going to fall pretty low on the enforcement list.JohnKiniston wrote:Honking except in an emergency situation is illegal in my state
It's supposed to cut down on noise and road rage.
http://www.library.pima.gov/librarianfiles/?kbid=985
That's what this device does. It allows you to give a friendly beep to the guy you work with who's backing out and can't see you; and also allows you to keep your thumb on the button for a split second longer to warn the neighbor who never mows his lawn and is busy talking on the phone with the girlfriend he's cheating on his wife with.
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- Syd
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Obviously, mechanical engineers make more money and can afford to pay someone to rewire their bike, replacing the horn switch while their at it.k1dude wrote:A half second is too long. It could be all over in a half second.
That's what happens when you let an electrical engineer try to design stuff. They should stick to drawing stick figures on paper. Now if a mechanical engineer had gotten involved it would have made far more sense.
That horn should be designed as a regular horn with a simple light press. It should only enter the "screaming" stage when you press down on the horn button HARD! Depending on the pressure exerted on the horn button is what should determine how loud the horn is. You can design it in a 2 stage loudness format or a single progressive loudness depending on pressure exerted. Either way is better than his half-second delay.
Pffft. Electrical engineers.

Really, I agree with you, to a point, but this guys idea was for a bolt on horn addition, not a horn replacement. I like it myself.
The majority is always sane - Nessus
- Skootz Kabootz
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Nice idea. If I didn't already have my Stebel I would absolutely consider one. It would be nice if the owner could adjust the sensitivity of the button, or perhaps rather than it waiting 1/4 second for the loud horn to kick in, if it was the pressure you pressed the button with that determined which horn sounded. It's pretty much guaranteed in an emergency you'll be pressing hard.
- jrsjr
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k1dude wrote:A half second is too long. It could be all over in a half second.
That's what happens when you let an electrical engineer try to design stuff. They should stick to drawing stick figures on paper. Now if a mechanical engineer had gotten involved it would have made far more sense.
That horn should be designed as a regular horn with a simple light press. It should only enter the "screaming" stage when you press down on the horn button HARD! Depending on the pressure exerted on the horn button is what should determine how loud the horn is. You can design it in a 2 stage loudness format or a single progressive loudness depending on pressure exerted. Either way is better than his half-second delay.
Pffft. Electrical engineers.





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jrsjr, BEE
- neotrotsky
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Am I the only one who's thinking "why bother"? It's a horn. If I use it, a quick tap is generally considered 'polite' as in you're trying to get someone's attention. Riding in Phoenix, nothing is ever polite. So, give me as much volume as simply as possible.
It's a horn. Horns aren't polite.
It's a horn. Horns aren't polite.
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- kschulz
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...ahem!k1dude wrote:A half second is too long. It could be all over in a half second.
That's what happens when you let an electrical engineer try to design stuff. They should stick to drawing stick figures on paper....
Pffft. Electrical engineers.

Kurt
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My computer once beat me at chess. But it was no match for me at kick boxing.
- PeteH
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The Banshee kit is based on what looks like a Wolo 139dB horn, which _seems_ to draw 15A, based on some websites' description and fusing.
The Stebel Compact Nautilus, standard equipment in the 150s, also appears to pull 15A, so I reckon the Banshee kit might serve as an upgrade to those Buddys with the smaller horns without stressing the system too badly, unless it runs both horns, which isn't clear from the docs.
Disclaimer: IANAEE
The Stebel Compact Nautilus, standard equipment in the 150s, also appears to pull 15A, so I reckon the Banshee kit might serve as an upgrade to those Buddys with the smaller horns without stressing the system too badly, unless it runs both horns, which isn't clear from the docs.
Disclaimer: IANAEE
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- Lotrat
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