Traffic Signal Timing and Rider Safety for eBikes – XNITO

GRATIS VERZENDING NAAR A<tc>L</tc><tc>L</tc>E <tc>L</tc>OCATIES IN DE VS, CANADA EN HET VK

Traffic Signal Timing and Rider Safety for eBikes

 Date: 

  Author: Xnito Team

Traffic signals are designed to organize movement, reduce conflicts, and improve safety. But for eBike riders, the way a signal is timed can significantly influence whether an intersection feels safe—or dangerous.

Research increasingly shows that signal timing is not just a traffic engineering detail. It directly affects:

  • Rider behavior
  • Driver yielding
  • Red-light running
  • Turning conflicts
  • Crash risk at intersections

And because eBikes travel faster and accelerate quicker than traditional bicycles, poor signal timing can create even greater safety problems.


Why Intersections Are Especially Dangerous for eBike Riders

Most serious eBike conflicts occur at intersections.

This is where:

  • Riders cross paths with turning vehicles
  • Drivers make quick gap judgments
  • Speed differences become difficult to estimate

Research from naturalistic riding studies found that:

  • eBike riders experience significantly more intersection-related conflicts than conventional cyclists
  • Drivers often underestimate how quickly eBikes approach intersections

This creates a dangerous combination:

  • Faster rider approach speeds
  • Smaller accepted gaps by drivers
  • Simultaneous vehicle turning movements

In many cases, the signal timing itself contributes to the problem.


What Is Traffic Signal Timing?

Traffic signal timing refers to how long signals stay green, yellow, or red—and the order in which different users move through an intersection.

For eBike safety, several timing strategies matter most:

  • Bicycle detection systems
  • Leading bicycle intervals (LBIs)
  • Delayed turning phases
  • Exclusive bicycle phases
  • Green-wave progression systems

Each affects how riders interact with traffic.


The Biggest Signal Timing Problem: Simultaneous Release

One of the most dangerous intersection designs occurs when:

  • eBike riders receive a green light
  • Turning vehicles receive a green light at the same time

This creates immediate conflict during the first few seconds of movement.

For example:

  • A rider begins crossing the intersection
  • A driver turns across the bike lane
  • The driver misjudges the eBike’s speed
  • A right-hook or left-turn collision occurs

Research consistently shows that turning motorists failing to yield are responsible for a large percentage of eBike intersection conflicts.


Why eBikes Change the Timing Equation

1. Higher Approach Speeds

Studies show:

  • Pedal-assist eBikes average slightly faster speeds than bicycles
  • Speed-pedelecs can travel substantially faster through intersections

Even a modest speed increase dramatically changes timing.

For example:

  • At 10 mph, a rider travels about 15 feet per second
  • At 20 mph, that doubles to nearly 30 feet per second

Drivers often fail to adjust for this difference.

Research found that drivers accept smaller gaps in front of approaching eBikes compared to conventional bicycles, increasing turning conflict risk.


2. Faster Launch From Standstill

eBikes accelerate faster than conventional bicycles, especially from a stop.

This changes:

  • Queue discharge timing
  • Rider positioning
  • Conflict timing during early green phases

Signal systems originally designed around slower bicycle acceleration may no longer align with modern eBike behavior.


Red-Light Running and Signal Delay

Another major issue is rider compliance.

Research from signalized intersections found:

  • eBike riders have higher red-light-running rates than conventional cyclists
  • Long waiting times significantly increase violation risk

In some studies:

  • More than half of riders would not wait through very long red phases

This highlights an important engineering reality:

Excessive delay can become a safety problem itself.

When riders perceive signals as inefficient or unresponsive, compliance declines.


Countdown Timers: Helpful or Harmful?

Countdown signals produce mixed safety effects.

Potential Benefits

  • Reduce uncertainty
  • Help riders anticipate phase changes
  • Can reduce some types of late crossings

Potential Risks

Research shows countdowns can also:

  • Encourage aggressive acceleration
  • Increase early starts
  • Create “beat the light” behavior

Flashing green intervals and red-yellow pre-green displays were especially associated with hurried launches and riskier decisions.


The Most Effective Safety Solution: Leading Bicycle Intervals (LBIs)

One of the strongest safety interventions is the Leading Bicycle Interval (LBI).

This gives cyclists and eBike riders:

  • A short head start before turning vehicles receive green

Typical LBI timing:

  • About 3–7 seconds

This small timing adjustment dramatically improves:

  • Rider visibility
  • Driver awareness
  • Separation from turning traffic

Research and field pilots show LBIs reduce first-second conflicts with relatively small impacts on vehicle delay.


Split Leading Bicycle Intervals: A Better Balance?

Some cities now use Split LBIs, which:

  • Hold turning vehicles briefly
  • Then release them later in the green phase

This approach:

  • Maintains many of the safety benefits of an LBI
  • Reduces traffic delay compared to fully protected phases

Studies found that most conflicts occurred after the protected lead period ended, highlighting both the value—and limitation—of partial protection.


Exclusive Bicycle Phases: The Safest Option

The safest design is often the simplest:

  • All vehicle traffic stops
  • Only bicycles and eBikes move

This removes direct turning conflicts entirely.

However:

  • It increases delay for all users
  • Lengthens signal cycles
  • Can reduce efficiency on lower-volume streets

As a result, cities typically reserve exclusive bicycle phases for:

  • High-conflict intersections
  • Heavy bike traffic corridors
  • Freight-heavy environments

Detection Systems Matter More Than Most Riders Realize

Many riders have experienced this problem:

  • Waiting at a red light
  • The signal never changes because the bike is not detected

Poor detection creates:

  • Frustration
  • Unnecessary delay
  • Increased red-light running pressure

Modern systems can use:

  • Radar
  • Cameras
  • Thermal sensors
  • Smartphone-based detection

But detection reliability remains a major issue, especially for fast-moving eBikes.


The Role of Heavy Vehicles

Large trucks create especially dangerous conditions for eBike riders at intersections.

Research found:

  • Right-turn conflicts between heavy vehicles and eBikes are particularly severe
  • Higher turning speeds increase conflict intensity

Warning systems, enforcement cameras, and delayed-turn strategies can reduce these risks—but geometry and timing both matter.


Why Protected Intersections Matter

Signal timing alone cannot solve every problem.

Protected intersection designs help by:

  • Slowing turning vehicles
  • Improving sight lines
  • Separating rider paths from traffic

When combined with:

  • LBIs
  • Protected phases
  • Reliable detection

they create significantly safer conditions for eBike riders.


The Bigger Challenge: eBike Speed Diversity

One emerging problem is rider speed variation.

A single bike lane may contain:

  • Traditional cyclists traveling 10–12 mph
  • Casual eBike riders traveling 15–20 mph
  • Delivery riders traveling even faster

This makes timing optimization more difficult.

A “green wave” designed for slower cyclists may not work for faster eBikes, increasing stop frequency and compliance pressure.


Practical Safety Recommendations for Riders

1. Assume Drivers Misjudge Your Speed

Especially at intersections and during turns.


2. Slow Slightly Before Green Intersections

Even with right of way, prepare for turning conflicts.


3. Increase Visibility During Early Green

Position yourself where drivers can clearly see you.


4. Avoid Rushing Yellow Lights

Many severe conflicts occur during late-phase crossings.


5. Be Extra Cautious Around Trucks

Especially during right-turn movements.


Final Conclusion

Traffic signal timing plays a major role in eBike safety—particularly at intersections where speed, visibility, and turning conflicts interact.

The research shows that the safest systems are those that:

  • Reduce unnecessary rider delay
  • Improve detection reliability
  • Separate riders from turning vehicles during critical moments

As eBike adoption continues to grow, signal systems originally designed for slower bicycles and motor vehicles will increasingly need to adapt.

Because for eBike riders, safer intersections are not just about better infrastructure—they are also about better timing.


Sources

FHWA Traffic Signal Timing Manual
https://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/fhwahop08024/fhwa_hop_08_024.pdf

NACTO Signal Phasing Strategies
https://nacto.org/publication/urban-bikeway-design-guide/designing-safe-intersections/signal-phasing-and-timing-strategies/signal-phasing-strategies/

MUTCD 11th Edition Part 9
https://mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/pdfs/11th_Edition/part9.pdf

Schleinitz et al. (2017)
https://tu-dresden.de/bu/verkehr/ivs/vpsy/ressourcen/dateien/publikationen/Schleinitz-et-al-2017-authors.pdf

Petzoldt et al. (2017)
https://tu-dresden.de/bu/verkehr/ivs/vpsy/ressourcen/dateien/publikationen/Petzoldt_et_al-_-2017-_authors.pdf

Kothuri et al. (2018)
https://doi.org/10.15760/trec.194

Tang et al. (2012)
https://doi.org/10.3141/2317-11

Lv et al. (2022)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsr.2022.09.005

Zhang et al. (2024)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2024.107722

Tang et al. (2020)
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/3594963

Yu et al. (2019)
https://doi.org/10.1080/15389588.2018.1542138

Yang et al. (2014)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2014.10.014