Many bicycle crashes involve predictable friction points:
- Left-turning vehicles at busy intersections where cyclists may be in a driver’s blind spot.
- Construction zones and lane shifts along commuter corridors, where signage, cones, and temporary markings don’t always match what drivers expect.
- Dooring and curbside hazards near residential streets and shopping areas where parking can put cyclists in the path of opening doors.
- Aggressive passing or late braking when drivers misjudge a cyclist’s speed—especially during rush hours.
When a crash happens, the other side may claim it was unavoidable or that you were riding unsafely. In practice, what wins or loses a claim often comes down to whether the evidence can be organized clearly and presented early—before memories fade and before footage gets overwritten.


