
The bag also displays brake signal, cruse signal and emergency signal the acceleration sensor detects speed and turns on stop signal automatically. The cool-quotient is upped with the Emotion Mode here you can display a variety of emoticons, just for the heck of it. This makes it easy for the following traffic to know the riders intent. In the Driving Mode it shows left and right turn signals for the rider, which is controlled via a detachable controller. The bag is designed to work in two modes: Driving Mode and Emotion Mode. It’s a backpack meant for cyclists and features an LED Display (flexible PCB) on its face. 44 mag.Lady Smith.Unless you don't live in a FREEĬountry like NYC,I'm told they don't carry handguns in NYC.Here is a totally cool backpack that goes by the name of SEIL Bag. dumb location as your hands & arms would constantly be in the way.move it up to the Sternum, even if I'm not carrying a back pack I still wear a back brace that has shoulder straps and a Sternum strap and a Hip belt to carry stuff on the shoulder straps are a good place to carry your. "Repulsor'' I saw on another article but they were trying to put that flash light at the waist.
#BUY SEIL BAG FREE#
Lumens head lights on the sternum strap the ''Wings could fold up when not on the bike and the hands free head lights can be used kinda like the bar,the bar could be highly flexable,and while I'm wearing the pack anyway lets' put 2-300+ In the middle but have turn signals at either end of the 24in. I kinda like the design however.If I'm carrying a backpack anyway,let us put a 24 inch bar across the back with RED lights across it Yes, put a Msg spot The campaign ends of November 1, and if all goes as planned, the first Special Edition SEIL bags will be shipped to backers by December of this year, with other units penciled in for March 2014 delivery. Pledge levels start at US$149 for a SEIL Pouch, though it'll cost you at least $299 for a bag, controller and app bundle. To get the product to market, the developer has launched a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign. Myung Su Lee has since been refining and tweaking the prototype to ready it for commercial release. The SEIL signaling system was originally created in 2010, and subsequantly won a Red Dot design award. The SEIL bag has an empty weight of 830 g (29 oz), and includes five inner pockets with a total capacity of 25 liters (including a head pocket big enough to hold a wallet and some small items like pens, and a main section large enough to hold a 13-inch notebook). The SEIL unit is slotted into a bag, hipsack or pouch so that the LEDs face a 1 mm-thick semi-transparent polycarbonate panel that lets the light shine out through the synthetic textile, while also offering some protection to the signaling unit. The cyclist activates the stop message on the rear of the SEIL bag SEIL's designer told Gizmag that development work on an iOS app has now been completed, and the Apple certification process is about to begin.
#BUY SEIL BAG ANDROID#
An Android smartphone app can be used to design the custom signals, images or short text messages, which can also be animated. Buttons on the top are pressed for a stop or emergency symbol, or simple custom messages or alerts. Its 430 mAh battery should last 8 hours between charges. The 135 light unit sports a 2700 mAh Li-ion battery that's reported good for 12 hours between charges, while the 207 LED version has a 3500 mAh Li-ion battery which can last for 16 hours before needing a top up.Ī lever at the front of a handlebar-mounted wireless controller is used to activate a left or right direction arrow shape via Bluetooth. Two grid sizes have been developed: a 15 x 9 LED unit that's 115 x 111 x 18 mm (4.5 x 4.4 x 0.7 in) in size and weighs 140 g (5 oz), and a 23 x 9 grid with dimensions of 170 x 109 x 18 mm (6.7 x 4.3 x 0.7 in), and weighing 160 g (5.6 oz). Bright directional arrows, stopping signals or custom animated text messages shine through the fabric at the back of the bag at the press of a button on a bar-mounted wireless controller.Ĭurrently a pre-production prototype, the Safe Enjoy Interact Light (or SEIL for short) is a water-resistant LED light grid mounted on a flexible PCB. A sleeker idea would be to integrate a wirelessly-controlled lighting system into your backpack? That's precisely what SEIL from Myung Su Lee does. Bike-based blinking technology like the Spooklight system is a good way to go, but having to detach and carry your lights between rides to keep them out of the hands of opportunist thieves can be a bit of a pain. Cyclists wanting to notify other road users of stopping or turning intentions can use their arms, but it's not always convenient or safe to do so.
