VROM BC
May 18, 2013, 02:19:23 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News:
 
   Home   VROM HOME Help Search ABOUT Weather MOTORCYCLE LINKS Login Register  
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: The Deadly Dozen  (Read 2209 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
hotshoe
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 349



« on: July 31, 2007, 06:38:19 PM »

" These are the Deadly Dozen, the motorcycle safety myths and urban legends ones that we hear most frequently.
 
Myth 1: Other Drivers Don't Care About Motorcyclists:
It may seem hard to believe at times, but other drivers almost never actually want to hit you. Most of those near-misses come about because they don't always know you are there, even when you are right in front of them, seemingly in plain view. You can be obscured or completely hidden by glare, by other things on or along the road, by the cars roof pillars, the handicap hangtag, or by other traffic.
 
Of course, not all drivers "think motorcycles" and make the effort to look that extra bit harder to see if there might be a motorcyclist hidden by that obscuration or in their blind spot. Instead of assuming that they will ignore you even when they see you, you should help make it easier for drivers to spot you, especially as the population ages and more drivers have greater difficulty in picking you out.
 
To overcome the fact that you might be hard to see and harder to notice, wear bright colors, especially on your helmet and jacket. Run your high beam during the day.
 
Think about things that can hide you and your bike from other drivers, things that can be as common as the sun behind you, the car ahead in the next lane, or a couple of roadside poles that line up on the driver's line of sight toward you. Make an effort to ride in or move to a location where drivers with potentially conflicting courses can see you before they stray your way.
 
Myth 2: Loud Pipes Save Lives:
Yeah, there are a few situations-like where you are right next to a driver with his window down who is about the to change lanes-where full-time noise-makers might help a driver notice you, but all that noise directed rearward doesn't do much in the most common and much more dangerous conflict where a car turns in front of you.
 
Maybe it's the fatigue caused by the noise, maybe it's the attitudes of riders who insist on making annoying noise, or perhaps loud bikes annoy enough drivers to make them aggressive. Whatever the reason, the research shows that bikes with modified exhaust systems crash more frequently than those with stock pipes.
 
If you really want to save lives, turn to a loud jacket or a bright helmet color, which have been proven to do the job. Or install a louder horn. Otherwise, just shut up.
 
Myth 3: Motorcycle Helmets Break Necks
It seems logical-you put more weight out there on the end of your neck and when you get thrown off the bike, that extra weight will create more pendulum force on your neck. Turns out, it doesn't work that way. In fact, the energy-absorbing qualities of a DOT motorcycle helmet also absorb the energy that breaks riders' necks in impacts.
 
Studies show that helmeted motorcyclists actually suffer fewer neck injuries when they crash compared to riders who crash without helmets.
 
Myth 4: Helmets Block Your Ability to See or Hear Danger
The thing you learn when you dig into the research is that motorcycle riders who use helmets crash less frequently than those who don't.
 
Maybe that happens because motorcyclists who decide to wear helmets have a better or more realistic attitude about riding. Maybe it's because putting on a helmet is a reminder that what you are about to do can be dangerous and the act of accepting protection puts you in the right mindset. Maybe it's because a helmet provides eye protection and cuts down wind noise so you can actually see and hear better. Maybe its because, by cutting wind pressure and noise, a helmet reduces fatigue.
 
Whatever the reasons, wearing a helmet clearly does not increase a motorcyclist's risk of having an accident and wearing one correlates to reduced likelihood of an accident.
 
Myth 5: A Helmet Won't Help in Most Crashes
People look at the seemingly low impact speeds used in motorcycle-helmet testing and assume that if you are going faster than that, the helmet will no longer be up to the job. That ignores a few critical facts:
 
Most accidents happen at relatively low speeds.
 
Most of the impact energy is usually vertical-the distance your head falls until it hits.
 
Helmets (or at least helmets that meet DOT standards) perform spectacular life-saving feats at impact speeds far above those used in testing. When a helmeted rider suffers a fatal head injury, it frequently doesn't matter, because, to hit hard enough to sustain that fatal injury, he sustained multiple additional fatal injuries to other parts of his body. In other words, the fact that the helmet didn't prevent the head injury was of no consequence.
 
The numbers clearly say that riders using DOT helmets simply survive crashes more successfully than those without them.
 
Myth 6: A Helmet Will Leave You Brain Damaged in an Crash When You Would Have Simply Died
Of course that's possible-your helmet attenuates the impact energy enough to keep the injury from being fatal but not enough to keep all of your eggs from getting scrambled. However, that's rare, and if you hit that hard, you are likely to get killed by some other injury.
 
It's actually the un-helmeted rider who is likely to cross from animal to vegetable kingdom, and often from a relatively minor impact that would have damaged nothing but his ego if he'd been wearing a DOT helmet.
 
Myth 7: A Skilled Rider Should Be Able to Handle Almost Any Situation
 
The sharpest, most skilled motorcyclist in the world isn't going to be up to the task when a car turns or pulls out in front of him a short distance ahead and stops directly in his path broadside.
 
Believing that your superior skills will keep you of trouble is a pipe dream, even if they are as good as you think.
 
No matter how skilled you are, it's better to ride to avoid situations that can turn ugly. Slow down, scan farther ahead, and think strategically. And dress for the crash.
 
Myth 8: If You Are Going to Crash, Lay It Down
 
I suspect this line was developed by riders to explain why they ended up flat-side-down while trying to avoid a crash. They over-braked or otherwise lost control, then tried to explain the crash away as intentional and tried to make it sound like it wasn't a crash at all.
 
Maybe motorcycle brakes once were so bad that you could stop better off your bike while sliding or tumbling. If so, that hasn't been true for decades. You can scrub off much more speed before and there be going slower at impact with effective braking than you will sliding down the road on your butt. And if you are still on the bike, you might get thrown over the car you collide with, avoiding an impact with your body. If you slide into a car while you are on the ground, you either have a hard stop against it or end up wedged under it.
 
Remember that the phrase "I laid 'er down to avoid a crash" is an oxymoron, often repeated by some other kind of moron.
 
The only events where being on the ground might leave you better off are: 1) on an elevated roadway where going over the guardrail will cause you to fall a long way, or 2) in that situation you see occasionally in movies, where the motorcyclist slides under a semi trailer without touching it. That's a good trick if the truck is moving.
 
Myth 9: One Beer Won't Hurt
 
Maybe not while you are drinking it, but if you get on your motorcycle after that, the effects of a single beer can get you hurt for life. No matter how unaffected you are sure you are, all the studies say differently.
 
You increase your risk to yourself and to others when you drink and hit the road. Also, as you age, your metabolism slows down, and those "coupla drinks" you had last night may still be affecting you when you hit the road the next morning.
 
Myth 10: It's Better to Stay in Your Lane than Split Lanes
 
In most parts of the world, motorcycles split lanes all the time, everywhere traffic is heavy. Here in the U.S., people often act as if lane-splitting is insane.
 
But when someone actually studied it in the only place in the U.S. where it's legal (California), they discovered it's actually slightly safer than staying in the lane in heavy, slow-moving traffic. Still many motorcyclists berate others who do it, when they should in fact be endorsing it.
 
Myth 11: I'm Safer on the Street than on an Interstate
 
The thinking here must be that slower is safer, but that's only really true after the accident begins.
 
Controlled-access roadways are inherently safer because all the traffic is going the same way, and there are no side streets from which someone can pop into your path, no pedestrians, and, often, less roadside "furniture" to hit if you depart the roadway.
 
Running down the road at 70 mph side-by-sidewall with the whirling wheels of a semi may feel hairy, but you are actually safer than at half that speed on a city street or even a country road.
 
Myth 12: A Skilled Rider Can Stop Better with Conventional Brakes than with Anti-Lock Brakes
 
Extensive testing done recently disproves this popular notion. Even on clean, dry, flat pavement, skilled, experienced riders (who did hundreds of panic stops for the testing on outrigger-equipped motorcycles) stopped in less distance with anti-lock brakes (ABS) than with conventional or linked braking systems.
 
Though the tests didn't include samples on surfaces with slick, dirty or wet spots, ABS certainly would have performed even better under those conditions while eliminating much of the risk of crashing.
 
The other cool thing about ABS on a motorcycle is that allows you to safely practice panic stops without risking a crash caused by lock-up.
 
Anyway, the next time tells you that he had to "lay it down" or that green bikes crash more than purple ones, you can nod and snicker internally or challenge them. Just don't base your own riding choices on what other people assume unless there is some solid science to back it up.
Logged

If yer not still learning, yer not livin right.
Hawk
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 882



« Reply #1 on: July 31, 2007, 11:22:50 PM »

Excellent post Mark.

About Myth 8 - Many years ago, Trev Deeley told me, "Don't be afraid to lay it down". Maybe the concrete was pretty thick in those days because it took a year or so for me to realise he wasn't talking about throwing it on the road and stepping off ... he was talking about laying it further over in a corner. As we all know, a bike will go over to about 45 degrees and very few of us ride to that extreme on the road. Hence, when we find ourselves in over our head, laying it further over (or down) maeans you will probably make the corner. If you don't, you will probably have a low-side come-off ... infinetly better than a high-side.

The only other item I have is this little gem from the AMA:
http://home.ama-cycle.org:80/newsroom/PSA/Distracted.wmv
Logged

RCRMC, CAC, QCAC, BCCOM, VROM, UMCI, ROS, LRR, RAs.
(\__/) (\__/)
(='.'=) (='.'=)
(")v(") (")o(")

"Life is a one lap race."
Never under-estimate the power of human stupidity.
virgil
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 1159



WWW
« Reply #2 on: August 02, 2007, 12:54:31 AM »

Cool Gord, there are some other items, cafeteria style, in the JUNE/07
issue of AMA magazine: "The 112 Best Things to happen to motorcycling"

It's all broken down into fascinating subgroups.... :wink:  :wink:

On another note: Have you seen the new restaurant at 1st & Rupert:
CHOPPERS restaurant !!! Know anything about it? Who started it? Why??? :lol:
Logged

Education will never be as expensive as ignorance:
Chance favours the prepared mind !
Hawk
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 882



« Reply #3 on: August 02, 2007, 05:30:04 AM »

I haven't seen Choppers .... Does it have something to do with false teeth?
Logged

RCRMC, CAC, QCAC, BCCOM, VROM, UMCI, ROS, LRR, RAs.
(\__/) (\__/)
(='.'=) (='.'=)
(")v(") (")o(")

"Life is a one lap race."
Never under-estimate the power of human stupidity.
ugogirl
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 66



WWW
« Reply #4 on: August 02, 2007, 12:17:13 PM »

Nice one Hawk!  ROTFLMAO
Logged

Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
virgil
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 1159



WWW
« Reply #5 on: August 02, 2007, 09:04:20 PM »

Cool Choppers Diner is awesome! Went for brekky this morning with Darius
before taking him to Seattle airport...

Opened by a biker cook, who rides an Indian... Biker motif outside and
inside! Menu diverse. More food served per order than offered in any
other restaurant! For example the special is a huge biker plate loaded
with food beyond expectations, but only a humble $3.50 !!! Cheesy

Don't miss seeing the "chopper" on top of the roof, over the entry door!!!
Should become a new watering hole for us with great center city
location, next to the highway and 2nd Narrows Bridge, accessible
by everybody, except bikers...lol! :shock:

Try it!!! (Brekky offered all day!) :wink:

Location: 1st & Rupert SW Corner,  directly opposite Chevron, west side.
Logged

Education will never be as expensive as ignorance:
Chance favours the prepared mind !
hotshoe
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 349



« Reply #6 on: August 04, 2007, 11:23:39 PM »

Yes, well, that's a terrific little tip and deserves its very own thread. But to get back to these boring old myths, in #4 there's a statement I question:
 "putting on a helmet is a reminder that what you are about to do can be dangerous and the act of accepting protection puts you in the right mindset."
If that was the case, do you really think we'd be seeing so many of those folks with the very fine, big and colourful helmets kitted out with shorts, running shoes or even sandals?
If I had to make a choice - hypothetically, without legal considerations - between leaving my head- or my leg protection at home, it would be the helmet every time, based on my not-inconsiderable experience. But in this real world, of course, I take them both. I like my head and my legs, and would like to keep them all intact even if my best efforts to keep things from going all pear-shaped should fail.

And another thing: Why, oh why is eye protection not at least as mandatory as the right hat?
Logged

If yer not still learning, yer not livin right.
hotshoe
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 349



« Reply #7 on: August 16, 2007, 09:36:08 AM »

No, really. Have you ever tried riding without eye protection of any kind?



And what do you think about this?
(just trying for, like, a response..)
Logged

If yer not still learning, yer not livin right.
Hawk
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 882



« Reply #8 on: August 16, 2007, 10:01:43 AM »

So, 50 this week, eh?

I'll buy you a glass of geritol at the Show 'n Shine.
Logged

RCRMC, CAC, QCAC, BCCOM, VROM, UMCI, ROS, LRR, RAs.
(\__/) (\__/)
(='.'=) (='.'=)
(")v(") (")o(")

"Life is a one lap race."
Never under-estimate the power of human stupidity.
hotshoe
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 349



« Reply #9 on: August 16, 2007, 11:31:26 AM »

51, but who's counting? And it's bloody near 2 weeks away, okay?
Logged

If yer not still learning, yer not livin right.
ugogirl
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 66



WWW
« Reply #10 on: August 17, 2007, 12:22:07 AM »

Fifty-one???  Ah, yer jist a mere stripling, laddie!   Tongue
Logged

Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
Hawk
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 882



« Reply #11 on: August 17, 2007, 03:02:19 AM »

Quote from: "ugogirl"
Fifty-one???  Ah, yer jist a mere stripling, laddie!   Tongue


(I'm still 20 ahead of him, ugo ...)
Logged

RCRMC, CAC, QCAC, BCCOM, VROM, UMCI, ROS, LRR, RAs.
(\__/) (\__/)
(='.'=) (='.'=)
(")v(") (")o(")

"Life is a one lap race."
Never under-estimate the power of human stupidity.
hotshoe
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 349



« Reply #12 on: August 17, 2007, 07:30:25 AM »

Naw. I WAS a stripling, once, but then I had a m/c accident and was disfigured, so no-one would hire me any more. Now my stripling career is over. Best thing for me, really. I was an egomaniac, like all other striplings. But I'm all better now, except for one thing: Someone stole my softail yesterday while I was in a meeting. No, really. So I'm not happy about that.
Logged

If yer not still learning, yer not livin right.
Charles
Guest
« Reply #13 on: August 17, 2007, 10:58:01 AM »

Quote from: "hotshoe"
Naw. I WAS a stripling, once, but then I had a m/c accident and was disfigured, so no-one would hire me any more. Now my stripling career is over. Best thing for me, really. I was an egomaniac, like all other striplings. But I'm all better now, except for one thing: Someone stole my softail yesterday while I was in a meeting. No, really. So I'm not happy about that.


 :shock: Are you serious about having your Softail stolen? If so... really sorry to here about that. Maybe you might post a 'Bike Stolen' thread here with more info? Maybe note -some digits of- the VIN number?

Charles
Logged
hotshoe
Master Contributor
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 349



« Reply #14 on: August 17, 2007, 04:06:24 PM »

as serious as a heart attack. 5-0 is on the job, but here's a pic of the bike, on the chance it is seen:



Click on the pic for a better look. There's a crack in the dashboard between the switch and the attaching bolt, and a dent on the left side of the front fender, low on the skirt behind the fork leg. The bars have been changed to decker buckhorns, and the windshield and passing lights are off. Otherwise it's showroom fresh looking.

Good hunting..
Logged

If yer not still learning, yer not livin right.
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.18 | SMF © 2013, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!