I can see where your comming from, in that someone has to be the cause if it is a two MV accident, but im saying if you can go along way to avoid the two MV accident if you are driving to conditions, ability, speed for ability, defensive driving, not expecting someone to look out for you, position yourself to be seen and a speed at which to be seen by other vehicle users.
Its alot, and a big ask, and like you said we all make mistakes me included, but i think by admitting in your mind i have to be responsible for myself goes along way to the way you ride.
Hey, but on this site, compared to alot of other riders that can ride at speed, I would be considered a bit of a 'nana'and im okay with that, as long as no one gives me a hard time!
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Just remember... "wherever you go, there you are" .....Buckaroo Banzai 1984
I blame breathing. I heard that 100% of motorists had drawn breath in the 5 minute period prior to a fatal accident.
Conclusive proof it's not training or skill at all!
$2,000 cash if you find a buyer for my house, kumeuhouseforsale@straightshooters.co.nz for details
I don't really think it's an age thing. The road toll itself has I think halved over the last 30 years or so. Safety & new technology is a big factor in that, particularly for cars;
ABS, been around for a while now
ESC, cars only (it's called balance & skill on bikes)
Airbags (front, side, curtain, roof ... you name it, may as well drive in a bag)
side torsion beams
Roof structure
Bumpers
Crumple zones
Firewalls
Better suspension/handling/tyres
etc etc etc
You can get hit in a car, and most of the time you will survive without serious injury.
For bikes it's a bit more sparse ...
ABS - it's available on some at a cost
helmets are the same (although there are some worse than others)
Leathers are still leathers, available with or without armour.
Gloves
Boots
the road is just as hard when you fall on it. A crash on a bike is more dangerous/life threatening, and with an increasing number on the road it would only seam natural that bike riders make up an increasingly larger % of deaths on the roads.
Cars are safer, and when you compare them to cars of 30 years ago, they are like fortresses surrounded in bubble wrap.
Bikes on the other hand are still bikes, a little bit faster maybe, but still open & free from bubble wrap & cotton wool, just the way I like them.
Shaken, not stirred in the shakey city!
I know what you mean, I ride like a complete nana in the wet due to some scary moments when I was a young rider (including 2 offs). In one case I could have been killed, but luckily wasn't - if I had been then I would have joined the category of riders that didn't get to learn from a mistake. Someone else could easily make less mistakes than me, but be unlucky and become a statistic.
Not to mention the fact that the "safer" vehicles are manufactured the more leeway it gives to idiots to rely on that safety. Cars might be able to withstand a whole lot more than they used to but for some that only means permission to push those boundaries even more. Unfortunately there is often another motorist in their vicinity when they do it. When they then lose control of their vehicle it's often someone else who was minding their own business who is on the receiving end.
All they need to do is make the tests meaningful. the current system of "buy 24 packets of chips and get a drivers licence" is what is to blame. Passing motor vehicle tests in New Zealand is just too easy.
In space, no one can smell your fart.
I agree. Make the bastards do a hundred track-days, then force them to ride their road bikes cross country...over the Southern alps, I reckon, Then force the bastards to drive their bikes out of the back of a Hercules, at 10,000 ft , pop the parachute, then land the bike, in first gear, revs up to red-line, aiming at a brick wall, then make a movie out of it.....Let's call it Tripple X.
Only 'Now' exists in reality.
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