
Originally Posted by
pritch
I mentioned a blind left hand bend. BIKE magazine put a camera on just such a bend and there were a number of 4WDs, and even a caravan, encroaching on the wrong side of the road exactly at the point where the handbook says the bike should be. Any one of which would probably have been the last thing you ever saw if you followed the manual to the letter. The only appropriate action is to stay somewhat left of the position advised in the Police handbook on a blind bend.
Been years since I read the handbook, and I wasn't riding road bikes when I did, but I seem to recall a general precept that pretty much all of the recommended lines were simply a first cut guide. In other words they're to be modified in line with conditions on every corner you approach.
Which is no different from what most have said: ride to the conditions.
The difference being that the UK police system goes as far as defining what response is recommended for each condition variable. And with the number of variables being rather large that may explain why it takes so long to assimilate.
NZ roads are certainly different, as is our driving culture, and maybe the handbook is less than perfect wrt some recommendations. Dunno. I’ll continue to simply put as much time between me and as many of the multitude of threats I see on the road as I see appropriate.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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