
Originally Posted by
BlackSheepLogic
Accidents involving more than one vehicle are never 100% a single drivers fault when you consider the human factors. The driver initiated the accident according to the OP. How the rider reacted both prior & after determined the outcome.
With experience and training observation, risk assessment, position & speed of what is happening around you prior to this event could have avoided or minimized the severity of the outcome. When a vehicle turns in front of a rider if the rider has not incorporated the risk into the riding plan the reaction time not only delays the response, they may not make the best decision on what to do (braking is not the only nor always the best response), nor may they have as many options available to them.
Other human factors were also likely at play here.for example: the rider was unfamiliar with the bike, it capabilities (braking characteristics for example) which only come with familiarity over time with the machine; they may not to have 100% of their time devoted to riding as they enjoyed their first ride on the new bike; the decision to ride at night on an unfamiliar bike increases risk; the riders probable lack of riding experience; the higher demands a bike like this requires from the rider.
What a load of BS and in sense not applicable in this case as a vehicle U-turning without warning to the extent he suffered serious injury means he prob didn't even have time to react or break.
You sound like your trying to pad out a 20,000 word research paper for ACC as that's the only context such gibberish would see the light of day. Your quoting a whole heap of things that prob make good sense in terms of a proactive defensive riding strategy but are things that can not be measured or proved in any meaningful way to submit to a court as evidence.
If what you are saying applied, every single 5 car nose to tail on the motorway would result in endless litigation between the insured parties insurers as to proportion of blame.
Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket - Eric Hoffer
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