It’s diametrically opposed to the sanitised existence of the Lemmings around me in the Dilbert Cartoon hell I live in; it’s life at full volume, perfect colour with high resolution and 10,000 watts of amplification.
It’s diametrically opposed to the sanitised existence of the Lemmings around me in the Dilbert Cartoon hell I live in; it’s life at full volume, perfect colour with high resolution and 10,000 watts of amplification.
You can only be safer if you listen to what they say and (remember) follow their advise.
Not protection but awareness of how those screw ups happen.
Being "in the right" and having "Right of way" ... and being within the prescribed speed limit does not give you the security to ignore all other road users.
Expect that anything and anyone within 50 meters of you ... wants to do you harm. By expecting trouble you will see it coming sooner.
When life throws you a curve ... Lean into it ...
C'mon OAB, there's some trickery involved in this...can't be rider ability, that's just not logical in some people's eyes...![]()
Choice of bike, like tight turning circle sure, however, confidence and ability to handle that bike makes a larger difference.
I'd be reasonably confident that my GSA is bigger than your bike, as it's bigger than most. I can u-turn it in less than 2 car park widths (I've never really measured accurately) and frequently ride at low speed (<10kph) and the u-turns are also sometimes done 2up with a cameraman doing an impression of a monkey at the same time.
Do you teach a child to walk or run first? Same with motorcycles. You start with the foundations (like motorcycle control at low speed, and low speed skills) and build up from there.
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
okay, i made a decision quite a while ago not to respond to cassina. so i will use the excuse that this is for the benefit of any newbies that might be getting sucked in by his BS.
firstly i have been riding since early eighties and had two offs on the road, first was as a young fella and showing off, leaving a farming feild day and sunout on some cowshit in the gateway, the other was as a young fella and hit black ice and i was expecting it so was only doing less than 20km/hr so i count neither of those.
i used to think i was just lucky but then i had a couple of really close calls in a short space of time and it was purely situational awareness that saved me.
the first was a tractor came out of a gate way and didn't see me, luckily i saw him coming and knew he was going to hit the road at the gate about the same time as me so i threw the anchor out and hauled off a load of speed, that stopped me becoming a nice new mid mounted implement on a john deer.
the second was in the car traveling to work one very dark rainy morning, a falcon ute coming out of a farm gate, i knew they weren't going to stop and threw on the anchors, came to a halt beside their drivers door, they didn't even know i was there until she pulled round beside me. i called in that nite to have a quiet word and she blamed it on the flax and not being able to see up the road, problem is i could see her drivers side window the whole time, she just didn't look.
no luck involved in either of those. it was at that point i realised it is my skill level that keeps me alive and turns disastrous situations into "shit that was close" situations
next, i have done two ride forever courses, they are tailored to who is on the course and no one that i know of believes they are god after doing them but every one on the courses i have done left them feeling they were better equipped to avoid disaster.
next, i ride a zzr1100 and do slow speed turns, and have done since purchasing it new, bike weight is 233 dry weight so with this fat fucker on it probably round 400kg with fuel and oil
i also ride a 1500 goldwing and do slow turns and u turns on it with my wife aboard, total weight probably well over half a ton, oh and that bike still gos round corners reasonably quickly as well.
lastly, peripheral vision, the zzr is a sports tourer but still a very lean forward riding position, i have no worse peripheral vision on that than i do on the wing with its very upright sitting position
Having owned both an X5 and a Disco, you're kidding yourself - you haven't got a fucking clue.
5 Star Volvo V50, $88 a year for registration because of the safety. Front brakes (brembos) are $103 per rotor, pads are about $80. Oil change is the same as a Corolla, filter is $14 for a Hengst. I can see half a dozen low mileage V50's for between $7,000 and $9,000.
You're seriously fucked in the head.
It’s diametrically opposed to the sanitised existence of the Lemmings around me in the Dilbert Cartoon hell I live in; it’s life at full volume, perfect colour with high resolution and 10,000 watts of amplification.
ABS systems are actually pretty reliable. Safety equipment tends to be. The Common Rail Diesels - different story - I recently saw a late model CRD in a Euro force fed petrol. $15,000 rebuild. Owner decided to scrap the car, sensibly.
You're an idiot. Moronic. Stupid. You're on a bike. If you can walk through the gap, you can ride through the gap. Splitting is safer than sitting on the end of a line - getting rear ended would fuck up your day. I've lane split a couple of times. Never an issue with cars alongside.
If you can't balance, you have no right to be on a motorcycle. You're doing me a disservice in two ways. First, you're jacking up the ACC levy. Second, you're using up oxygen that can be better used elsewhere.
Shit. I fell for it. I'm trying to have a reasoned discussion with an imbecile.
It’s diametrically opposed to the sanitised existence of the Lemmings around me in the Dilbert Cartoon hell I live in; it’s life at full volume, perfect colour with high resolution and 10,000 watts of amplification.
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