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Thread: Dr. Jeckell or Mr. Hyde?

  1. #1
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    21st January 2004 - 13:00
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    Dr. Jeckell or Mr. Hyde?

    I don't know how many of you reading this are full-time motorcyclists and never drive cages, but I'd guess that most of us here own both vehicles and ride/drive them simultaneously during the week?

    Are you a Jeckell and Hyde type character who is like a lion on the bike, but like a lamb behind the steering wheel of a cage? Sure, there are some of you who ride and drive like a granny, so you are the exception, but generally I say that if there isn't a dramatic change in outlook/attitude when changing from a bike to a cage then you may truly be mad(senile)?

    Personally, I'd rather travel by bike over a cage anyday, however, sometimes it is just more practical to DRIVE (I don't know how you manage sometimes SpankMe?). When I make the transition into the cage I totally relax to the air-conditioning, turn on the sounds, and get frustrated with having to slow down every 30 seconds...I handle it though and program myself to keep my distances and cruise to my destination no matter how long it takes - this is of course when I'm Dr. Jeckell.


    Zed

  2. #2
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    29th September 2003 - 20:48
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    My bike is my only form of transport and I only drive occasionally. But I have found that since I have started riding all of my "hoonish" driving is allowed to be fullfilled on my bike and thus now I don't tend to thrash driving a car like I used to, like when I was in high school.

    It seems that I get all the thrills of speed etc from my bike and now when I drive a car, doesn't matter what kind it is, I am alot more sedate.

    Does anyone else find this??

  3. #3
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    I too have become more sedate and watchful with my car driving since becoming a rider... (and a boring old fart)
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  4. #4
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    When the daily driver vehicle is an Escort diesel van, there's no question that riding *anything* on two wheels is going to be the sporty mode
    it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
    those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
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  5. #5
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    6th May 2003 - 12:00
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    Don't have car license & would rather never get it (but for practical sake I'll need it).
    /end communication

  6. #6
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    29th September 2003 - 12:00
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    When I ride I,m very aggressive defensive and seldom relax,I'm always on the look out for the next idiot or changing conditions ect.For this reason I've never understood people that claim they ride for stress relief or to relax.I'm normaly more hyped up after I get off a bike than when I got on.
    Cars on the other hand,I'm not driving for fun, it's just away to get somewhere and I tend to go into cruise control,There's far less danger to me personaly so I hit the tunes and relax.
    As far as not driving a car goes,well in my world the inability to drive a car,tractor,truck,ect,ect makes one about as much use as tits on a bull and pretty much not worth having around.

  7. #7
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    Ride and drive the same

  8. #8
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    4th November 2003 - 13:00
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    I tend to drive a bit more defensively than I ride,due to the ute simply being less manuverable than the bike,I only tend to stay about the 110km mark but try not to slow down for the corners to much and I also tend to use the brakes a bit harder in the ute than on the bike.

    I do get more impatient driving than riding especially at holiday time with the usual lines of traffic,led by caravan/boat towing morons who won't pull over

    I would rather travel by bike anytime,but the bike cant tow a trailer or take racebikes on the back.
    "If you can make black marks on a straight from the time you turn out of a corner until the braking point of the next turn, then you have enough power."


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  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jackrat
    When I ride I,m very aggressive defensive and seldom relax,I'm always on the look out for the next idiot or changing conditions ect.For this reason I've never understood people that claim they ride for stress relief or to relax.
    Because with all that concentration going on you can't think about anything else. Clears the mind and reduces the amount of stress generating toxins in the brain. There's good stress and bad stress, and I find the bike riding stress "good". I don't ride about in a blissful haze if that's what you're thinking.

    It makes me so tired I sleep well after a day in the saddle.
    If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?



  10. #10
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    12th February 2004 - 12:00
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    I like Wkid, drove as i ride..... hence why i have had to get 2 new clutchs, a new gearbox and 6 tyres in the past year and a half (note i dont pull burnouts)

    I get better feeling of riding faster than i do in the car...... And i feel relaxed after getting a huge adrenilin dose from riding the bike.......

    I probably do more stunting in the car...... i only do stoppies on the bike regularly, the odd wheelie, and sit on the tank lye on the bike etc (Yes MR you are an influence and i couldnt help but try, and now im good at it hehehe....)

    Where the car is balls out, wheels of the ground handies, j-turns etc......

    man im just asking for an early grave...... dumbfucker.... (note all stunting down in quiet carparks/ industial areas..)
    See Robert Taylor for any Ohlins requirements www.northwest.co.nz
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  11. #11
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    I find driving too frustrating and theres too many complaints from the cheap seats saying things like "You're not on the bike now you know", " The van doesnt lean into corners", "Put the window up its cold in here". Just no fun at all. So I let the boy or the Mrs drive and watch the scenery go by.
    "I think men who have a pierced ear are better prepared for marriage.
    They've experienced pain and brought jewelry." - Rita Rudner
    A man is only as big as the dreams he dares to live

  12. #12
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    21st March 2003 - 20:23
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    Like most I tend to ride more aggressively than I drive. I also notice sometimes when i'm in the cage i'll try and make manouveres as if I'm on the bike. Eg. For a split second I thought I could lane split with the car, just the mentality I get when I see a pile of cars I guess.

    There are others on this site though who drive a lot harder than they ride!!

  13. #13
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    19th March 2004 - 11:00
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    I ride harder than I drive, because 1: I own the bike, I dont own the car and 2: Pushing a 91 toyota corolla wagon hard isnt going to be much fun not matter how much you do, compared to hooning on a bike. I try and be nice in the car, but I still follow too closely and try and take gaps that the corolla really doesnt have the power for...I dont plan on owning a cage for a while, and if I do, it will be a classic or an old wagon or something, and I'll still commute and travel mostly by bike. Especially if I'm living in Auckland....
    Queiro voya todo Europa con mi moto.... pero no tengo suficiente tiempo o dinero.....

  14. #14
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    The same in both, going anywhere just takes longer in the cage.

  15. #15
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    29th October 2003 - 21:14
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    I think I drive pretty much the same as I ride. Usually I'm pretty cautious, but I do like to have a bit of fun and push my limits a bit sometimes.
    The only car I've ever owned was an '88 nissan sentra (1.3L), I haven't ever driven anything sporty. But I still had fun in it.
    I guess what I think of as "fun" is probably pretty tame for many people here though .

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