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Thread: I crashed today! Ahh (1 July)

  1. #1
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    25th June 2007 - 14:54
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    I crashed today! Ahh (1 July)

    My poor brand new bike, i Crashed i have only ride 4 times, going to work which i think it was my fault, i was rushing, only rushing at 70'ks tho, which is a naughty on 50k roads, but i when to slow down to 20k for a aroundabout, saw another car, signal to go left and then he continue and then changed him mind and when right! FFS i though in my head is this is going to hurt! i didnt know what to do, and a wind was abit strong so it pushed , the best thing i could do is, continune and pray the car wasnt going to fast and hope i dont go to hosptail, or slow down really fast, and still get hit, i dnt have insurance on my bike yet too, so the best thing i did was,...... slow down fast and just tip the bike to my side, so i dont crash into the stupid car infront, poor bike is alittle mark, i didnt care about myself, only my bike,

    im all good and bike still alive, the thing that pissed me off is .... alot of cars stopped but didnt even helped , i had to walk up to one and said in correct words "if there was a car crash would you get out and help, " he said " yes" then i said "why are you on your f^^^^ ass, get out and help me or is it cause im on a motorcycle," "he said yes" omg!!!!!! i just wanted to whack him one, " so all i did is take my time getting my bike off the road, damn i was mad, then a lady pulled over from the other side and helped me, my left wrist is bloody sore, =( hard to type, and im at work .. =(

    im having second though about this bike, i might go for a car now, i dnt know, or is it im just scared as its my first crash, everyone has little crashs, im sure, im a bit shaken about going home today

  2. #2
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    18th December 2004 - 08:09
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    Sad to hear about your little off, seems like you are not really hurt which is good, three lessons come to mind here.

    First, better to be late than get yourself in trouble by speeding in the wet with your skills not developed, especially around handling and braking in the wet.

    Second, you need to get some mentoring and training to improve your skills and learn good habits, check the mentors list for people in your area.

    Third, never trust a cager to go where they look like they will, they frequently go somewhere else at the last second.

    Almost everyone has little crashes in the early part of their riding experience, don't let that bother you, learn from the incidents and make sure that it is a positive thing. Highly recommend doing Ride Right, Ride Safe course, and getting some help with your riding, makes a huge difference to confidence and skills.
    Take care.
    Mack

    "If you can't laugh at yourself, you're just not paying attention!"
    "There is no limit to dumb."

    "Resolve to live with all your might while you do live, and as you shall wish you had done ten thousand years hence."

  3. #3
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    14th March 2006 - 21:55
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    Quote Originally Posted by Macktheknife View Post
    Sad to hear about your little off, seems like you are not really hurt which is good, three lessons come to mind here.

    First, better to be late than get yourself in trouble by speeding in the wet with your skills not developed, especially around handling and braking in the wet.

    Second, you need to get some mentoring and training to improve your skills and learn good habits, check the mentors list for people in your area.

    Third, never trust a cager to go where they look like they will, they frequently go somewhere else at the last second.

    Almost everyone has little crashes in the early part of their riding experience, don't let that bother you, learn from the incidents and make sure that it is a positive thing. Highly recommend doing Ride Right, Ride Safe course, and getting some help with your riding, makes a huge difference to confidence and skills.
    Take care.
    Mack
    Ditto what he said
    Have to Karma ... Justice catches up eventually !!

  4. #4
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    22nd July 2006 - 11:59
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    Sorry to hear about your off. Glad to hear you are okay! Main thing. Macktheknife has said all the sensible things and it's not an admonition, just a gee-up to get yourself some skills and practice with more experienced mentors and people who can help you.

    Don't let the experience put you off, you must have decided to ride two wheels of freedom because something inside you wanted life to be different. And riding two wheels will do that.

    You did the right thing and asked for advice and got on with your situation, as for that attitude from the cagers, yep - to be expected. Don't let it colour your riding experience however!
    "I like to ride anyplace, anywhere, any time, any way!"

  5. #5
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    23rd June 2007 - 20:30
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    Smile

    Yeah sorry to hear about you accident as well im glad you are ok!! thats the main thing, i've recently come back into riding i used to ride 8 years ago then went full time into a cage, So for me this is almost like starting from the begining with the basic fundamental of bikes still intact. when i first started out (8 years ago) i came off a few times also nothing major and i had the same feeling as you "giving up or maybe i should get a car" but i did'nt i lernt from my mistakes which made me a stronger more confident rider. My actual reason for being in a cage the past 8 years was more my familly hassling me rather than my own decision. But now im older and not alot wiser hehe and jumping back on a bike is the greatest thing, Yes it's scary but life is full of frights and challenges and this is something you should not let overcome you!!!

  6. #6
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    5th January 2007 - 14:58
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    Dont sell the bike mate, you have just learned the lesson that will save your life & its only cost you a sore wrist, NEVER TRUST THE CAGE!!!

  7. #7
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    17th April 2007 - 00:41
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    Dotn stop riding because of a crash, you will get better at riding in time. and those situations will come rarely

    WEAR QUASiMOTO

  8. #8
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    28th August 2005 - 18:21
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    Quote Originally Posted by phiretrojan View Post
    signal to go left and then he continue and then changed him mind and when right! FFS
    They never give way, they're just not in striking distance yet.

    Be careful, man. There's a lot more to this biking thing than driving a car and slowing down, in particular, can be a pretty fraught pastime. Wellington's roads are pretty nasty right now too so you want to be on the brakes early and gently - the front in particular likes to be gently introduced to the idea that you're going to need it soon and this gives it time to start compressing the forks, squashing some more tyre onto the road and if necessary drying off the disks too.

    Much bigger following distances, mmmkay?

    And try and work out where the cars will go based on where they *can* go. It's common for a car to turn without indicating, but extremely rare that they turn where there is already another car or no place to turn into.

    Head up. Eyes up. Don't look at the instrumentation. Look behind you before changing lanes ... LOOK with eyes, not mirrors. Be farking careful, especially in rain and wind.

    Dave
    Signature needed. Apply within.

  9. #9
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    27th May 2007 - 10:00
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    ok first up that sux bro but your ok thats all that matters, im new to biking to and no how you feel i came off my old bike and bunged my knee quiet bad. The bike came off worse but sold not that long after, I had a brain storm!

    I brought a car!

    what a f***ing joke mate dont do it!

    Cages are s**t they make you lazy and arent half the fun!

    i have now returned to 2 wheels as of yesterday and even road today in the sunny(not) auckland weather.

    my advice is you learn from that and dont do it again


    everybody makes mistakes once or twice a idiot makes them three or four

    Ride well

    Alex

  10. #10
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    25th March 2007 - 12:04
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    Ohhh...warm fuzzies in the air....NOT.

    Seriously tho......don't give up so easy! Pick ya bike up dust yaself off and think......Fucken arse not gonna let a little bin ruin my fun. Get back on and learn from this!

    M1C
    No body move... I dropped my brain

  11. #11
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    25th June 2007 - 14:54
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    thanks for the infomation,

    of course im going to stay with my bike =) i think it was a little scare today, i and just thinking what happen, i have a pimped out performance scooter lol, and i have a few mistake with it aswell, life is not perfect and its the A$$ out there that make it not, i guess as long i have a L plate on my bike, ill just take it easy and ride at limit, - i notice the FXR150 Mirrors are usless all i can see is my elbows, and the lights on it, as i was riding home from work aat 9pm last night, in the rain i couldnt see much, what is a good bulb to get for a fxr150? thats a little better? aprt from that thanks for all the info, im feel more better and i cant wait to end work to ride again

  12. #12
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    2nd March 2007 - 10:38
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    Quote Originally Posted by phiretrojan View Post
    of course im going to stay with my bike =)
    Glad to hear you didn't wuss out. If you didn't get back on the bike you'd kick yourself in a week.

    Might pay to read through this thread

    http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...ad.php?t=52318

  13. #13
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    25th May 2007 - 15:34
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    If all you got was a sore wrist and a few scratches on your bike, I'd say this was the best thing that could have happened to you starting out as a rider. Knowing about road safety and what to look out for is all very well, but it's no substitute for the real thing. No matter how alert you stay or how much you practise your moves that car park, there is no way to recreate the fear you have when you realise you are about to get off, or the embarrasment and/or anger afterwards, and the 'shaken' feeling you describe. You need a real-life experience to jolt a different part of your brain into action. Not everybody gets to learn this and then continue on their way to work. You've learned a very expensive lesson at a bargain price, and you're much better prepared for the next time a situation like this comes along.

    I had a similar accident after about six months of riding. I was zooming along behind a bike courier in the left lane, when a taxi turned left in front of us from the right hand lane. As the taxi turned, he noticed us and panicked, stomping on the brake and ending up stopping right in our path. The bike courier guy had read this well, and he was able to come to a stop about 20cm from the taxi. I was not so 'with it' and slammed into the back of him, causing him to slam into the taxi, poor guy. Nobody was really hurt, but 'shaken' is definitely a good word (my bike narrowly missing a yakuza mercedes as it fell didn't help me relax either). I was talking to the bike courier guy while we were waiting for the police to arrive and I declared to him that I would not be riding bikes anymore after that, to which he replied "Bollocks!" - and then told me pretty much what I've written above. Needless to say seven years later I'm still riding.

  14. #14
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    5th August 2005 - 13:28
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    Quote Originally Posted by phiretrojan View Post
    the thing that pissed me off is .... alot of cars stopped but didnt even helped , i had to walk up to one and said in correct words "if there was a car crash would you get out and help, " he said " yes" then i said "why are you on your f^^^^ ass, get out and help me or is it cause im on a motorcycle," "he said yes" omg!!!!!!
    I rear ended a car a couple of years ago on Cobham Drive - Wellington(wasn't looking in front, looked to see if anything coming and car stopped in front of me for no good reason) and my bike went down. Maybe because I was a woman but HEAPS of car drivers stopped to help me, check I was OK, help get bike off the road. Other bikers have had similar experiences, I think you were a bit unlucky with that lot.

  15. #15
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    16th September 2004 - 16:48
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    Don't worry too much boss we all crash once.....some of us don't learn and have to keep doing it.
    As for the mirror thing. FXR mirrors are crap - go to repco and buy some of those little dome wideview stick on mirror things and chuck them on the standard mirrors on the FXR.
    Most of all remember:
    Chicks DIG Scars!!!!
    Reactor Online. Sensors Online. Weapons Online. All Systems Nominal.

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