Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 25

Thread: First accident.

  1. #1
    Join Date
    12th May 2007 - 14:24
    Bike
    2005 Suzuki GN250E
    Location
    Wellington
    Posts
    36

    First accident.

    So, it was a nice sunny saturday morning, i had my ginny all warmed up and ready to go for an uber ride round the bays and was considering going further as it was sunny.Stopped off at the garage in brooklyn to fill her up. and as i was taking off my gloves and about to dismount - some wee wifey in the car in front of me that was stationary - suddenly decided she wanted to be closer to the pump -so she reversed right back .... into me. snapped the clutch lever right off. there goes the weekend
    luckily the guy in the garage next door was about to leave for the weekend and offered to let me park the bike there until monday morning when the wellington motorcycle guys are gonna come pick it up.
    Anyone know the average turnaround for replacing the clutch lever? am assuming it will be quite fast? made me realize i should probably look into that damn insurance now... although the bill for this one is being sent round to the wee woman who dinged my wee beastie.

    hopefully get her back monday afternoon.
    --

    "I'd rather be riding my motorcycle thinking about God than sitting in church thinking about my motorcycle"

  2. #2
    Join Date
    21st February 2007 - 09:55
    Bike
    Anything I can straddle
    Location
    At the bottom of a glass
    Posts
    488
    Assuming that they have a spare clutch lever for your bike then it should be only a few minuites.

    After my recent off that was one item I had to replace and as said it was the easiest part to replace.

    Mr
    "When you think of it,

    Lifes a bowl of ....MERDE"

  3. #3
    Join Date
    23rd June 2007 - 20:30
    Bike
    2007 Yamaha R-Sixer
    Location
    Jafa
    Posts
    470
    Blog Entries
    1
    Quote Originally Posted by DuLuX View Post
    So, it was a nice sunny saturday morning, i had my ginny all warmed up and ready to go for an uber ride round the bays and was considering going further as it was sunny.Stopped off at the garage in brooklyn to fill her up. and as i was taking off my gloves and about to dismount - some wee wifey in the car in front of me that was stationary - suddenly decided she wanted to be closer to the pump -so she reversed right back .... into me. snapped the clutch lever right off. there goes the weekend
    luckily the guy in the garage next door was about to leave for the weekend and offered to let me park the bike there until monday morning when the wellington motorcycle guys are gonna come pick it up.
    Anyone know the average turnaround for replacing the clutch lever? am assuming it will be quite fast? made me realize i should probably look into that damn insurance now... although the bill for this one is being sent round to the wee woman who dinged my wee beastie.

    hopefully get her back monday afternoon.
    Insurance is a good idea if you completely kill ya wee beast but for a clutch lever by far aint worth the access, Glad to hear the ginny came off with such minor damage though and it will take a bike shop like five minutes to change that lever

  4. #4
    Join Date
    4th August 2005 - 22:21
    Bike
    XJR1220
    Location
    Upper Hutt
    Posts
    1,488
    Bummer! New lever is probably around $20, and takes about 2 minutes to replace.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    21st December 2005 - 23:41
    Bike
    HONDA EXPRESS
    Location
    forest brightly feathered
    Posts
    6,457
    Stink!

    Was she sorry?
    You don't NEED a clutch lever, its a luxury

    www.PhotoRecall.co.nz

  6. #6
    Join Date
    5th September 2005 - 19:20
    Bike
    GSX-R600 K6, 07 CBR600RR
    Location
    Howick, Auckland
    Posts
    887
    Quote Originally Posted by Drum View Post
    Bummer! New lever is probably around $20, and takes about 2 minutes to replace.
    Yep. Think the real cost is the loss of this fine weekend's riding..... Bad luck mate.... Not your fault but anything learnt from this experience?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    25th January 2006 - 15:33
    Bike
    Honda NT650 The Stealth Bomber
    Location
    New Plymouth
    Posts
    571
    Get someone to show you how to replace both levers and have a spare set at home.

    I don't know your bike, but on an SV650 and a Honda NT650, lever replacing is easy peasy - I can do it no sweat and I am not exactly a mechanic.

    Getting the shop to do it for you would be a bit like putting your bike into the garage for them to put air in your tyres . . . it's really basic once someone has shown you!
    Illuc ivi, illud feci.

    Buggrim, Buggrit.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    13th February 2006 - 13:12
    Bike
    raptor 1000
    Location
    Dunedin
    Posts
    2,975
    first thing monday i would be getting insurance because if you had hit her car you would be looking at far more than the $20 to fix...3rd party should be compulsary

  9. #9
    Join Date
    12th May 2007 - 14:24
    Bike
    2005 Suzuki GN250E
    Location
    Wellington
    Posts
    36

    eek

    Quote Originally Posted by Leong View Post
    Yep. Think the real cost is the loss of this fine weekend's riding..... Bad luck mate.... Not your fault but anything learnt from this experience?
    Yeah i guess I learned to keep my eye open for women drivers! hehe joking!
    Seriously though I think it has made me realize that bikes are quite hard to spot if you're just going through the motions and not being 100% vigilant - I dont blame the lass, I probably could have done the same thing (although i always look behind me over the left shoulder no in the wing mirror!) - but i think the main thing is that if she can see me reversing at 2km/hr its just as likely she wont see me while putting her lipstick on as she's late for work doing 100 on the highway.

    first thing monday i would be getting insurance because if you had hit her car you would be looking at far more than the $20 to fix...3rd party should be compulsary -jimjim
    Yup, i have been emailing places the past week anyway to get quotes and will be calling round Monday until i get something sorted.
    --

    "I'd rather be riding my motorcycle thinking about God than sitting in church thinking about my motorcycle"

  10. #10
    Join Date
    21st June 2005 - 20:11
    Bike
    .
    Location
    .
    Posts
    1,929
    Quote Originally Posted by kiwifruit View Post
    Stink!

    Was she sorry?
    You don't NEED a clutch lever, its a luxury
    Pfft, back in my day we didn't have clutches! You had to pull the back wheel off the road, then change gear.

    Clutches? Luxury...

  11. #11
    Join Date
    5th September 2005 - 19:20
    Bike
    GSX-R600 K6, 07 CBR600RR
    Location
    Howick, Auckland
    Posts
    887
    Quote Originally Posted by DuLuX View Post
    Seriously though I think it has made me realize that bikes are quite hard to spot if you're just going through the motions and not being 100% vigilant
    So when I'm driving the cage... even though I ride a bike and am thus aware.... I'll admit that I'm not 100% vigilant 100% of the time and I reckon most people are the same. You don't need full concentration to drive so the mind tends to wander, unlike riding.

    Point is NOT to put yourself in the position where you can be harmed - doesn't matter whos fault it is.... likely you'll be the one hurt!! This time simple low speed/cost. Next week you could be filtering thru traffic...

    Don't know about this particular situation, but maybe you could have stopped in a different position, or somehow made eye contact, a nod or a hello or something so the driver knew you were there etc etc. When filtering, drivers often have zero chance of seeing you, so make sure that no matter what they do (within reason), you have not put yourself in a position where they could hit you. Same goes with where you stop at traffic lights, riding thru intersections where you have right of way etc etc.

    I think this is something experienced riders do automatically. It doesn't come naturally to those of us who have been driving for years before learning to ride.

    Just my 2c FWIW....

  12. #12
    Join Date
    18th December 2004 - 08:09
    Bike
    Triumph Tiger
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    2,086
    It pays to keep a set of spare levers with you on the bike, should pack under the seat nicely. If you ever have an off in the wops somewhere, this can often get you home.

    "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."

  13. #13
    Join Date
    22nd July 2006 - 11:59
    Bike
    900 Hornet, Preddy, RZ's, A100's
    Location
    Auckland, Takanini
    Posts
    5,159
    Blog Entries
    54
    Quote Originally Posted by Macktheknife View Post
    It pays to keep a set of spare levers with you on the bike, should pack under the seat nicely. If you ever have an off in the wops somewhere, this can often get you home.
    Now that is damn fine idea... I will do this ASAP since I'm the sort of person who ends up in the wop wops quite often and at random!
    "I like to ride anyplace, anywhere, any time, any way!"

  14. #14
    Join Date
    22nd July 2006 - 11:59
    Bike
    900 Hornet, Preddy, RZ's, A100's
    Location
    Auckland, Takanini
    Posts
    5,159
    Blog Entries
    54
    Sorry to hear about the loss of a fine days pootling But the upside is you are okay and it should be a relatively simple fix! And good on you for taking action right away and sorting out your insurance needs!

    Now, I woulda given you some bling but it appears I've been too generous with it lately!
    "I like to ride anyplace, anywhere, any time, any way!"

  15. #15
    Join Date
    19th November 2003 - 18:45
    Bike
    KTM 690 DUKE R
    Location
    Auckland - unavoidably...
    Posts
    6,422
    Quote Originally Posted by Macktheknife View Post
    It pays to keep a set of spare levers with you on the bike, should pack under the seat nicely. If you ever have an off in the wops somewhere, this can often get you home.
    If its a cable just put a loop in the end and pull it with your hand!

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •