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Thread: Motorcyclists in dice with death

  1. #1
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    Motorcyclists in dice with death

    http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/...839518153.html
    Motorcyclists in dice with death Jano Gibson
    May 5, 2008 - 12:37PM


    Motorbikes might save time cutting through traffic and be inexpensive to run, but they are deadly machines, with a new report finding riders are 23 times more likely to be killed than people travelling in cars.
    Motorbikes account for only 4.5 per cent of vehicle registrations in the country and less than 1 per cent of kilometres travelled.
    But motorbike deaths make up almost 15 per cent of road fatalities, according to a new Federal Government report, Fatal And Serious Road Crashes Involving Motorcyclists.
    Motorcyclists are also 40 times more likely to suffer serious injury than car occupants.
    Last year 240 motorcycle riders were killed and 5000 admitted to hospital.
    The report found many of the fatal accidents occurred on weekends and between the hours of 2pm and 6pm, indicating recreational riding, rather than commuting, was linked to the accidents.
    Excessive speed and alcohol were the two biggest causes of fatal motorbike accidents and one in 10 involved a rider not wearing a helmet.
    "My message to riders is simple: your first accident is likely to be your last so slow down, don't drink and ride, wear a helmet and, in the case of the weekend rider, acknowledge your inexperience and limits with the machine," the Minister for Infrastructure, Anthony Albanese, said.
    Since 2002, the number of motorcycles registered on Australian roads has grown an average of 6.8 per cent each year.
    Jano Gibson is Urban Affairs Reporter for the Herald

  2. #2
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    Like I've said before, motorcycles aren't dangerous - motorcyclists are dangerous.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    Like I've said before, motorcycles aren't dangerous - motorcyclists are dangerous.
    Like I said before - I disagree.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Big Dave View Post
    your first accident is likely to be your last
    Can't say it worked that way for me.

    kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
    - mikey

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    This is foreign info innit? NZ doesn't have anything Federal that I've seen. And I suspect Jano Gibson writes for the Sydney Morning Herald rather then the New Zealand Herald.

    Good job we're in NZ and these stats don't affect us
    In space, no one can smell your fart.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jrandom View Post
    Can't say it worked that way for me.

    Close to double figures.

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    Quote Originally Posted by McJim View Post
    This is foreign info innit? NZ doesn't have anything Federal that I've seen. And I suspect Jano Gibson writes for the Sydney Morning Herald rather then the New Zealand Herald.

    Good job we're in NZ and these stats don't affect us
    I did include the link thinking it wasn't necessary to index.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    motorcycles aren't dangerous
    Purely hypothetical situation.

    Late night. Dark. Raining. Deep in the boondocks of the west Waikato. A milk tanker goes around a back-road T-junction and slops diesel all over the road.

    Over the following hour or so, before the diesel washes off the road, several vehicles turn through the same intersection, coming the other way. The rain and the darkness make the diesel invisible, and it's right on the braking and turning point of the intersection.

    In that situation, is a two-wheeled vehicle any more inherently dangerous to its occupant(s) than a four-wheeled one?
    kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
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    Quote Originally Posted by jrandom View Post
    Purely hypothetical situation.
    Make a car fall over.

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    Thing is Katman, we both end up at the same conclusion.

    Appropriate preparedness.

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    Obviously there is more risk involved in riding a motorcycle than driving a car.

    However - weighing up the option of driving, cycling, busing or riding to work the cheapest, most enjoyable, most efficient and quickest way of getting to work is on the GN express.

    It's entirely possible I'll get run over by a car who's driver is reading the paper, talking on their phone and updating their facebook page rather than looking where they are going.
    But - thats a risk I'll just have to take.
    I feel a hell of a lot safer than when I cycled to school.
    Over the course of 6 years of cycling I was hit by cars, buses and timber loads hanging over the edge of trucks.
    I hit an open manhole cover at 40kph (couldn't avoid it between parked cars and the traffic flow) and was lucky to only break an arm.

    At least on a bike I can move with the traffic flow, avoid obstacles (using the lightening quick GN acceleration) and have proper protection head to foot.

    They should discount any death on a motorcycle where the rider isn't wearing a helmet. Kinda like counting suicides in murder statics. You've got to have a death wish riding on the road without a helmet.

  12. #12
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    Nobody rides on the road without a helmet any more than here - the stats would be off road/recreational.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    Like I've said before, motorcycles aren't dangerous - motorcyclists are dangerous.
    well have to agree there...get a bloke full of piss on a high powered bike..danger to everyone on the road.....
    Remeber going to a party in my youthfull days,,,and a guy comes out and starts blowing holes in the ceiling with a 22.
    cops turn up..and it ends up in the Hearald....Ban guns.Dangerous things.well at the time it was.....
    also read where a shelia was ironing next to the bath ,,and fell in .and electrocuted herself...so we going to ban irons to..
    comes down to responabilty..........
    just my 2c

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    Quote Originally Posted by jrandom View Post
    Purely hypothetical situation.

    Late night. Dark. Raining. Deep in the boondocks of the west Waikato. A milk tanker goes around a back-road T-junction and slops diesel all over the road.

    Over the following hour or so, before the diesel washes off the road, several vehicles turn through the same intersection, coming the other way. The rain and the darkness make the diesel invisible, and it's right on the braking and turning point of the intersection.

    In that situation, is a two-wheeled vehicle any more inherently dangerous to its occupant(s) than a four-wheeled one?
    But - not undetectable. You will , if riding with all senses alert , smell diesel long before you can see it.

    So, the alert biker smells diesel, slows down and take a straith line course , and motors off. The cagers,m sealed in their cagers know nothing and slide off

    I have MANY times smelled diesel but never seen it.

    You have FIVE senses. A wise man uses ALL of them
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

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    Quote Originally Posted by Big Dave View Post
    Like I said before - I disagree.
    I disagree with your disagreement.
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

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