Found sum interesting stuff right here.
http://www.transport.govt.nz/assets/...et-July-07.pdf
Does anyone have a clue what happened that brought the roadkill down so drastically from the 80's to the 2000's.
Found sum interesting stuff right here.
http://www.transport.govt.nz/assets/...et-July-07.pdf
Does anyone have a clue what happened that brought the roadkill down so drastically from the 80's to the 2000's.
Always remember to wake up before ya get up and then watch on who ya step on yer way up as ya dunno who ya'll need on yer way down
Good post, thanks for that ... makes really interesting reading.
To really answer your question, you'd have to go back to the registration stats and see how many motorcycles were on the road and then work out the number of accidents per 100 bikes on the road.
You'll see from this post of registration stats, that in 1980/81 there were three times as many bikes on the road as there are now (30K vs 11K). Although at the rate sales are going, we might reach those levels again soon.
Two things happened.
The first one Gubb already addressed, and that is the number of motorcycles on the road decreased after 1981.
The second one is that the open road speed limit was increased from 80 to 100 kmh in 1986. And, hey, look at the graph. The peak motorcycle accident rate was in 1986!!!!![]()
Time to ride
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I'd put money on the impact of deregulation of imported cars, making more youngsters choose cars over motorcycles as first transport.
Couple that with NZ effectively being in the grip of 2 recessions, one in 1987-89, the other in 1992-95, reducing discretionary spending hugely.
Look in five years when the latest recession is over. It will have a corresponding effect due to the sales of bike dropping off.
And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
Very interesting. The graph at the bottom of page 4 shows that between 2002 - 2006, in crashes involving motorcycles, the rider was primarily responsible in more than half the cases.
Sure motorcycling is dangerous but I don't know how many times I've been told that usually the rider is taken out and wasn't at fault. That assertion is clearly wrong according to these stats. Go figure
That alone has to be the major reason....Up untill the cheap Jap imports era cars were horrendously expensive...AND very boring..
(Thousands and thousands of dollars just for a second hand Vauxhall Viva...)
Now you can buy a 200 HP turbo Blabla for a couple hundred dollars.....
Second hand motorbikes however are far more expensive in NZ then in most other countries....
Plus licences for Motorbikes are now a lot harder to get, and a lot more expensive!
Opinions are like arseholes: Everybody has got one, but that doesn't mean you got to air it in public all the time....
I see in the original link that you have a higher chance of crashing between the hours of midday and 4pm on a Saturday or Sunday so my advice would be to stay put in whichever pub you're in and ride home after 4.![]()
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