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Thread: My first hair raising moment

  1. #16
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    29th December 2007 - 18:54
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    Hey as a fellow newbie I know where you are coming from. I wasn't there but from what you said erring o the side of caution sounds better than pushing your limits and not likeing he end result. As long as you are in one piece and have learnt something useful for the future the ride was a great learning experience. Go you!
    We're just two lost souls swimming in a fish bowl, year after year,
    Running over the same old ground.
    What have you found? The same old fears.
    Wish you were here. QWQ

  2. #17
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    11th February 2009 - 21:05
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    Sounds like you made the right choice!

    Are buses restricted to 90kph on the open road?? If yes I'm not sure why it was trying to pass you. If no, nothing to see here please move along.


  3. #18
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    23rd October 2009 - 13:58
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    Quote Originally Posted by DJSin View Post
    Are buses restricted to 90kph on the open road??
    Not to the best of my knowledge.

  4. #19
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    5th August 2008 - 11:05
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    GG Danielle with not schiz'ing out totally, had my big incident in the 2nd week of riding, truck won in the end :P Anyways, good to hear you kept it together for the most part and still riding!!!
    2wheels: Can't drift that sh!t...or can you?

  5. #20
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    17th December 2008 - 13:40
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    Quote Originally Posted by YellowDog View Post
    Hey Danielle, well done for surviving your first scare. There are some good points here and IMO the main one is confidence. It was your road and the bus driver also knew it. If you had held your line, the bus would have had to take action and not you. I know the fear of getting squished is not a nice one, but was never going to happen. You just need to believe it as the biggest danger to you at that moment was the resulting actions of your panic.
    Actually, Im going to argue that point. I dont know what the road code says (will have to look), but I dont recall seeing anything in it about the right of way (or even any guidance about it) when merging.

    However, given that the standard rule is 'give way to the right', that would infer that actually the left hand lane should give way to the right hand lane in a situation where you have two vehicles side-by-side. On the other hand, if you are 'merging like a zip' and its 'your turn' then to me that would give you the moral 'right of way'. It would also possibly depend on whether the left lane is merging into the right 'main' lane, or if the right lane is merging into the left 'main' lane. Also, the onus is on the passing vehicle to do it in a safe manner.

    But 'rights' aside, personally, I wouldnt argue with a bus, especially if I wasnt sure if he had seen me, or I had a suspicion that he didnt know exactly where I was

    I will agree with you though, that your 'body language' and 'attitude' definitely seem to make a difference to how the cages treat you on the road. If you ride with a mental attitude of 'i deserve to be here as much as you do' then people dont seem to try and mess with you as much. The size (and visibility) of the bike makes a difference too...

    As for the ones that DO push it, I usually try it make it a slightly 'close call' on purpose. Not enough to be dangerous, but enough to give them a fright. I reckon that works far better than giving them a finger or kicking in their door. People remember 'frights' and maybe they wont do it again next time.

  6. #21
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    2nd June 2007 - 01:01
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    Quote Originally Posted by DJSin View Post

    Are buses restricted to 90kph on the open road??

    "90 km/h is the maximum open road speed limit for all heavy vehicles, except school buses, which are limited to 80 km/h" - NZTA

    What was your road position like when you slowed down and the car passed you? If you were clinging on the left side, the bus might have taken that as an invitation to pass. Either way the bus would have been in the wrong, seeing that it would have been exceeding 90km/h and the passing maneuver wouldn't be considered safe, as you had to take evasive actions.

  7. #22
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    28th July 2009 - 23:25
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    Try to avoid being parallel with other vehicles - can really save ya bacon in town, as you're already in the clear if someone does a SMIDSY as it's LFYIWAOTWOIWPYOAGYAWTNEMHE (lucky for you I was already outta the way otherwise I woulda punched you one and given you a wedgie that not even Millhouse has experienced).

  8. #23
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    19th April 2009 - 22:34
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    Before the bus passed me i was on the right hand side of my lane, and i wasnt side by side with the bus until i slowed right down to let it pass so if we were talking "right of way" i had right of way the whole time vs the bus until it got ahead of me at a dangerous point
    Cant wait till training day on monday!

  9. #24
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    28th July 2009 - 23:25
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    Quote Originally Posted by danielle View Post
    Before the bus passed me i was on the right hand side of my lane, and i wasnt side by side with the bus until i slowed right down to let it pass so if we were talking "right of way" i had right of way the whole time vs the bus until it got ahead of me at a dangerous point
    Yeah, the bus shouldn’t have even attempted the overtake. I'd have done exactly as you did (if on a 150). Good that you had your b/f behind you looking out for you so you knew you could slow down a lot and the person behind you was aware of what was happening.

    Don't worry, soon you'll be on a bigger bike and you'll be able to accelerate out of trouble.

  10. #25
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    23rd August 2008 - 14:37
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    Don't be so hard on yourself. You are still here, unhurt and no accident. You made the right choice. You aren't blaming anyone else. You reacted and dealt with the situation appropriately. That is what saved you. Blame never changed someone elses behaviour (eg. car driver, bus). Well done.
    Quote Originally Posted by FlangMaster
    I had a strange dream myself. You know that game some folk play on the streets where they toss coins at the wall and what not? In my dream they were tossing my semi hardened stool at the wall. I shit you not.

  11. #26
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    17th February 2008 - 17:10
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    you did the right thing

    let them pass
    specialy if you are having trouble keeping up a good speed
    think what you would have been like if the bus had of been behind you for the next 30 k's
    if you cant out accelarate them (you had an fxr and probably would not have been comfy traveling at 120k/h)
    let them go. Pull over and stop if you have to
    nothing worse that following a nervios bike rider (speeds up then nearly stopes for a corner)

    and ye some track time whith no buses and cars to get in the way

    good on ya
    "Instructions are just the manufacturers opinion on how to install it" Tim Taylor of "Tool Time"
    “Saying what we think gives us a wider conversational range than saying what we know.” - Cullen Hightower

  12. #27
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    26th September 2008 - 16:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by danielle View Post
    Before the bus passed me i was on the right hand side of my lane, and i wasnt side by side with the bus until i slowed right down to let it pass so if we were talking "right of way" i had right of way the whole time vs the bus until it got ahead of me at a dangerous point
    Thats where it is so much nicer to have the confidence to know that when you open throttle you will burn all and sundry. You would then just stay in front of bus and merge in front of him.


    But if you are not sure of wht your bike can do, then you should probably play safe. After all, you are living to tell the tale, and bike is healthy, and thats all that counts right?
    The one thing man learns from history is that man does not learn from history
    Calvin and Hobbes: The surest sign of intelligent life out there is that it has not tried to contact us.
    Its easier to apologise than ask for permission.
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    Quote Originally Posted by quickbuck View Post
    It could be that I have one years experience repeated 33 times!

  13. #28
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    26th September 2008 - 16:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sentox View Post
    A whole year until your first hair-raising moment? Mine came in week 1 Apexed way, way too early going into a left turn, ran wide on the exit, and found myself looking into the grill of an oncoming SUV. Target fixation kicked in, and I went for the brakes, so it was pretty much a trifecta of the worst possible actions. Managed to get back to my side just in time, but my lines got a whole lot more disciplined afterwards, that's for sure.
    Seriously it sounds like you are (were?) itching to throw the bike around to find its limits- and the road is just not the place to do it.

    You dont need "lines" on the road. You ride in the middle with most swerve room for whatever. It literally is life or death. Yes its tempting to pretend - but ist just not worth it. and its even more tempting when you have more power.
    The one thing man learns from history is that man does not learn from history
    Calvin and Hobbes: The surest sign of intelligent life out there is that it has not tried to contact us.
    Its easier to apologise than ask for permission.
    Wise words:
    Quote Originally Posted by quickbuck View Post
    It could be that I have one years experience repeated 33 times!

  14. #29
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    7th February 2010 - 19:27
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    Quote Originally Posted by danielle View Post
    Before the bus passed me i was on the right hand side of my lane, and i wasnt side by side with the bus until i slowed right down to let it pass so if we were talking "right of way" i had right of way the whole time vs the bus until it got ahead of me at a dangerous point
    Unfortunately, buses will push bikers around in my experience (but I am in Auckland).
    Better to be safe than sorry - I have had buses fail to give way on roundabouts and there is no way you can miss me in hot pink!
    I would go for a bigger and louder bike as well, just so people can be more aware that you are there. If you go to a 250 get the exhaust done (take a baffle out? or whatever they do)

  15. #30
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    23rd October 2009 - 13:58
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    Quote Originally Posted by R Sole View Post
    Seriously it sounds like you are (were?) itching to throw the bike around to find its limits- and the road is just not the place to do it.
    Oh, absolutely. I was in far too much of a hurry when I started riding. Luckily I survived the first few months and came to the realisation that self-preservation is a better approach.

    You dont need "lines" on the road. You ride in the middle with most swerve room for whatever. It literally is life or death. Yes its tempting to pretend - but ist just not worth it. and its even more tempting when you have more power.
    Honestly, the only time I would ever put myself in the middle of the lane is when possible hazards on both sides dictate it. Otherwise, it's one of the tire tracks (again, as road hazards dictate). I believe lane positioning is pretty vital in general, and there's a lot of reasons to stay out of the middle imo: avoiding oil and other residue, extending the vanishing point in blind corners, maximising visibility to other traffic...

    As for apexing a corner... at any given speed, it lets you take the corner in a more relaxed manner, and with late apexes you maximise distance from the opposing lane at the point where oncoming traffic is most apt to cut the corner.

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