On the contrary, the statement indicates a lack of even basic understanding of what is actually happening.
If you climb a high tree, look down and feel compelled to hold on tight, that's because evolution has taught us that a fall will hurt.
Nothing in the evolution of humans has prepared us for motor vehicles. Many (most) road users fail to link their actions with any possible consequences.
Combine that with the minimal skills of most NZ road users and be afraid. Be very afraid.
That way you may just survive the lottery...
There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop
and
http://www.nzta.govt.nz/resources/cr...orcyclists.pdf
and
http://www.transport.govt.nz/researc...s-2011-(1).pdf
are all useful and relevant. Perhaps Mr Kiwi could take this to motonz
They called it paradise, I don't know why.
Call someplace paradise, kiss it goodbye.
If you think of those actions being possible factors in an accident ... it gives cause for thought ...
People that are afraid ... think more ...
On the road ... there is nothing that scares you more ... than the knowledge that your own ability and skill ... might not be enough to keep you alive.
When life throws you a curve ... Lean into it ...
The MOT document may contain some useful information/statistical breakdowns but doesn't go in to much detail. The other report is template driven rubbish - 100% of motorcycle crashes involve motorcycles apparently. Who'd a thunk it?
The problem is that the majority of crashes involving motorbikes are not investigated to a level that people on here are asking for, certainly nowhere near what the CAA produce. If it is fatal and the serious crash unit are involved then it is looked at in much greater detail. Otherwise it is luck of the draw as to what is recorded on the crash report and what goes in to producing the reports linked above. Unfortunately when you see what basic and obvious information can be missing from the crash report it doesn't give you much hope that a lot of analysis went in to it.
Considering that TPTB have made it appear that they care by releasing the Safer Motorcycling guide I am sure that if a request was made to the right person in the right tone a summary of all SCU or Coroners reports for all fatal motorcycle reports could be easily produced.
It doesn't even need a right tone, ANYONE can request the coronial info...there's links and stuff too.... http://www.justice.govt.nz/courts/co...-register-data
http://www.justice.govt.nz/courts/co...-coronial-data
http://www.justice.govt.nz/courts/co...-coronial-data
There's also requests under the Official Information Act. I'd wager SCU data is easy enough to get to as well![]()
Last edited by Genestho; 5th December 2012 at 20:44. Reason: links
ter·ra in·cog·ni·taAchievement is not always success while reputed failure often is. It is honest endeavor, persistent effort to do the best possible under any and all circumstances.
Orison Swett Marden
Perzackery.I remember the info was even harder to track down back near 5 years ago, statistics were shocking too. I remember copying the jpeg '05 and '06 stats from the transport site and they were exactly the same lol.
They've definately gotten better at it (It being; bringing info into public domain). Maybe it's also a volume issue, how many aviation crashes vs road crashes need investigating...
ter·ra in·cog·ni·taAchievement is not always success while reputed failure often is. It is honest endeavor, persistent effort to do the best possible under any and all circumstances.
Orison Swett Marden
Also bear in mind that first responders are attempting to gauge the status of an accident victim or two and the detail they are more interested in is how to extract those people from the situation before they die. The cop who ordered a helicopter for me was brilliant, and possibly saved my life as there is no telling how a 1.5hr ambulance ride with 10 broken ribs and fluctuating blood pressure would have gone. I've also seen SCU guys turn up to hospital to check up on people. Sometimes the accident detail comes second to making sure people are looked after properly, especially for people who have a large area to cover. They may bounce from accident to accident and often when they arrive people and vehicles have been moved for safety's sake, making it harder to work out what went on.
If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?
Hmmm. I'll try and be more precise than that. Tickets are a red herring; I didn't say anything about 'skill' reducing tickets (although, of course, if you don't break the law, you won't get ticketed - right?) I'm arguing that:
- Skill (ability to control a machine, and ability to think about what's going on around you) is inversely proportionate to the chance of binning on the road.
- ... yeah, that's about it.
The above seems such a truism that I'm not sure what else there is to say, other than everyone calling me a cunt. Which should be old news, anyhow.
![]()
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
Your last point is a big telling factor in the difference between aviation crash investigation and road crash investigation. I guess there is pressure on aviation to clear the scene so "normality" can return but they seems to have days as opposed to on the road where they have have minutes, sometimes those minutes stretch to hours but within 24 hours. And there are no black boxes, which would be a double edged sword.
Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people. --- Unknown sage
So the NZTA says that on a motorcycle you're 23 times more likely to get pwned than a cager over the same distance.
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