My theory on that is that it is a marketing exercise by the helmet manufacturers. There was an interesting article in a bike mag (I can't remember which one) a while ago suggesting the same thing.
After all, if it can't survive a stationary fall when empty, how can it protect a 15 pound head at 100+ km/h?
"Statistics are used as a drunk uses lampposts - for support, not illumination."
The foam inside helmet shells does not re-expand after being compressed.
Without the uncompressed foam, the helmet will just transmit impacts straight through to your head.
I don't think it's just a marketing exercise.
Maybe it would be possible to design a helmet that absorbed multiple impacts as well as current designs absorb one impact. I dunno. But if someone makes a helmet and sells it to me saying "this is only good for one crash, wear it again after a knock and all bets are off" I'm going to believe them. It's my fucking head.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
I don't disagree, the point I'm trying to make is that in an empty helmet there is nothing to compress the foam. The article in question referred to a helmet rolling off the seat and down a grassy hill. I would have no hesitation in replacing my helmet if I fell off and banged it heavily on the deck.
(I didn't think it would be long before I was taken to task.)![]()
"Statistics are used as a drunk uses lampposts - for support, not illumination."
I think it must be something about over loved/cleaned/pampered bikes, they seem to have this tendency to want to throw themselves on the floor and have a tanty, best thing you can do is stop cleaning and pampering it and it will stop it!!![]()
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
TOP QUOTE: “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money.”
Must be time I pulled a "dropped my bike standing still" story out of my hat.
First Harley I bought, I was 18, Rode it like a motocross bike, destroyed the clutch within a couple of weeks, took her home, put it up on a crate, pulled the side cover off, had to compress the clutch plates and hold them compressed while I undone the bolt that held them and the basket together. (Harley have a special tool for this) Using A hammer, vice grips and a spanner I couldn't do it, after an hour of frustration and skinned knuckles......sitting on my arse,facing the bike, I boot the clutch....
Bike flips straight off the crate, Then slides upside down off the drive and down a bank into a garden.
Three of us couldn't move it, ended up with a chain around the wheel and dragging it out with a car.
LMFAO.
Damage to paint, handle bars, levers, Indicators, seat, Wheel plus the refurbished clutch, Just short of $3000
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