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Date: 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." I'm assuming that you want to save the buck, and that perhaps you care about the environment, if not that you plain hate "cages," and, most importantly, that you want to avoid a senseless accident like this. Sure, you would say, "Why not ban the damned phones!?" But you know deep down it won't happen. Too much money into it, you know. So in a bicycle you could have let yourself go and hit the stupid woman (maybe a MADD member?) square on the bumper. At least I've made the switch. You can even get a chopper bicycle! Isn't this cute? http://www.phatcycles.com/soon.htm (I meant the girl) Hang Up and Drive I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like ear). Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than the bike itself is probably worth. As I looked up, with murder in my heart, off she went, oblivious to what had just happened behind her. I hope that phone call was her boyfriend, dumping her. Even before the accident, my motorcycle was no gleaming machine -- no snarling, customized Harley with the chrome pipes polished to within an inch of its owner's life. It's an '86 Honda Shadow. At 500cc, it's nimble enough for city riding while packing enough power for the road, as long as the road isn't too long. The seat's kinda ripped up, there's some rust and it's got its share of dings and dents. But it runs OK, costs about $4 at the gas pump and, best of all, you can park it pretty much where you like. It's also a freakin' death trap. The most hard-core biker -- even the biggest fat guy straddling the baddest hog -- knows that riding a motorcycle is inherently dangerous. There's no such thing as a "minor" motorcycle accident, aside from maybe dropping the bike on your foot. We know this, but we accept the risk of riding. Why? Well, some of us are probably just stupid. There's the thrill factor, of course, and it is fun. It's also relatively cheap, you can maneuver through heavy traffic and you always look cooler than even the coolest dude in his Euro sports car. Because you are cool, and he's just a loser who dropped 60 grand on a penis extender. Why is it that only a handful of states have made it illegal to talk on the phone while driving? Driving is not something you do as an afterthought, OK? You're hurtling down the road behind the wheel of a 3,000-pound vehicle (more like 7,000 pounds in that idiotic destroyer of worlds, the Hummer) and it doesn't take a physicist to figure out that if you hit a human being -- astride a motorcycle, riding a bicycle or on foot -- you're going to do some damage. And it doesn't take a rocket scientist or an IT guy or a professional poker player to understand that anything you do -- like talking on the phone -- that distracts you from the business of driving increases the chances of causing a serious accident. So do everybody a favor and turn off your cell phone while you drive. (It's OK. Your important life can wait while you zip over to the mall.) If you have to make a call this very minute, pull over. This ain't exactly brain surgery, but it might help prevent some of it, you know? Then there are the vehicles themselves. Hummers aside, have you seen the size of some these, these ... well, when Paw drove to town we used to call them pickup trucks. Now? Pickup trucks on steroids, maybe. (A truck that seats six adults: What genius dreamed that one up?) They're huge. They ride high. Too high. There's a hood the size of Rhode Island out in front of you, blotting out the sun. It makes it even harder to see what's out there. If it was easy to miss a biker when you were driving your Volvo station wagon, well, try checking your field of vision in one of these mesomorphic babies. Of course, you're probably so busy cranking up that Slayer CD that you'd miss Sonoma Sammy at full throttle on his Fatboy. RIP, Sammy. Car manufacturers are also tarting up their vehicles with all sorts of things that, when used like most humans tend to use them, distract you from watching the road. GPS (What? You can't pull over and read a map?), high-end sound systems requiring your full attention to operate and -- what in God's name were they thinking? -- in-dash video monitors: These have no place in a motor vehicle. Cars exist to convey you from one place to another. They are not concert halls or TV babysitters for cranky children. (Teach the kid to read. Better yet, teach him to love to read, then give him a book, fer crissake.) What about the motorcycles themselves? They're bigger, faster and more dangerous than ever. Why would anyone want to ride a motorcycle capable of doing 150 mph? So they can scrape you off the road with a spatula instead of dumping you in a body bag? But the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period. (many replies at this link) http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,68769-0.html WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE http://webspawner.com/users/donquijote BIKE FOR PEACE http://webspawner.com/users/bikeforpeace
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Date: 06 Nov 2006 13:02:10
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: my Quixotic adventures will continue
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Though not worthy of another thread the small incident that occurred last night is illustrative of what's going out there... I was riding my bike at night with the tail light and all, and all of a sudden I hear the blast of a horn. It was a young lady --phone-on-ear-- who panicked or was trying to intimidate me out of the way, while the three-lane road was totally deserted... This is a sort of terrorism without terrorists, or without a cause for that matter, just plain simple stupidity and lack of interest on the part of the traffic authorities and politicians to erradicate this problem. But my Quixotic adventures --riding a bike on the road-- will continue. To be continued (if I survive). Of course, and I will wear my one-of-a-kind T-shirts, like this... http://cafepress.com/putsomefun "My struggle is not against the puppet, but against the puppeteer"
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Date: 01 Nov 2006 13:58:54
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: WHAT DOESN'T KILL YOU, MAKE YOU STRONGER
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MLOM wrote: > donquijote1954 wrote: > > Tom Keats wrote: > > > > Actually, bicycles are one of the most safe transportational > > > > modes. Safer even than being a pedestrian. Motorcycles are > > > > one of the least safe, as is being a pedestrian. > > > > Where you see differences I see simliraties: MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES AND > > PEDESTRIANS SHARE BEING AT THE BOTTOM OF THE FOOD CHAIN. > > > > Even though bicycles may not that dangerous, they are perceived as > > such, and the authorities don't do much to dismiss those fears. It's > > not that I'm that fearful (I even rode last night several miles at 3 > > o'clock am and I'm still alive) it's just the fear factor is always > > there particularly in heavy traffic. But you know the saying: WHAT > > DOESN'T KILL YOU, MAKE YOU STRONGER. > > It sounds like the old anecdote of the guy on a safari who asks his > guide, "Is that lion safe?" Response: "He's safer than you." I see. But I won't feel safe until his paws and teeth are removed. Or until he publicly renounces to eating meat and becomes a vegetarian.
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Date: 31 Oct 2006 13:36:07
From: MLOM
Subject: Re: WHAT DOESN'T KILL YOU, MAKE YOU STRONGER
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donquijote1954 wrote: > Tom Keats wrote: > > > Actually, bicycles are one of the most safe transportational > > > modes. Safer even than being a pedestrian. Motorcycles are > > > one of the least safe, as is being a pedestrian. > > Where you see differences I see simliraties: MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES AND > PEDESTRIANS SHARE BEING AT THE BOTTOM OF THE FOOD CHAIN. > > Even though bicycles may not that dangerous, they are perceived as > such, and the authorities don't do much to dismiss those fears. It's > not that I'm that fearful (I even rode last night several miles at 3 > o'clock am and I'm still alive) it's just the fear factor is always > there particularly in heavy traffic. But you know the saying: WHAT > DOESN'T KILL YOU, MAKE YOU STRONGER. It sounds like the old anecdote of the guy on a safari who asks his guide, "Is that lion safe?" Response: "He's safer than you."
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Date: 31 Oct 2006 12:04:40
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: WHAT DOESN'T KILL YOU, MAKE YOU STRONGER
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Tom Keats wrote: > > Actually, bicycles are one of the most safe transportational > > modes. Safer even than being a pedestrian. Motorcycles are > > one of the least safe, as is being a pedestrian. Where you see differences I see simliraties: MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES AND PEDESTRIANS SHARE BEING AT THE BOTTOM OF THE FOOD CHAIN. Even though bicycles may not that dangerous, they are perceived as such, and the authorities don't do much to dismiss those fears. It's not that I'm that fearful (I even rode last night several miles at 3 o'clock am and I'm still alive) it's just the fear factor is always there particularly in heavy traffic. But you know the saying: WHAT DOESN'T KILL YOU, MAKE YOU STRONGER.
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Date: 29 Oct 2006 00:48:44
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <Xns986AE4E58E8ABsmvsmv@216.196.97.142 >, "Stephen!" <NO@spam.com > writes: > tomkeats@bud.garden.local (Tom Keats) wrote in > news:b981ie.eaj.ln@vcn.bc.ca: > >> Gee whiz, motorcycling in Wisconsin is almost twice as dangerous >> as bicycling! And about a third more dangerous than just walking! > > Wow... You have absolutely no grasp of statistics, do you? How come you killed rec.bicycles.misc from the Newsgroups list? What do you fear? From Ken Kifer's site: <http://www.kenkifer.com/bikepages/health/risks.htm > "There is absolutely no way that I can furnish definite proof that bicycling is a safe activity. Those of us who bicycle on a regular basis while following the traffic laws know that it is a safe activity from years of experience, but we are also aware that other cyclists have frequent accidents, we assume due to different behavior. Nor can I do anything to reconcile my various sources of statistics. However, I think I can easily establish that cycling is much less dangerous that what the fearmongers insist and that it has compensating benefits which are more important than the risks involved. I think you will agree when you finish reading this that bicycling is very far from being the dangerous activity that the fearmongers like to make it appear." I invite you to check out the above URL, and to read further. I assure you it's benign and well-known. And there are some interesting numbers in there, as well as what I consider an honest approach to interpreting them. I am not attacking you. But as a bicyclist, I feel compelled to defend myself and my fellow riders from the misbegotten notion that bicycling is particularly dangerous. Further cites & references bolstering my position shall be forthcoming. In the meantime, I friendlily wish you a pleasant weekend, and a Good Life. cheers, Tom -- -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn [point] bc [point] ca
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Date: 28 Oct 2006 20:51:54
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <timberwoof.spam-A6C0F5.17360724102006@nnrp-virt.nntp.sonic.net >, Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com > writes: > Were you paying attention when I and several others told you to pay > attention? It doesn't matter what she was doing: she was in front of you > and you should have paid attention to her. You should have been far > enough away that you could have stopped in time. Or, when the light > turned green and she didn't go, you should have noticed and not smashed > into her. > > None of which has anything to do with this sub-thread, which is that > sometimes you can accelerate out of a bad situation. The numbers seem to indicate that more often, one accelerates /into/ bad situations. Out of the frying pan, into the fire. cheers, Tom -- -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn [point] bc [point] ca
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Date: 28 Oct 2006 23:28:23
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote in news:qg81ie.ibj.ln@vcn.bc.ca: > The numbers seem to indicate that more often, one > accelerates /into/ bad situations. What numbers? -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 28 Oct 2006 20:47:55
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <9aerhe.7lb.ln@vcn.bc.ca >, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) writes: > In article <1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com>, > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> writes: > >> As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > Yeah, well, what else is new? > >> Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. >> Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >> and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > > Okay, I can't let that last statement go by unrebutted > any longer. > > Actually, bicycles are one of the most safe transportational > modes. Safer even than being a pedestrian. Motorcycles are > one of the least safe, as is being a pedestrian. > > I'll get back to you on that on the weekend and provide some > substantiating references (unless someone else beats me to it.) > For now I've gotta hit the hay and get my 40 winks before my > last graveyard shift of the week. > > In the meantime, I'll leave you with this consideration: > motorcycles and bicycles involve differing approaches to > interacting with fellow traffic, hence exposures to > differing risk levels for various scenarios (and perhaps > differing tactics for dealing with those risks.) > > Bicycles may not have the "life saving horspower" of MCs, > but they /do/ have some pretty good life saving handling, > if the rider is up to it. Have a look at the motorcycle/bicycle/pedestrian crash numbers here: http://www.dot.wisconsin.gov/drivers/drivers/traffic/crash/final.htm At the ends of the lines, under "Avg" over the period from years 2000 to 2005 we have: Pedestrian Crashes: 1,504 Pedestrians Killed: 50 Pedestrians Injured: 1,489 Bicycle Crashes: 1,195 Bicyclists Killed: 11 Bicyclists Injured: 1,155 Motorcycle Crashes: 2,296 Motorcyclists Killed: 81 Motorcyclists Injured: 2,184 Gee whiz, motorcycling in Wisconsin is almost twice as dangerous as bicycling! And about a third more dangerous than just walking! Here's another good 'un: http://neptune.spacebears.com/opine/helmets.html Pedestrian Bicycle Motorcycle Car Death Rates ----------- per 10,000 vehicles N/A N/A 6.7 1.6 per 1 million population 16.9 2.5 11 12.9 per 1 million miles travelled 0.2 0.2 27.6 1.3 Injury Rates ------------ per 10,000 vehicles N/A N/A 133 124 per 1 million population 280 453 210 987 per 1 million miles travelled 3.9 15 551 99 Hmmm ... maybe all that power & speed that's intrinsic to motorcycles actually contributes more to crashes than to safety? I can come up with more, and I'm just about ready to do so. I fact, I shall. In the meantime I sincerely hope you don't become another fatality statistic on your dangerous, stinky, air-pollutin' murdercycle. The world already has more than enough good people dying uselessly & needlessly. Please be safe, and stick around to make your positive contribution to this wonderful world that needs good people to keep it goin'. cheers, Tom -- -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn [point] bc [point] ca
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Date: 28 Oct 2006 23:29:32
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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tomkeats@bud.garden.local (Tom Keats) wrote in news:b981ie.eaj.ln@vcn.bc.ca: > Gee whiz, motorcycling in Wisconsin is almost twice as dangerous > as bicycling! And about a third more dangerous than just walking! Wow... You have absolutely no grasp of statistics, do you? -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 15:59:19
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <9aerhe.7lb.ln@vcn.bc.ca >, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) writes: > In article <1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com>, > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> writes: > >> As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > Yeah, well, what else is new? > >> Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. >> Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >> and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > > Okay, I can't let that last statement go by unrebutted > any longer. Your above statement: "Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well" shouldn't really go by unrebutted either. But, oh well. One thing at at time. cheers, Tom -- -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn [point] bc [point] ca
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 15:54:01
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com >, "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com > writes: > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. Yeah, well, what else is new? > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Okay, I can't let that last statement go by unrebutted any longer. Actually, bicycles are one of the most safe transportational modes. Safer even than being a pedestrian. Motorcycles are one of the least safe, as is being a pedestrian. I'll get back to you on that on the weekend and provide some substantiating references (unless someone else beats me to it.) For now I've gotta hit the hay and get my 40 winks before my last graveyard shift of the week. In the meantime, I'll leave you with this consideration: motorcycles and bicycles involve differing approaches to interacting with fellow traffic, hence exposures to differing risk levels for various scenarios (and perhaps differing tactics for dealing with those risks.) Bicycles may not have the "life saving horspower" of MCs, but they /do/ have some pretty good life saving handling, if the rider is up to it. cheers, Tom -- -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn [point] bc [point] ca
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 13:22:12
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: the three wise monkeys
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The point is, not so much that the motorcycle rider was to blame or not, but that both motorcyclists and cyclists live under the constant terror of idiots on the phone. WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE. Countries that ban cell phones while driving (In Poland you get fined $1,000! while America, of course, ignores the problem) http://www.cellular-news.com/car_bans/ But here here's the approach followed by MADD, the politicians and the traffic authorities (the three wise monkeys)... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Monkeys-nikko-japan.jpg
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 19:22:57
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: the three wise monkeys
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In article <1161894132.264567.221720@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com >, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > The point is, not so much that the motorcycle rider was to blame or > not, but that both motorcyclists and cyclists live under the constant > terror of idiots on the phone. WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE. Absolutely, Donqui. And in future, you should watch your following distances very carefully‹especially behind idiots on their cell phones. Hint: If you can tell that the idiot is talking on a cell phone, you're probably too close. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 12:59:40
From:
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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BroTHeR zAcHaRy wrote: > yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: > > > > You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two > > months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. > > *feh*, after a concussion and a broken clavicle, I was back to work two > days later. I shouldn't have been... but I was. Knowing him, if it hadn't been for that pesky six week coma thing he probably would have too. He had the neatest little gizmo to bend his knee they had to rebuild. Two loops with about two feet of cargo tiedown strapping between them. Hook one end over your foot and pull on the other one to raise your leg. Compound fracture of the humerus. He damn near was a Darwin Award contestant. All this a good 3 years before Indian Larry did himself in doing the same damn fool thing. > > > He also > > only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he > > doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. > > Idiot. I bought a ZX-10 about ten years ago. It only had 15K mi. on the > odometer. The back rotor, however was concave (so that and a new set of > pads was the first thing I did to it) . The two previous owners were > apparently rear brake lovers, too. The thing is that a ZX-10 MIGHT be able to stoppie. The large cruiser the guy I know owns couldn't under any circumstances.
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 12:42:46
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <1161802018.187143.70760@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>, > "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > Well, the small one should get away with some stuff not allowed to the > > big one. > > For example, you think you should be able to get away with following too > closely. (It's better if the person you followed too closely was yacking > on a cell phone[1] because you can blame it on that.) > > [1] You must have been following quite closely to be able to tell that. > I'm thinking here of bar hopping among bikers. Let them be! Not the car on the SUV though. They can kill many innocents.
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 12:36:31
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: survival of the fittest not the biggest
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Billzz wrote: > > "insects are prey to many animals; monkeys, anteaters, coatimundis, > > spiders, and frogs all enjoy an occasional insect such as a termite or > > a grasshopper. For this reason, insects have developed many > > techniques to escape predators. Grasshoppers and katydids (insect > > similar to a grasshopper) have powerful hind legs that allow them jump > > from place to place at incredible speeds. Many animals use the > > camouflage to remain unseen. A great number of animals, including > > insects, birds, and wild cats, in the Amazon are able to blend into the > > background. Some animals have mechanism that allow it to defend or > > attack. An example of such would be the scorpion which can use its > > stinger to kill a prey or defend itself when under attack. Monkeys > > try to stick to the trees. In the trees, they are able to quickly move > > about. When on land, however, they can become targets for jaguars and > > other wild cats." > > > > http://library.thinkquest.org/21395/graphics/fauna/forest.html > > This seems to be good advice. Ride your motorcyle in the trees and you > won't get run down by a Jaguar. Not quite. Jaguars are tree climbers as far as I know, but lions aren't for the most part. Motorcycles can only benefit from taming the predators though, and that would take a miracle --or a banana, according to this story... The monkey knows that the lion is more powerful than him, and knows he better use his own weapons, so he decides to be funny, that being his natural gift. The story goes like this: The lion roars: "Monkey, I'm made to eat meat, so you better come down right now." And the monkey replies very cool: "Mighty King, that's doubtful as the Bible says you were vegetarian, so you can eat my banana..." (T-shirts with the slogan "You Can Eat My Banana" available now!) By the way, DO YOU THINK THE LION WILL EAT THE BANANA? __ No, the lion is a carnivore __ Why not, he's gonna love it! __ We gotta wait until he's hungry __ We can stick it into a sausage
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 18:20:25
From: Alan Moore
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: <snip > >Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her >back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I >never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging >with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) >and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up >pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than >the bike itself is probably worth. Gee, given the choice of landing on a nicely upholstered car seat or a slab of pavement, I'd go for the car seat! Do they have really soft pavement where you ride? Al Moore DoD 734
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 11:51:55
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: survival of the fittest not the biggest
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I don't have to tell you that the big fish eats the little fish, but I got to remind you that the SUV eats the rest of the vehicles out there. 'Department of Transportation scientists study the "kill rate" - how manyother people certain vehicle models are responsible for killing each year in crashes. Looking at SUVs, these scientists came to a frightening conclusion. For every one life saved by driving an SUV, five others will be taken. In one specific instance, they found that the SUV Chevy Tahoe kills 122 people for every 1 million models on the road. In comparison, the Honda Accord kills 21 people.' http://www.suv.org/newsarticle.html
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 11:46:58
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: > donquijote1954 wrote: > > Tim Kreitz wrote: > > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > > > > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > > > rider. > > > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > > > Well, you never feel frustrated by ladies like this. Once we create our > > own *bike lanes,* we'll be absolutely free from these MADD drivers. (I > > call them so because they don't have driving manners but never drink.) > > I ride motorcycles. I drive cars. I also ride bicycles. You can take > you bike lanes and shove them someplace rude. I pay for the fucking > roads just like everybody else and I'll use all of my vehicles there. > I don't want to go where the bike lanes go, I want to go wherever the > fuck I want to. OK, me too, but we must know what is bad, better and good. I drive my girlfriends Lexus (bad), I ride a motorcycle whenever I have a chance (but havent fixed my motorcycle) and I ride bicycles of late (good). What's it's not good in that the two wheeled vehicles are always at the bottom of the food chain, living an insect's life so speak. > > > > > We cyclists then we'll live similar to Key West, Daiquiri in > > handlebars. > > In many states thats a DUI. Well, the small one should get away with some stuff not allowed to the big one. A guy in an SUV thus should have to pay twice more for drinking and driving such a deadly piece of junk. The guy on the bike though hurts no one and should be allowed to have fun. That's why Key West is such a draw. Still you find the StupidUVs but they pretty much behave. > > > > > By the way, cyclists and motorcyclists have a lot in common: TWO WHEELS > > GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD. And we also share this T-shirt... > > Any number of wheels good. Poor vehicle operators bad. True. SUVs should have special license though. Too much risk to others. Bad behavior matters and so does size.
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 20:02:43
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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In article <1161802018.187143.70760@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com >, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > Well, the small one should get away with some stuff not allowed to the > big one. For example, you think you should be able to get away with following too closely. (It's better if the person you followed too closely was yacking on a cell phone[1] because you can blame it on that.) [1] You must have been following quite closely to be able to tell that. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 11:26:53
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: survival of the fittest not the biggest
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <7MednQ1e3K_Y_KDYnZ2dnUVZ_smdnZ2d@wavecable.com>, > "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: > > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > rider. > > Oh, baloney! Some of us bikers know we're more exposed to traffic > stupidity, so we advocate reasonable following distances jut for this > sort of thing. > I see you are ready to bow to every stupid driver out there on four wheels, but in the struggle between big and stupid and small and st, the winner should be the last one. It's survival of the fittest not the biggest. In the following paragraph think of the animal on two wheels (cyclist or motorcyclist) as an insect, or better yet as a monkey. Well, the monkey has developed an strategy based on staying on the treetops (similar to cyclists having bike lanes), well away from the predators down there (SUVs and other aggressive cagers)... (the comparison is not totally scientific, but you get the point about how to deal with the jungle out there) "insects are prey to many animals; monkeys, anteaters, coatimundis, spiders, and frogs all enjoy an occasional insect such as a termite or a grasshopper. For this reason, insects have developed many techniques to escape predators. Grasshoppers and katydids (insect similar to a grasshopper) have powerful hind legs that allow them jump from place to place at incredible speeds. Many animals use the camouflage to remain unseen. A great number of animals, including insects, birds, and wild cats, in the Amazon are able to blend into the background. Some animals have mechanism that allow it to defend or attack. An example of such would be the scorpion which can use its stinger to kill a prey or defend itself when under attack. Monkeys try to stick to the trees. In the trees, they are able to quickly move about. When on land, however, they can become targets for jaguars and other wild cats." http://library.thinkquest.org/21395/graphics/fauna/forest.html
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 19:57:59
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: survival of the fittest not the biggest
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In article <1161800813.801761.148780@i3g2000cwc.googlegroups.com >, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > Timberwoof wrote: > > In article <7MednQ1e3K_Y_KDYnZ2dnUVZ_smdnZ2d@wavecable.com>, > > "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: > > > > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > > > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > > rider. > > > > Oh, baloney! Some of us bikers know we're more exposed to traffic > > stupidity, so we advocate reasonable following distances jut for this > > sort of thing. > > > > I see you are ready to bow to every stupid driver out there on four > wheels, but in the struggle between big and stupid and small and st, > the winner should be the last one. It's survival of the fittest not the > biggest. > > In the following paragraph <snipped irrelevant lession on entymology > So. How close were you following the car, and why were you that close at that speed? -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 22:25:38
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: survival of the fittest not the biggest
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Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com > wrote in news:timberwoof.spam- 20A8B3.19575925102006@nnrp-virt.nntp.sonic.net: > So. How close were you following the car, and why were you that close at > that speed? Don't you get it? It wasn't his fault... It was the fault of the cell phone company for providing coverage in that area... The sooner you accept that the sooner you'll fell sorry for him... -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 12:36:43
From: Billzz
Subject: Re: survival of the fittest not the biggest
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"donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote in message news:1161800813.801761.148780@i3g2000cwc.googlegroups.com... > > Timberwoof wrote: >> In article <7MednQ1e3K_Y_KDYnZ2dnUVZ_smdnZ2d@wavecable.com>, >> "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: >> >> > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of >> > the >> > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle >> > rider. >> >> Oh, baloney! Some of us bikers know we're more exposed to traffic >> stupidity, so we advocate reasonable following distances jut for this >> sort of thing. >> > > I see you are ready to bow to every stupid driver out there on four > wheels, but in the struggle between big and stupid and small and st, > the winner should be the last one. It's survival of the fittest not the > biggest. > > In the following paragraph think of the animal on two wheels (cyclist > or motorcyclist) as an insect, or better yet as a monkey. Well, the > monkey has developed an strategy based on staying on the treetops > (similar to cyclists having bike lanes), well away from the predators > down there (SUVs and other aggressive cagers)... > > (the comparison is not totally scientific, but you get the point about > how to deal with the jungle out there) > > "insects are prey to many animals; monkeys, anteaters, coatimundis, > spiders, and frogs all enjoy an occasional insect such as a termite or > a grasshopper. For this reason, insects have developed many > techniques to escape predators. Grasshoppers and katydids (insect > similar to a grasshopper) have powerful hind legs that allow them jump > from place to place at incredible speeds. Many animals use the > camouflage to remain unseen. A great number of animals, including > insects, birds, and wild cats, in the Amazon are able to blend into the > background. Some animals have mechanism that allow it to defend or > attack. An example of such would be the scorpion which can use its > stinger to kill a prey or defend itself when under attack. Monkeys > try to stick to the trees. In the trees, they are able to quickly move > about. When on land, however, they can become targets for jaguars and > other wild cats." > > http://library.thinkquest.org/21395/graphics/fauna/forest.html This seems to be good advice. Ride your motorcyle in the trees and you won't get run down by a Jaguar.
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 11:09:21
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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Road Glidin' Don wrote: > On 24 Oct 2006 14:29:09 -0700, "donquijote1954" > <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > > >TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD > > Unless you're a twit cross-poster who doesn't know how to stop a > motorcycle. > I learned fast enough and never went down again: Too much front brake in light rain. Luckily I was slow enough not to hurt myself. Still two wheels is better than four wheels because they are the underdog in this dog-eats-dog traffic. And they pollute less to boot.
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 07:06:40
From:
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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donquijote1954 wrote: > Tim Kreitz wrote: > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > > > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > > rider. > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > Well, you never feel frustrated by ladies like this. Once we create our > own *bike lanes,* we'll be absolutely free from these MADD drivers. (I > call them so because they don't have driving manners but never drink.) I ride motorcycles. I drive cars. I also ride bicycles. You can take you bike lanes and shove them someplace rude. I pay for the fucking roads just like everybody else and I'll use all of my vehicles there. I don't want to go where the bike lanes go, I want to go wherever the fuck I want to. > > We cyclists then we'll live similar to Key West, Daiquiri in > handlebars. In many states thats a DUI. > > By the way, cyclists and motorcyclists have a lot in common: TWO WHEELS > GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD. And we also share this T-shirt... Any number of wheels good. Poor vehicle operators bad. > > http://cafepress.com/putsomefun
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 18:48:30
From: Harry K
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <1161730238.126472.128100@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>, > "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > Here's a follow up to the original article... > > > > (which I totally endorse) > > > > "lol, people, you will find anyone else to blame to completely miss the > > point of the driver in the SUV. Mr. Long's experience with a motorcycle > > should have prevented this alone, but still, the lady was yacking away > > needless on a phone while driving. Had she been driving that tank > > (which, SUV owners should be subject to a harder and much strict > > license exam; let alone have their insurance cost shoot up %80) like > > she was supposed to be doing, the accident wouldn't have happened > > anyway. > > > > I don't see where the complication lies. Talking on cell phones in cars > > = unnecessary distraction to the driver. Ban cell phone use in cars > > that are in movement." > > What if she had been paying attention to the road and stopped for a > little old lady crossing the street against the light? It would still > have been your fault for following too closely and not paying attention. > Just because she's driving around focused on her conversation instead of > her surroundings is no excuse for you to follow too close and not pay > attention to yours! > > -- > Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml Thanks. I was wondering if anyone was going to mention the obvious. Harry K
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 18:56:51
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161740910.437525.170430@m7g2000cwm.googlegroups.com >, "Harry K" <turnkey4099@hotmail.com > wrote: > Timberwoof wrote: > > In article <1161730238.126472.128100@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>, > > "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Here's a follow up to the original article... > > > > > > (which I totally endorse) > > > > > > "lol, people, you will find anyone else to blame to completely miss the > > > point of the driver in the SUV. Mr. Long's experience with a motorcycle > > > should have prevented this alone, but still, the lady was yacking away > > > needless on a phone while driving. Had she been driving that tank > > > (which, SUV owners should be subject to a harder and much strict > > > license exam; let alone have their insurance cost shoot up %80) like > > > she was supposed to be doing, the accident wouldn't have happened > > > anyway. > > > > > > I don't see where the complication lies. Talking on cell phones in cars > > > = unnecessary distraction to the driver. Ban cell phone use in cars > > > that are in movement." > > > > What if she had been paying attention to the road and stopped for a > > little old lady crossing the street against the light? It would still > > have been your fault for following too closely and not paying attention. > > Just because she's driving around focused on her conversation instead of > > her surroundings is no excuse for you to follow too close and not pay > > attention to yours! > > > > -- > > Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> > > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml > > Thanks. I was wondering if anyone was going to mention the obvious. I did mention it yesterday. And what's obvious to you isn't obvious to everyone. Obviously Mr. Donqi didn't pay attention to my first post, so I felt compelled to post again. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 01:05:32
From: Road Glidin' Don
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: >Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her >back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. BWAAA HAAA HAAAAA HAAAAAAAAAAAAA! -- Home page: http://xidos.ca/scripts/personal/
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 05:59:38
From: Keith Schiffner
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"Road Glidin' Don" <langkd_NO_SPAM@shaw.ca > wrote in message news:453eb5e5.4927325@shawnews.ed.shawcable.net... > On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" > <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > >>Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping >>was so completely >>unexpected that I didn't have time to ride >>around her, which would have >>been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump >>the bike or visit her >>back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass >>over teakettle. > > BWAAA HAAA HAAAAA HAAAAAAAAAAAAA! That was my initial reaction also. Granted I had extra special effects of coffee, uri(runny nose + laughter = snot everywhere) -- Keith Schiffner History does not record anywhere at any time a religion that has any rational basis. Religion is a crutch for people not strong enough to stand up to the unknown without help. But, like dandruff, most people do have a religion and spend time and money on it and seem to derive considerable pleasure from fiddling with it. Robert Heinlein
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 18:04:11
From: BroTHeR zAcHaRy
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: > Rayvan wrote: > > donquijote1954 wrote: > > > > > > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > > > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > > > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > > > back seat. > > > > You had one more choice: Stop the bike properly.... > > Sounds like some riding lessons are in order.... > > > > How dare you bring knowledge and logic to a rant. Shame on you. ;) > > > --Rayvan > > > > Hint: A motorcycle stops faster if you use the brakes properly because > > rubber has much better grip than does metal and flesh... > > Much less painful also. A guy I know "laid it down" because he was > going to hit a car. I asked him why in the world he would do that and > he said he would rather have road rash than hit the car. I commented > that now he had road rash and a broken leg and collarbone because he > still hit the car. I told him he hit the car harder than if he had > rode the brakes in. He told me I was nuts and that everybody knows > sliding the bike was the fastest way to stop but you only did it to > avoid a worse crash. Running through all of Newton's laws of motion > and how brakes are much more efficient than grinding chrome off the > bike to change the kinetic energy to heat meant nothing. > > You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two > months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. *feh*, after a concussion and a broken clavicle, I was back to work two days later. I shouldn't have been... but I was. > He also > only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he > doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. Idiot. I bought a ZX-10 about ten years ago. It only had 15K mi. on the odometer. The back rotor, however was concave (so that and a new set of pads was the first thing I did to it) . The two previous owners were apparently rear brake lovers, too.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 19:04:58
From: Henry
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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donquijote1954 wrote: > Why would anyone want to ride a motorcycle capable > of doing 150 mph? So they can scrape you off the road with a spatula > instead of dumping you in a body bag? Power is a safety feature that enables the rider to accelerate away from danger. HTH -- http://911research.wtc7.net http://www.st911.org Here's what happens to steel framed buildings exposed to raging infernos for hours on end. http://davesweb.cnchost.com/nwsltr69c.html On 9-11-01, WTC7, a 47 story steel framed building, which had only small, random fires, dropped in perfect symmetry at near free fall speed as in a perfectly executed controlled demolition. http://911research.wtc7.net/talks/wtc/videos.html http://www.physics.byu.edu/research/energy/htm7.html http://wtc7.net/articles/FEMA/WTC_ch5.htm "You're doin' a heckuva job, Brownie!" - bu$h, a few days before his FEMA chief, Micheal Brown was forced to resign because of his gross incompetence. "The tools that enable Cuba to save lives and preserve human dignity during hurricanes are socialist values and organization." - Dr. W.T. Whitney Jr Ever wonder who benefits from the 300 MILLION U.S. taxpayer dollars spent each DAY in Iraq? http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0223-08.htm http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?list=type&type=21 "They are waging a campaign of murder and destruction. And there is no limit to the innocent lives they are willing to take... men with blind hatred and armed with lethal weapons who are capable of any atrocity... they respect no laws of warfare or morality." -bu$h describing his own illegal invasion of Iraq. http://www.robert-fisk.com/iraqwarvictims_2003.htm http://www.commondreams.org/ http://www.truthout.org/ http://www.prohibitioncosts.org/ http://thirdworldtraveler.com/ http://counterpunch.org/ http://responsiblewealth.org/ "Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter." -- tin Luther King Jr. "To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public." -- Theodore Roosevelt (1918) Don't let bu$h do to the United States what his very close friend and top campaign contributor, Ken Lay, did to Enron...
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 17:54:34
From: Don Fearn
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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I think it was "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > who stated: >I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >ear). > >Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >been the usual evasion tactic. Following too close. GUILTY. Next case!
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 16:38:17
From: Dt Lemons 1900
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"Don Fearn" <pooder@charter.net > wrote in message news:fb6tj2tnvvd0hih8vv12clc0tjrqatffnp@4ax.com... >I think it was "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> who > stated: > > >>I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >>the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >>phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >>traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >>words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >>for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >>ear). >> >>Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >>unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >>been the usual evasion tactic. > > Following too close. > > GUILTY. > > > Next case! It's the fault of the "cager" Motorcycle riders are never at fault.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 15:50:38
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Here's a follow up to the original article... (which I totally endorse) "lol, people, you will find anyone else to blame to completely miss the point of the driver in the SUV. Mr. Long's experience with a motorcycle should have prevented this alone, but still, the lady was yacking away needless on a phone while driving. Had she been driving that tank (which, SUV owners should be subject to a harder and much strict license exam; let alone have their insurance cost shoot up %80) like she was supposed to be doing, the accident wouldn't have happened anyway. I don't see where the complication lies. Talking on cell phones in cars = unnecessary distraction to the driver. Ban cell phone use in cars that are in movement."
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 16:52:00
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161730238.126472.128100@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com >, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > Here's a follow up to the original article... > > (which I totally endorse) > > "lol, people, you will find anyone else to blame to completely miss the > point of the driver in the SUV. Mr. Long's experience with a motorcycle > should have prevented this alone, but still, the lady was yacking away > needless on a phone while driving. Had she been driving that tank > (which, SUV owners should be subject to a harder and much strict > license exam; let alone have their insurance cost shoot up %80) like > she was supposed to be doing, the accident wouldn't have happened > anyway. > > I don't see where the complication lies. Talking on cell phones in cars > = unnecessary distraction to the driver. Ban cell phone use in cars > that are in movement." What if she had been paying attention to the road and stopped for a little old lady crossing the street against the light? It would still have been your fault for following too closely and not paying attention. Just because she's driving around focused on her conversation instead of her surroundings is no excuse for you to follow too close and not pay attention to yours! -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 19:02:58
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com > wrote in news:timberwoof.spam- DB2FDC.16520024102006@nnrp-virt.nntp.sonic.net: > Just because she's driving around focused on her conversation instead of > her surroundings is no excuse for you to follow too close and not pay > attention to yours! Give it up, Tim... This jerk-off is a Charter Member of the "It Wasn't My Fault" club... He's been playing the Blame Game for years... -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 14:55:26
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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bstevens@rock.com wrote: > There's no point in complaining about how dangerous cage drivers are; > it's like complaining about the sky being blue. Just adapt to it. And > save your cycle for nice cruises down country roads on Sunday > afternoon. There's a lot to be asked from them, or better from the officials that allow the phones and other distracting gadgets to be normal behavior on our roads. Meanwhile you hear all the bad rap about drunks and speeders --and getting hefty tickets, which are fixed by the foxes of the jungle, ie the lawyers.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 14:52:00
From: Triman
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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http://www.tri-mansworldmailboxofficesupply.com/ Timberwoof wrote: > In article <a8SdnZX1c8ib-KDYnZ2dnUVZ_qudnZ2d@wavecable.com>, > "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: > > > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> wrote in message > > news:1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... > > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > >> It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of > > >> the > > >> "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > >> rider. > > > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > > > > > Tim Kreitz > > > 2003 ZX7R > > > 2000 ZX6R > > > http://www.timkreitz.com > > > > > > > Life-saving horsepower????? > > Yes. On a bicycle, the only way to get out of a situation is to stop. > With a motorcycle, there's also the option to get out of there. > > Consider if I'm stopped at the end of a queue of cars waiting at a red > light. I monitor my rear-view mirror and see a car heading towards me > faster than it ought to: I sneak over between cars and ahead a few, and > avoid a rear-end collision. > > Consider if I'm cruising along the freeway and some inattentive cager > decides to change lanes into me (typically after a merge). Depending on > where I am, I could brake hard and still have to deal with the > possibility of the cager also braking hard or the car behind me not > braking hard ... or accelerate out of there. (Which, since I keep good > following distance, I have room to do.) > > So if you're not an experienced motorcycle rider, don't be quick to > dismiss possibilities you haven't thought of. > > -- > Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 14:51:22
From: Triman
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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http://www.tri-mansworldmailboxofficesupply.com/ Timberwoof wrote: > In article <a8SdnZX1c8ib-KDYnZ2dnUVZ_qudnZ2d@wavecable.com>, > "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: > > > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> wrote in message > > news:1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... > > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > >> It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of > > >> the > > >> "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > >> rider. > > > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > > > > > Tim Kreitz > > > 2003 ZX7R > > > 2000 ZX6R > > > http://www.timkreitz.com > > > > > > > Life-saving horsepower????? > > Yes. On a bicycle, the only way to get out of a situation is to stop. > With a motorcycle, there's also the option to get out of there. > > Consider if I'm stopped at the end of a queue of cars waiting at a red > light. I monitor my rear-view mirror and see a car heading towards me > faster than it ought to: I sneak over between cars and ahead a few, and > avoid a rear-end collision. > > Consider if I'm cruising along the freeway and some inattentive cager > decides to change lanes into me (typically after a merge). Depending on > where I am, I could brake hard and still have to deal with the > possibility of the cager also braking hard or the car behind me not > braking hard ... or accelerate out of there. (Which, since I keep good > following distance, I have room to do.) > > So if you're not an experienced motorcycle rider, don't be quick to > dismiss possibilities you haven't thought of. > > -- > Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 14:45:17
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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jojo wrote: > "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote in message > news:1161648216.667872.277040@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... > > "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So > > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." > > > > I'm assuming that you want to save the buck, and that perhaps you care > > about the environment, if not that you plain hate "cages," and, most > > importantly, that you want to avoid a senseless accident like this. > > Sure, you would say, "Why not ban the damned phones!?" But you know > > deep down it won't happen. Too much money into it, you know. So in a > > bicycle you could have let yourself go and hit the stupid woman (maybe > > a MADD member?) square on the bumper. At least I've made the switch. > > You can even get a chopper bicycle! > > http://bicycleaustin.info/justice/ > not the solution It is but only when we get rid of the jungle. Coming soon... RIDING A BIKE COSTS PEANUTS OK, since the lion (for whom "peanuts" is not important) refuses to listen to the monkey asking for bike facilities,* let's scrutinize the secrets ($$$) of the political jungle, where "democracy" is the word of choice... "Remember the Golden Rule: Those with the Gold, Rule" (saying) "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy" (title of book) And this one... "Freedom is when the people can speak, democracy is when the government listens" -Alastair Farrugia Oh, that one was so good. So let's see: The monkey can cry all he wants but he will be ignored. Tough life that of the monkey. Other quotes... "Great is truth, but still greater, from a practical point of view, is silence about truth" -Aldous Huxley That one was deep. We all live in the lie (notice the word "lie" in li-on). And look at this one... "The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any" -Alice Walker And this would threaten the order in the jungle... "Democracy is when the indigent, and not the men of property, are the rulers" -Aristotle And here they must be talking about the lion... "The wild, cruel beast is not behind the bars of the cage. He is in front of it" -Axel Munthe Many more quotes to entertain yourself are found at the link below. I hope you use them responsibly and don't start a revolution. http://www.democracy.ru/english/quotes.php *Riding a bike is good for the environment, great for peace, and excellent for your health. We need facilities, though, like BIKE LINES to be safe. This is a sumy of what's going on in the jungle... http://webspawner.com/users/bananarevolution
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 14:35:09
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <a8SdnZX1c8ib-KDYnZ2dnUVZ_qudnZ2d@wavecable.com>, > "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: > > > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> wrote in message > > news:1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... > > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > >> It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of > > >> the > > >> "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > >> rider. > > > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > > > > > Tim Kreitz > > > 2003 ZX7R > > > 2000 ZX6R > > > http://www.timkreitz.com > > > > > > > Life-saving horsepower????? > > Yes. On a bicycle, the only way to get out of a situation is to stop. > With a motorcycle, there's also the option to get out of there. Or simply squeeze on the right. > > Consider if I'm stopped at the end of a queue of cars waiting at a red > light. I monitor my rear-view mirror and see a car heading towards me > faster than it ought to: I sneak over between cars and ahead a few, and > avoid a rear-end collision. > > Consider if I'm cruising along the freeway and some inattentive cager > decides to change lanes into me (typically after a merge). Depending on > where I am, I could brake hard and still have to deal with the > possibility of the cager also braking hard or the car behind me not > braking hard ... or accelerate out of there. (Which, since I keep good > following distance, I have room to do.) > > So if you're not an experienced motorcycle rider, don't be quick to > dismiss possibilities you haven't thought of. But the MADD lady doesn't do your job any easier. She challenges you without even noticing thanks to her poor reflexes and the yanking on the phone.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 17:36:07
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161725708.919385.58710@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com >, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > Timberwoof wrote: > > In article <a8SdnZX1c8ib-KDYnZ2dnUVZ_qudnZ2d@wavecable.com>, > > "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT> wrote: > > > > > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> wrote in message > > > news:1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... > > > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > > >> It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of > > > >> the > > > >> "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > > >> rider. > > > > > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > > > > > > > Tim Kreitz > > > > 2003 ZX7R > > > > 2000 ZX6R > > > > http://www.timkreitz.com > > > > > > > > > > Life-saving horsepower????? > > > > Yes. On a bicycle, the only way to get out of a situation is to stop. > > With a motorcycle, there's also the option to get out of there. > > Or simply squeeze on the right. Yes, as I illustrate in the following paragraph. > > Consider if I'm stopped at the end of a queue of cars waiting at a red > > light. I monitor my rear-view mirror and see a car heading towards me > > faster than it ought to: I sneak over between cars and ahead a few, and > > avoid a rear-end collision. > > > > Consider if I'm cruising along the freeway and some inattentive cager > > decides to change lanes into me (typically after a merge). Depending on > > where I am, I could brake hard and still have to deal with the > > possibility of the cager also braking hard or the car behind me not > > braking hard ... or accelerate out of there. (Which, since I keep good > > following distance, I have room to do.) > > > > So if you're not an experienced motorcycle rider, don't be quick to > > dismiss possibilities you haven't thought of. > > But the MADD lady doesn't do your job any easier. She challenges you > without even noticing thanks to her poor reflexes and the yanking on > the phone. Were you paying attention when I and several others told you to pay attention? It doesn't matter what she was doing: she was in front of you and you should have paid attention to her. You should have been far enough away that you could have stopped in time. Or, when the light turned green and she didn't go, you should have noticed and not smashed into her. None of which has anything to do with this sub-thread, which is that sometimes you can accelerate out of a bad situation. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 14:29:09
From: donquijote1954
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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Tim Kreitz wrote: > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > rider. > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. Well, you never feel frustrated by ladies like this. Once we create our own *bike lanes,* we'll be absolutely free from these MADD drivers. (I call them so because they don't have driving manners but never drink.) We cyclists then we'll live similar to Key West, Daiquiri in handlebars. By the way, cyclists and motorcyclists have a lot in common: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD. And we also share this T-shirt... http://cafepress.com/putsomefun
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 01:08:20
From: Road Glidin' Don
Subject: Re: TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD
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On 24 Oct 2006 14:29:09 -0700, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: >TWO WHEELS GOOD, FOUR WHEELS BAD Unless you're a twit cross-poster who doesn't know how to stop a motorcycle. -- Home page: http://xidos.ca/scripts/personal/
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 08:55:15
From:
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Rayvan wrote: > donquijote1954 wrote: > > > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > > back seat. > > You had one more choice: Stop the bike properly.... > Sounds like some riding lessons are in order.... > How dare you bring knowledge and logic to a rant. Shame on you. ;) > --Rayvan > > Hint: A motorcycle stops faster if you use the brakes properly because > rubber has much better grip than does metal and flesh... Much less painful also. A guy I know "laid it down" because he was going to hit a car. I asked him why in the world he would do that and he said he would rather have road rash than hit the car. I commented that now he had road rash and a broken leg and collarbone because he still hit the car. I told him he hit the car harder than if he had rode the brakes in. He told me I was nuts and that everybody knows sliding the bike was the fastest way to stop but you only did it to avoid a worse crash. Running through all of Newton's laws of motion and how brakes are much more efficient than grinding chrome off the bike to change the kinetic energy to heat meant nothing. You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. The bike happily went almost another 50 yards or more without him. He also only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. Yet he has successfully lived to be almost 40 years old. My mind boggles.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 16:53:34
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161705315.250195.187010@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com >, yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: > Rayvan wrote: > > donquijote1954 wrote: > > > > > > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > > > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > > > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > > > back seat. > > > > You had one more choice: Stop the bike properly.... > > Sounds like some riding lessons are in order.... > > > > How dare you bring knowledge and logic to a rant. Shame on you. ;) > > > --Rayvan > > > > Hint: A motorcycle stops faster if you use the brakes properly because > > rubber has much better grip than does metal and flesh... > > Much less painful also. A guy I know "laid it down" because he was > going to hit a car. I asked him why in the world he would do that and > he said he would rather have road rash than hit the car. I commented > that now he had road rash and a broken leg and collarbone because he > still hit the car. I told him he hit the car harder than if he had > rode the brakes in. He told me I was nuts and that everybody knows > sliding the bike was the fastest way to stop but you only did it to > avoid a worse crash. Running through all of Newton's laws of motion > and how brakes are much more efficient than grinding chrome off the > bike to change the kinetic energy to heat meant nothing. > > You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two > months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. The > bike happily went almost another 50 yards or more without him. He also > only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he > doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. Yet he has > successfully lived to be almost 40 years old. My mind boggles. He probably won't understand this either, but others here might: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/stoppie.html -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 15:40:42
From: Matthew Russotto
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <timberwoof.spam-7908B0.16533424102006@nnrp-virt.nntp.sonic.net >, Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com > wrote: > >He probably won't understand this either, but others here might: >http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/stoppie.html You say there that the torque created by the inertial and braking forces is clockwise. I don't think that's possible. In both diagrams that torque is counterclockwise, tending to transfer weight from the rear wheel to the front. In the case of the BMW, you reach the traction limit of the tire before the weight on the rear tire reaches 0. In the case of the Honda, you don't. Hmm... maybe you meant the torque created by the inertial, braking, and gravitational forces is clockwise? (of course the "inertial force" exists only in the accelerated frame of reference of the motorcycle, but that's a lot more convenient than trying to find a useful inertial frame) -- There's no such thing as a free lunch, but certain accounting practices can result in a fully-depreciated one.
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 14:40:44
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <ldKdnbQl4L1XVqLYnZ2dnUVZ_sednZ2d@speakeasy.net >, russotto@grace.speakeasy.net (Matthew Russotto) wrote: > In article <timberwoof.spam-7908B0.16533424102006@nnrp-virt.nntp.sonic.net>, > Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com> wrote: > > > >He probably won't understand this either, but others here might: > >http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/stoppie.html > > You say there that the torque created by the inertial and braking > forces is clockwise. I don't think that's possible. In both diagrams > that torque is counterclockwise, tending to transfer weight from the rear > wheel to the front. In the case of the BMW, you reach the traction > limit of the tire before the weight on the rear tire reaches 0. In > the case of the Honda, you don't. > > Hmm... maybe you meant the torque created by the inertial, braking, > and gravitational forces is clockwise? You're absolutely correct; my description was in error. Thanks for pointing that out; I corrected the web page. > (of course the "inertial force" exists only in the accelerated frame > of reference of the motorcycle, but that's a lot more convenient than > trying to find a useful inertial frame) I hope you're okay with the phrase ' momentum "torque" '. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 15:10:50
From: P.Roehling
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"Timberwoof" <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com > wrote >> Hmm... maybe you meant the torque created by the inertial, braking, >> and gravitational forces is clockwise? > > You're absolutely correct; my description was in error. Thanks for > pointing that out; I corrected the web page. What!? An open admission of a mistake on Usenet? And worse yet, a *polite* admission? I just *knew* that last oyster tasted funny... Pete
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 11:43:27
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <1161705315.250195.187010@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>, > yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: > >> Rayvan wrote: >> You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two >> months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. The >> bike happily went almost another 50 yards or more without him. He also >> only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he >> doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. Yet he has >> successfully lived to be almost 40 years old. My mind boggles. 40 is still young. > > He probably won't understand this either, but others here might: > http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/stoppie.html > Have you ever tried a stoppie? Unless you are skilled way beyond the normal human it will result in a wrong way wheelie all the way over. There are only a handful of people who can do it and they are probably working as stunt men for the movie industry. The record was about 600 feet starting at 100 MPH +, but the guy was an Evel Knievel type pro. I tried something like that when I was younger and dumber and went over the bars and slid with the bike (motorcycle) on top of me, causing much unwanted road rash. First time == last time. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 20:08:02
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <z5I%g.17448$vJ2.14282@newssvr12.news.prodigy.com >, bill <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net > wrote: > Timberwoof wrote: > > In article <1161705315.250195.187010@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>, > > yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: > > > >> Rayvan wrote: > >> You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two > >> months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. The > >> bike happily went almost another 50 yards or more without him. He also > >> only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he > >> doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. Yet he has > >> successfully lived to be almost 40 years old. My mind boggles. > > 40 is still young. > > > > He probably won't understand this either, but others here might: > > http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/stoppie.html > > > Have you ever tried a stoppie? Unless you are skilled way beyond the > normal human it will result in a wrong way wheelie all the way over. Please come to Berkeley sometime. There's a road west of there that climbs into the hills. There's a place called "The Wall" where bikers like to hang out. Hang out there on some summer day and watch the experienced riders routinely stoppie in. > There are only a handful of people who can do it and they are probably > working as stunt men for the movie industry. All of them must live in the San Francisco area, too. > The record was about 600 > feet starting at 100 MPH +, but the guy was an Evel Knievel type pro. > I tried something like that when I was younger and dumber and went over > the bars and slid with the bike (motorcycle) on top of me, causing much > unwanted road rash. First time == last time. Ah. The informal fallacy of "If I cannot do it, no ordinary mortal can." (I have not tried stoppieing my motorcycle.) -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 09:30:34
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <z5I%g.17448$vJ2.14282@newssvr12.news.prodigy.com>, > bill <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net> wrote: > >> Timberwoof wrote: >>> In article <1161705315.250195.187010@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>, >>> yournotauser@gmail.com wrote: >>> >>>> Rayvan wrote: >>>> You have to understand that this is the same guy that spent almost two >>>> months in the hospital after "surfing" his bike and falling off. The >>>> bike happily went almost another 50 yards or more without him. He also >>>> only uses the rear brake if he's going over about 25mph because he >>>> doesn't want to flip the bike by over braking the front. Yet he has >>>> successfully lived to be almost 40 years old. My mind boggles. >> 40 is still young. >>> He probably won't understand this either, but others here might: >>> http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/stoppie.html >>> >> Have you ever tried a stoppie? Unless you are skilled way beyond the >> normal human it will result in a wrong way wheelie all the way over. > > Please come to Berkeley sometime. There's a road west of there that > climbs into the hills. There's a place called "The Wall" where bikers > like to hang out. Hang out there on some summer day and watch the > experienced riders routinely stoppie in. Ask them how many bikes and or broken bones it took to get good. There may be local clusters of groups who get together to do this but I have not seen it on local roads. Maybe I just don't have the population density and number of Motorcycle riders where I live. I am also a rider with 100,000 miles on various motorcycles (pre-1985 pocket rockets) so the types of bikes I rode may have precluded doing that. I tried it at fairly high speed on a 1973 Kawasaki 750 2 stroke and messed up the bike pretty bad, and again at much lower speed on a 198? Kawsaki 650 4 cylinder with end end over but mostly hurt pride. I stopped trying because I had to work and not convalesce, and I couldn't afford repairing the bike or buying a new one every time I failed. > > >> There are only a handful of people who can do it and they are probably >> working as stunt men for the movie industry. > > All of them must live in the San Francisco area, too. > >> The record was about 600 >> feet starting at 100 MPH +, but the guy was an Evel Knievel type pro. >> I tried something like that when I was younger and dumber and went over >> the bars and slid with the bike (motorcycle) on top of me, causing much >> unwanted road rash. First time == last time. > > Ah. The informal fallacy of "If I cannot do it, no ordinary mortal can." > > (I have not tried stoppieing my motorcycle.) > Maybe so, but the record I did see a video of and if my overloaded brain cells remember right he started at 119 MPH with full armor on. 600 feet is still quite a balancing act, so I give this guy tons of respect. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 07:41:18
From: Turby
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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On Wed, 25 Oct 2006 20:08:02 -0700, Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@infernosoft.com > wrote: >Please come to Berkeley sometime. There's a road west of there that >climbs into the hills. <pedantic mode on > West? Would those be the in hills? -- Turby the Turbosurfer
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 14:47:23
From: P.Roehling
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"bill" <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net > wrote > Have you ever tried a stoppie? Unless you are skilled way beyond the > normal human it will result in a wrong way wheelie all the way over. There > are only a handful of people who can do it and they are probably working > as stunt men for the movie industry. Uh, unless you're *way, way* off in your estimate, all those "stunt men" live within ten miles of me. In fact, there are scads of riders out there who can pull a controlled stoppie, and with the explosion of "stuntahs" and their assorted websites over the last few years, their numbers are no doubt still growing by leaps and bounds. That is not to say that there weren't a lot of trashed bikes, broken bones, and serious road rash strewn along the learning curve that led to competence, but your statement that there are "only a handful of people who can do it" is wildly inaccurate. Pete
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 09:13:54
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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P.Roehling wrote: > "bill" <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net> wrote > >> Have you ever tried a stoppie? Unless you are skilled way beyond the >> normal human it will result in a wrong way wheelie all the way over. There >> are only a handful of people who can do it and they are probably working >> as stunt men for the movie industry. > > Uh, unless you're *way, way* off in your estimate, all those "stunt men" > live within ten miles of me. > > In fact, there are scads of riders out there who can pull a controlled > stoppie, and with the explosion of "stuntahs" and their assorted websites > over the last few years, their numbers are no doubt still growing by leaps > and bounds. > > That is not to say that there weren't a lot of trashed bikes, broken bones, > and serious road rash strewn along the learning curve that led to > competence, but your statement that there are "only a handful of people who > can do it" is wildly inaccurate. > > Pete > > I will admit to the possibility of being inaccurate, but then again I am a very skilled rider, not just of bicycles, but have about 100,000 miles on a motorcycle and can't do it. The few times I tried it resulted in going over, once minor, the other time trashing the bike. If you have scads of riders doing them, then mass insanity must be gripping the new riders (possible these days) of they have way too much money to spend on new bikes and/or repairs. There are none in my area, maybe due to police with zero sense of humor, or maybe it is a big city thing, like racing those ridiculous modded Honda front wheel drives, which would embarrass me clean off the road. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 12:11:47
From: David Kerber
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161705315.250195.187010@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com >, yournotauser@gmail.com says... ... > Much less painful also. A guy I know "laid it down" because he was > going to hit a car. I asked him why in the world he would do that and > he said he would rather have road rash than hit the car. I commented > that now he had road rash and a broken leg and collarbone because he > still hit the car. I told him he hit the car harder than if he had > rode the brakes in. He told me I was nuts and that everybody knows > sliding the bike was the fastest way to stop but you only did it to Yep. Whenever you hear "everybody knows", that usually means "everybody's wrong". The only exception I know of is the one that says "everybody knows that red bikes are faster" ;-D > avoid a worse crash. Running through all of Newton's laws of motion > and how brakes are much more efficient than grinding chrome off the > bike to change the kinetic energy to heat meant nothing. Next time tell him to carefully lay his motorcycle down in his driveway and see how hard it is (or isn't!) to slide it around, then try that with it up on its tires and the gears engaged. Maybe he'll figure it out after that... ... -- Remove the ns_ from if replying by e-mail (but keep posts in the newsgroups if possible).
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 07:50:03
From: tomorrow@erols.com
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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bstevens@rock.com wrote: > For the most part, I won't ride a cycle in town. It's not fun anyway, > since it's just stop and go; you can't just relax and cruise. Plus, of > course, being RIDICULOUSLY dangerous. If I'm just going to sit there in > city traffic, I might as well lean back in my truck and get comfortable > with the A/C and some good music. These people who use their bikes to > commute to work every day in big city rush hour traffic are just > begging for disaster. Nah, we're just a hell of a lot more skilled than you. You made the right choice for you, leave it at that. Tim 28 years commuting daily in Metro D.C. - 0 accidents
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 06:05:44
From:
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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<snip > Pretty interesting post, and sadly it's pretty accurate as well. THREE TIMES in the past 18 months, I've been in stop-and-go traffic in my big Dodge truck - you know, the traffic where you move forward a few feet, then stop, then a few feet more, then stop, then a few feet more, then stop... - and the car behind me SLAMMED into my back bumper. In two cases, it was some bubbleheaded broad. In the other case, it was some pimple-faced, greasy haired high school boy. In all three cases, they were jabbering on their cell phones and weren't aware that their cars were still rolling. One of the women was in a 3/4 ton truck, pulling a trailer with 4 horses. On top of that, she had a dog in her lap. All while jabbering on her cell. I didn't hurt my truck: I learned a long time ago to leave the trailer hitch sticking out there. It protects my truck, and tears the hell out of your car if you bump into me. But the point is... in all three cases, what if I had been on my bike? For the most part, I won't ride a cycle in town. It's not fun anyway, since it's just stop and go; you can't just relax and cruise. Plus, of course, being RIDICULOUSLY dangerous. If I'm just going to sit there in city traffic, I might as well lean back in my truck and get comfortable with the A/C and some good music. These people who use their bikes to commute to work every day in big city rush hour traffic are just begging for disaster. There's no point in complaining about how dangerous cage drivers are; it's like complaining about the sky being blue. Just adapt to it. And save your cycle for nice cruises down country roads on Sunday afternoon. Bill S. ronNOSPAM@peacefulhills.net
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 10:48:03
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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bstevens@rock.com wrote in news:1161695144.021823.258500 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: > then stop, then a few feet more, then stop, then a few feet more, then > stop... - and the car behind me SLAMMED into my back bumper. <snip > > they were jabbering on their cell phones and weren't aware that their > cars were still rolling. They "SLAMMED" into you while they were rolling? You've never been in a real crash, have you? -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 12:44:31
From: jojo
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote in message news:1161648216.667872.277040@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... > "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." > > I'm assuming that you want to save the buck, and that perhaps you care > about the environment, if not that you plain hate "cages," and, most > importantly, that you want to avoid a senseless accident like this. > Sure, you would say, "Why not ban the damned phones!?" But you know > deep down it won't happen. Too much money into it, you know. So in a > bicycle you could have let yourself go and hit the stupid woman (maybe > a MADD member?) square on the bumper. At least I've made the switch. > You can even get a chopper bicycle! http://bicycleaustin.info/justice/ not the solution
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 07:50:44
From: necromancer
Subject: Quit your trolling, donkey hotay!
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Ladies and Gentlemen (and I use those words loosely), donquijote1954 trolled in rec.autos.driving: <snip of alot of crap >
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 08:30:58
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: Quit your trolling, donkey hotay!
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In article <MPG.1fa7c82075211717989e80@newsgroups.bellsouth.net >, necromancer <necromancer@kretp.tmy > wrote: > Ladies and Gentlemen (and I use those words loosely), donquijote1954 > trolled in rec.autos.driving: > > <snip of alot of crap> Yes, he's a troll. So killfile him and ignore him, as I have done. Use your newsreader to kill his threads. Stop feeding the troll!
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 03:40:12
From: oasysco
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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donquijote1954 wrote: > "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So I've recently read that the #1 nemesis is the inattentive rider. A different perspective altogether. Greg > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." > > I'm assuming that you want to save the buck, and that perhaps you care > about the environment, if not that you plain hate "cages," and, most > importantly, that you want to avoid a senseless accident like this. > Sure, you would say, "Why not ban the damned phones!?" But you know > deep down it won't happen. Too much money into it, you know. So in a > bicycle you could have let yourself go and hit the stupid woman (maybe > a MADD member?) square on the bumper. At least I've made the switch. > You can even get a chopper bicycle! > > Isn't this cute? > > http://www.phatcycles.com/soon.htm > > (I meant the girl) > > > Hang Up and Drive > > I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when > the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a > phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any > traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other > words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, > for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like > ear). > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I > never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging > with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) > and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up > pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than > the bike itself is probably worth. > > As I looked up, with murder in my heart, off she went, oblivious to > what had just happened behind her. I hope that phone call was her > boyfriend, dumping her. > > Even before the accident, my motorcycle was no gleaming machine -- no > snarling, customized Harley with the chrome pipes polished to within an > inch of its owner's life. It's an '86 Honda Shadow. At 500cc, it's > nimble enough for city riding while packing enough power for the road, > as long as the road isn't too long. The seat's kinda ripped up, there's > some rust and it's got its share of dings and dents. But it runs OK, > costs about $4 at the gas pump and, best of all, you can park it pretty > much where you like. > > It's also a freakin' death trap. > > The most hard-core biker -- even the biggest fat guy straddling the > baddest hog -- knows that riding a motorcycle is inherently dangerous. > There's no such thing as a "minor" motorcycle accident, aside from > maybe dropping the bike on your foot. We know this, but we accept the > risk of riding. > > Why? Well, some of us are probably just stupid. There's the thrill > factor, of course, and it is fun. It's also relatively cheap, you can > maneuver through heavy traffic and you always look cooler than even the > coolest dude in his Euro sports car. Because you are cool, and he's > just a loser who dropped 60 grand on a penis extender. > > Why is it that only a handful of states have made it illegal to talk on > the phone while driving? Driving is not something you do as an > afterthought, OK? You're hurtling down the road behind the wheel of a > 3,000-pound vehicle (more like 7,000 pounds in that idiotic destroyer > of worlds, the Hummer) and it doesn't take a physicist to figure out > that if you hit a human being -- astride a motorcycle, riding a bicycle > or on foot -- you're going to do some damage. > > And it doesn't take a rocket scientist or an IT guy or a professional > poker player to understand that anything you do -- like talking on the > phone -- that distracts you from the business of driving increases the > chances of causing a serious accident. > > So do everybody a favor and turn off your cell phone while you drive. > (It's OK. Your important life can wait while you zip over to the mall.) > If you have to make a call this very minute, pull over. This ain't > exactly brain surgery, but it might help prevent some of it, you know? > > Then there are the vehicles themselves. Hummers aside, have you seen > the size of some these, these ... well, when Paw drove to town we used > to call them pickup trucks. Now? Pickup trucks on steroids, maybe. (A > truck that seats six adults: What genius dreamed that one up?) > > They're huge. They ride high. Too high. There's a hood the size of > Rhode Island out in front of you, blotting out the sun. It makes it > even harder to see what's out there. If it was easy to miss a biker > when you were driving your Volvo station wagon, well, try checking your > field of vision in one of these mesomorphic babies. Of course, you're > probably so busy cranking up that Slayer CD that you'd miss Sonoma > Sammy at full throttle on his Fatboy. RIP, Sammy. > > Car manufacturers are also tarting up their vehicles with all sorts of > things that, when used like most humans tend to use them, distract you > from watching the road. GPS (What? You can't pull over and read a > map?), high-end sound systems requiring your full attention to operate > and -- what in God's name were they thinking? -- in-dash video > monitors: These have no place in a motor vehicle. Cars exist to convey > you from one place to another. They are not concert halls or TV > babysitters for cranky children. (Teach the kid to read. Better yet, > teach him to love to read, then give him a book, fer crissake.) > > What about the motorcycles themselves? They're bigger, faster and more > dangerous than ever. Why would anyone want to ride a motorcycle capable > of doing 150 mph? So they can scrape you off the road with a spatula > instead of dumping you in a body bag? > > But the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period. > > (many replies at this link) > > http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,68769-0.html > > WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE > http://webspawner.com/users/donquijote > > BIKE FOR PEACE > http://webspawner.com/users/bikeforpeace
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 00:32:40
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote in news:1161648216.667872.277040@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com: > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I > never touched her. You must have some pretty shitty tyres... There's no part of my bike that will stop it faster than the brakes and tyres... P.S. Stop tailgating. -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 20:51:45
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <1161648216.667872.277040@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com >, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when > the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a > phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any > traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other > words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, > for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like > ear). > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. Oh, baloney! Did she have working brake lights? Were you following at a decent distance? (Do you know the two-second rule?) Since it was at a traffic light, chances are the speed limit was 45 mph or less. Do you practice hard braking? Obviously not. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 02:43:53
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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donquijote1954 wrote: > What about the motorcycles themselves? They're bigger, faster and more > dangerous than ever. Why would anyone want to ride a motorcycle capable > of doing 150 mph? So they can scrape you off the road with a spatula > instead of dumping you in a body bag? Don't crash and 150 MPH and faster is an Adrenalin rush and then some. Just do it where there is no chance of traffic, like way out in the desert. 170-180+ for 10 miles and losing a CHP made my day back in 1973. Of course the road was dead straight and slightly downhill for over 11 miles and I had no hope of combing my hair for about a week (no helmet) but I would do it again. Death wish, I guess. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 04:46:23
From: Outback Jon
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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bill wrote: > Don't crash and 150 MPH and faster is an Adrenalin rush and then some. > Just do it where there is no chance of traffic, like way out in the > desert. 170-180+ for 10 miles and losing a CHP made my day back in 1973. > Of course the road was dead straight and slightly downhill for over 11 > miles and I had no hope of combing my hair for about a week (no helmet) > but I would do it again. Death wish, I guess. What bike were you on in 73 that could do 170~180+? Or should I ask what *drugs* were you on? -- "Outback" Jon - KC2BNE outback_jon@ver.no.sp.am.izon.net AMD Opteron 146 (@2.8) and 6.1 GHz of other AMD power... http://folding.stanford.edu - got folding? Team 48435 2006 ZG1000A Concours "Blueline" COG# 7385 1980 CB750F SuperSport "CoolerKing"
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 13:59:55
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Outback Jon wrote: > bill wrote: >> Don't crash and 150 MPH and faster is an Adrenalin rush and then some. >> Just do it where there is no chance of traffic, like way out in the >> desert. 170-180+ for 10 miles and losing a CHP made my day back in 1973. >> Of course the road was dead straight and slightly downhill for over 11 >> miles and I had no hope of combing my hair for about a week (no >> helmet) but I would do it again. Death wish, I guess. > > What bike were you on in 73 that could do 170~180+? > > Or should I ask what *drugs* were you on? It was a Kawasaki 750cc 2 stroke that had been modded with Denco chambers, bigger carbs, and better free flow air filters, plus a one tooth larger front chain gear for a slight overdrive. The official factory red line was 7500 which would have been right at 160 MPH but with the extra tooth 7500 was more like 175 MPH and with the chambers it pulled harder and harder up to 12,000 RPM. On that day I saw about 8,500 RPM so the actual speed was way up there but since I lost the CHP and didn't get radared (and jail) I don't know. The bike was insanely fast and could do a throttle wheelie at 90 MPH or a shift wheelie at the 4-5 shift at 130 MPH. Once in a turn I broke the rear wheel loose at 125 MPH in 4th gear and that got really interesting, but I learned that it was the same as dirt track racing. I could just twiddle the throttle according to how much I wanted to kick it out. Not recommended for a long riding life, but fun (and scary). Those bikes used to run high 9's at about 135-140 MPH at the drag strip, so the top end I saw was not a stretch, but I had to lay down or the wind slowed the bike and tried to pull me off. The other effect was that I pulled back on the handlebars so hard that I could turn the bars and not turn the bike since the weight was off the front wheel. That was the only time I ever took it that fast and that was up in the high desert (Mojave) where there was zero traffic and no side streets or even driveways for the 11 mile stretch I was on. After I stopped in a restaurant and the CHP went screaming by I got back on the bike and 20 miles later the bigger front gear let go and chewed up my ignition wiring. The $150 for parts was still cheaper than the ticket would have been and the dealer that made the mod paid for it since their mechanic failed to bend over the retaining ring. Sam Arena Harley Davidson in San Jose. I started out to buy a Harley and wound up with the rice rocket. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 02:39:31
From: Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: > >I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >ear). > >Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her >back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I >never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging >with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) >and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up >pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than >the bike itself is probably worth. > All this proves is that you were either tail-gating or innatentive.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 12:20:04
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" > <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > > >> I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >> the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >> phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >> traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >> words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >> for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >> ear). >> >> Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >> unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >> been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her >> back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I >> never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging >> with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) >> and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up >> pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than >> the bike itself is probably worth. >> > > All this proves is that you were either tail-gating or innatentive. In 15 years of almost daily motorcycle riding I never rear ended a car, nor came remotely close. The same rules as bicycles, keep you eye on ALL possible hazards. I had a friend get a broken hip, but even that was not his fault since some really old (antique) lady turned left in front of him and even though he tried to lay it down the car clipped the rear of his bike and tossed him at about 50 MPH. Whenever you are on the road, Bike, cage, or even walking, you are at the mercy of idiots. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 19:54:35
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <Uxn%g.14277$TV3.9906@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com >, bill <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net > wrote: > Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > > On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" > > <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > > > >> I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when > >> the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a > >> phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any > >> traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other > >> words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, > >> for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like > >> ear). > >> > >> Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > >> unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > >> been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > >> back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I > >> never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging > >> with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) > >> and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up > >> pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than > >> the bike itself is probably worth. > >> > > > > All this proves is that you were either tail-gating or innatentive. > > In 15 years of almost daily motorcycle riding I never rear ended a car, > nor came remotely close. The same rules as bicycles, keep you eye on ALL > possible hazards. > I had a friend get a broken hip, but even that was not his fault since > some really old (antique) lady turned left in front of him and even > though he tried to lay it down the car clipped the rear of his bike and > tossed him at about 50 MPH. Let's see now. He braked as hard as he could on the steel and plastic parts of his bike, and fifty feet later, he was still doing 50 MPH. Makes me wonder how fast he was going when he was still on his wheels. Probably 55 MPH. I'm having a hard time figuring out what happened. She was oncoming and turned left ... and clipped the rear end of his motorcycle? That doesn't compute. > Whenever you are on the road, Bike, cage, or even walking, you are at > the mercy of idiots. But you can mitigate that by riding intelligently and learning skills to handle the bike: For instance, how to stop a bike quickly. (Hint: Not on the steel and plastic bits.) -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 26 Oct 2006 09:21:13
From: bill
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Timberwoof wrote: > In article <Uxn%g.14277$TV3.9906@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com>, > bill <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net> wrote: > >> Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: >>> On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" >>> <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >>>> the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >>>> phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >>>> traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >>>> words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >>>> for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >>>> ear). >>>> >>>> Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >>>> unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >>>> been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her >>>> back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I >>>> never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging >>>> with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) >>>> and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up >>>> pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than >>>> the bike itself is probably worth. >>>> >>> All this proves is that you were either tail-gating or innatentive. >> In 15 years of almost daily motorcycle riding I never rear ended a car, >> nor came remotely close. The same rules as bicycles, keep you eye on ALL >> possible hazards. >> I had a friend get a broken hip, but even that was not his fault since >> some really old (antique) lady turned left in front of him and even >> though he tried to lay it down the car clipped the rear of his bike and >> tossed him at about 50 MPH. > > Let's see now. He braked as hard as he could on the steel and plastic > parts of his bike, and fifty feet later, he was still doing 50 MPH. > Makes me wonder how fast he was going when he was still on his wheels. > Probably 55 MPH. > > I'm having a hard time figuring out what happened. She was oncoming and > turned left ... and clipped the rear end of his motorcycle? That doesn't > compute. He had it partially laid down at that point and she was already almost through the intersection and clear of him. Another 0.25 second and they probably would have missed but he would still have been laid down with road rash. He turned left to avoid her and she turned left from the other direction so it was a rear to rear collision. He may have been doing 55 for all I know since the rest of the group was sell behind him and it happened so fast that some didn't even see the accident. Girls on the side of the road do that to guys on motorcycles. Sorry. > >> Whenever you are on the road, Bike, cage, or even walking, you are at >> the mercy of idiots. > > But you can mitigate that by riding intelligently and learning skills to > handle the bike: For instance, how to stop a bike quickly. (Hint: Not > on the steel and plastic bits.) > I have personally never laid one down, but then I learned early on not to tailgate and to watch 'very' carefully at intersections where someone could turn in front of me without warning. I can't tailgate on a bicycle unless it is a bus or big box semi at 35 MPH but I always watch the oncoming traffic for possible left turners on cell phones. That is just common survival sense. -- Bill (Sleepless biker) Baka
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 10:49:43
From: Stephen!
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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bill <bbaka@c-o-m-c-a-s-t.net > wrote in news:Uxn%g.14277$TV3.9906 @newssvr21.news.prodigy.com: > I had a friend get a broken hip, but even that was not his fault since > some really old (antique) lady turned left in front of him and even > though he tried to lay it down the car clipped the rear of his bike and > tossed him at about 50 MPH. Why didn't he try to stop instead? -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465 http://imagesdesavions.com
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 15:45:22
From: BrianNZ
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: hehehe.....as a convicted drunk driver and habitual speeder, I can only assume you lost a family member to a speeding drunk driver to call them 'MURDERERS'.......Iv'e never hurt anyone :) LOL.
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 00:21:29
From:
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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On 23 Oct 2006 17:03:36 -0700, "donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote: >I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >ear). > >Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have >been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her >back seat. I hit the brakes and down I went, ass over teakettle. I >never touched her. I landed on top of the bike, fortunately, emerging >with a badly bruised elbow (not to mention a rip in my leather jacket) >and a pretty nasty welt on my upper thigh. The motorcycle got beaten up >pretty good but everything was put right for about $400 -- more than >the bike itself is probably worth. So, you were following too close, not paying attention, and assuming cage drivers would do what you WISH they would do. What, you want fucking sympathy for this ???? Not. >As I looked up, with murder in my heart, off she went, oblivious to >what had just happened behind her. I hope that phone call was her >boyfriend, dumping her. Not as hurtful as you, dumping your bike :-) > >Even before the accident, my motorcycle was no gleaming machine -- no >snarling, customized Harley with the chrome pipes polished to within an >inch of its owner's life. It's an '86 Honda Shadow. At 500cc, it's >nimble enough for city riding while packing enough power for the road, >as long as the road isn't too long. The seat's kinda ripped up, there's >some rust and it's got its share of dings and dents. But it runs OK, >costs about $4 at the gas pump and, best of all, you can park it pretty >much where you like. > >It's also a freakin' death trap. With you on it, apparently so. ( snip fucking blah blah blah ) STFU. -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 17:53:32
From: Tim Kreitz
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > rider. That's 'Cager' to you. Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. Tim Kreitz 2003 ZX7R 2000 ZX6R http://www.timkreitz.com
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 17:57:48
From: Dt Lemons 1900
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com > wrote in message news:1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: >> It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of >> the >> "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle >> rider. > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > Tim Kreitz > 2003 ZX7R > 2000 ZX6R > http://www.timkreitz.com > Life-saving horsepower?????
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 20:59:21
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <a8SdnZX1c8ib-KDYnZ2dnUVZ_qudnZ2d@wavecable.com >, "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT > wrote: > "Tim Kreitz" <timkreitz@yahoo.com> wrote in message > news:1161651212.752249.121350@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... > > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > >> It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of > >> the > >> "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > >> rider. > > > > That's 'Cager' to you. > > > > Statistically speaking, the car driver is found to be at fault in just > > over 75 percent of all car-bike crashes, according to the NHTSA. So no, > > it's not ALWAYS the cager's fault. Just most of the time. > > > > As for the rest of Donkey-Hotay's original post: complete drivel. > > Cagers in metro areas run over bicyclists at an alarming rate, as well. > > Robbing yourself of a motorcycle's potentially life-saving horsepower > > and handling for the sake of pedal power is nonsensical. > > > > Tim Kreitz > > 2003 ZX7R > > 2000 ZX6R > > http://www.timkreitz.com > > > > Life-saving horsepower????? Yes. On a bicycle, the only way to get out of a situation is to stop. With a motorcycle, there's also the option to get out of there. Consider if I'm stopped at the end of a queue of cars waiting at a red light. I monitor my rear-view mirror and see a car heading towards me faster than it ought to: I sneak over between cars and ahead a few, and avoid a rear-end collision. Consider if I'm cruising along the freeway and some inattentive cager decides to change lanes into me (typically after a merge). Depending on where I am, I could brake hard and still have to deal with the possibility of the cager also braking hard or the car behind me not braking hard ... or accelerate out of there. (Which, since I keep good following distance, I have room to do.) So if you're not an experienced motorcycle rider, don't be quick to dismiss possibilities you haven't thought of. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 13:39:19
From: BrianNZ
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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donquijote1954 wrote: > "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." ....#1 nemesis = inattentive RIDER!...... > > Hang Up and Drive > > I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when > the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a > phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any > traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other > words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, > for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like > ear). > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, So, you had time to note what sex the driver was and what she was doing inside her car......but weren't ready to stop if she did something stupid. You say you were at the speed limit......I don't know about where you are from, but we have a rule that you must be able to stop in half the distance visible in your lane and a 'two second' rule for when you are following a vehicle.
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 17:41:47
From: Dt Lemons 1900
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"BrianNZ" <brian@itnz.co.nz > wrote in message news:ehjn9n$ukh$1@lust.ihug.co.nz... > donquijote1954 wrote: >> "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So >> listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention >> is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." > > > ....#1 nemesis = inattentive RIDER!...... > > > >> >> Hang Up and Drive >> >> I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when >> the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a >> phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any >> traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other >> words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, >> for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like >> ear). >> >> Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely >> unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, > > > So, you had time to note what sex the driver was and what she was doing > inside her car......but weren't ready to stop if she did something stupid. > > You say you were at the speed limit......I don't know about where you are > from, but we have a rule that you must be able to stop in half the > distance visible in your lane and a 'two second' rule for when you are > following a vehicle. It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle rider.
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 20:54:24
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <7MednQ1e3K_Y_KDYnZ2dnUVZ_smdnZ2d@wavecable.com >, "Dt Lemons 1900" <YEAHRIGHT > wrote: > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > rider. Oh, baloney! Some of us bikers know we're more exposed to traffic stupidity, so we advocate reasonable following distances jut for this sort of thing. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 24 Oct 2006 13:56:39
From: BrianNZ
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > rider. > > The other day, when a guy asked me why I thought there were so many accidents involving bikes where the driver pulled out in front of them......I put a lot of the blame on speeding motorcyclists, who will swear black and blue that they were doing the speed limit when the accident happened (that way it IS the cars fault....no-one wants a ticket!). I understand the motorcyclists mentality all too well.....I am one!.....and Iv'e been on the receiving end of of 'blind' drivers....but Iv'e also had many near misses where it was entirely my own fault. Stay alert, stay alive! To avoid rear ending a vehicle, you must stay at a reasonable distance behind them.
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Date: 25 Oct 2006 20:00:42
From: Timberwoof
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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In article <ehjoa7$10v$1@lust.ihug.co.nz >, BrianNZ <brian@itnz.co.nz> wrote: > Dt Lemons 1900 wrote: > > > > > It's never the fault of the motorcycle rider, it's always the fault of the > > "cage" driver. You have to understand the mentality of the motorcycle > > rider. > > > > > > The other day, when a guy asked me why I thought there were so many > accidents involving bikes where the driver pulled out in front of > them......I put a lot of the blame on speeding motorcyclists, who will > swear black and blue that they were doing the speed limit when the > accident happened (that way it IS the cars fault....no-one wants a ticket!). > > I understand the motorcyclists mentality all too well.....I am > one!.....and Iv'e been on the receiving end of of 'blind' drivers....but > Iv'e also had many near misses where it was entirely my own fault. Stay > alert, stay alive! > > To avoid rear ending a vehicle, you must stay at a reasonable distance > behind them. Yesterday morning, at a four-way stop sign, the driver of the vehicle approaching decided to go, turn on his turn signal, and turn left, all at he same time. Had the fuck had his turn signal on as he approached the intersection, I might have had a clue about his intentions. Foe some reason, many San Francisco drivers think that you use the turn signal to indicate that you are making a turn. -- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com > faq: http://www.timberwoof.com/motorcycle/faq.shtml
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 17:31:09
From: Rayvan
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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donquijote1954 wrote: > "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." > > I'm assuming that you want to save the buck, and that perhaps you care > about the environment, if not that you plain hate "cages," and, most > importantly, that you want to avoid a senseless accident like this. > Sure, you would say, "Why not ban the damned phones!?" But you know > deep down it won't happen. Too much money into it, you know. So in a > bicycle you could have let yourself go and hit the stupid woman (maybe > a MADD member?) square on the bumper. At least I've made the switch. > You can even get a chopper bicycle! > > Isn't this cute? > > http://www.phatcycles.com/soon.htm > > (I meant the girl) > > > Hang Up and Drive > > I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when > the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a > phone to her ear, but she also had the green light. There wasn't any > traffic to speak of and there was nobody in front of her. In other > words, she stopped for absolutely no reason at all (except, probably, > for whatever it was someone had just whispered into her shell-like > ear). > > Although I was at the speed limit, her stopping was so completely > unexpected that I didn't have time to ride around her, which would have > been the usual evasion tactic. My choices: Dump the bike or visit her > back seat. You had one more choice: Stop the bike properly.... Sounds like some riding lessons are in order.... --Rayvan Hint: A motorcycle stops faster if you use the brakes properly because rubber has much better grip than does metal and flesh...
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Date: 23 Oct 2006 17:17:38
From: Dt Lemons 1900
Subject: Re: Quit your motorcycle and pedal a bicycle!
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"donquijote1954" <nolionnoproblem@hotmail.com > wrote in message news:1161648216.667872.277040@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... > "the motorcyclist's No. 1 nemesis remains the inattentive driver. So > listen up: Your job as the driver is to drive. Period. Your attention > is focused on what's happening outside, not inside. Period." > > I'm assuming that you want to save the buck, and that perhaps you care > about the environment, if not that you plain hate "cages," and, most > importantly, that you want to avoid a senseless accident like this. > Sure, you would say, "Why not ban the damned phones!?" But you know > deep down it won't happen. Too much money into it, you know. So in a > bicycle you could have let yourself go and hit the stupid woman (maybe > a MADD member?) square on the bumper. At least I've made the switch. > You can even get a chopper bicycle! > > Isn't this cute? > > http://www.phatcycles.com/soon.htm > > (I meant the girl) > > > Hang Up and Drive > > I was riding my motorcycle to work one morning a few months ago when > the car in front of me stopped. Cold. The woman behind the wheel had a > phone to her ear, but she also had the green light Maybe you should pay attention to the road instead of the driver in the car and if they have a phone to their ear or not.
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