Despite the reputation, it's better, more practical transit than you might think.
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In the 1970's, the first comprehensive study on motorcycle accidents was created. Aptly or ironically named the Hurt Report, after the lead author's name it described a list of 55 items that were involved in the vast majority of motorcycle accidents. The top 10:I like motorcycle culture and aesthetics, particularly the subculture thereof that comes from the lineage of cool dudes like Steve McQueen and Paul Newman doing cool dude shit in the desert on cool bikes, and cool dudes like Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman doing cool overland shit on cool bikes, and cool motorcycle races like the Dakar. They're cool. I see a BMW 1600 GS or a Husqvarna Svartpilen or a Ducati Scrambler and I bite my lip a little. There's few cars that have that kind of cool, and the ones that do tend to get adopted as aspirational lifestyle affectations by owners who aren't that cool, e.g. Wranglers, G-wagens, Broncos, etc. And that dynamic ends up making them less cool unless it's a very rare car, like a 911 Dakar. Motorcycles aren't usually so common that you can just assume the driver is a dork with a high debt tolerance who's just commuting to work and has never done anything cool.
But I was a volunteer at a local hospital when I was 16-18 or so, and ended up hanging out a lot in the ER, and there's some sights related to motorcycle accidents I wish I'd known to play a lot of Tetris soon after I beheld them there. The idea of actually riding a bike brings up a mental image of someone's whole-ass thigh hanging off their femur and that kills all the cool vibes.
That said, this is all good advice:
And I'd add that the classic ingredients for a horrific motorcycle accident are high speed, highways, darkness, bad visibility, unprotected intersections, not enough PPE, alcohol, drugs, or combinations thereof. Avoid as many of those factors as you can and you're probably fine. Probably. And pick your routes, times, and actions very carefully. Friends of mine who ride tell me there's lots of mornings where the vibe is just off and they take the car.
I can’t believe that the author is advocating for lane splitting (not legal here, but done all the time) and cutting between cars to get up to a light. These seem among the most dangerous moves a motorcyclist can do (and incidentally, among the most likely to tick off a car driver). That’s even if you are otherwise a safe rider (which is likely unusual, judging by the motorcyclists I see), wear a helmet (not required here, and often not worn) and the rest. Maybe it’s possible to fairly safely ride a motorcycle on busy streets during commute times (I doubt it, but I’ll give the benefit of the doubt) but I can’t see encouraging those actions, apparently just to save the motorcyclist commute or other travel time, as something a reasonable person would do.
Freedom to die or get seriously injured is just that. Point is, on a motorcycle or bicycle you’re exposed, you will absolutely always lose. Having a helmet simply means you get chance to live through it. But hey! bikes are fun and there’s always luck.He says just the opposite....so.....
One disadvantage not mentioned is tire costs. Car tires for a commuter sedan - 50-80,000 lifespan. Motorcycle tires - 5-10,000 life. Replace half the number of tires, but at 60% of the cost and 4 times as often, and you've just erased any fuel savings you've gained.
Basically you have to ride as if you are invisible to everyone else. Which is pretty close to the truth.Far and away the biggest mistake even veteran riders make is in riding a motorcycle like they drive a car. If you need any faith at all in your fellow road users you're riding wrong.
Never believe a turn signal until you see the wheels turn. If a car is slowing down, assume it didn't see you and is planning to turn in front of you. Never pace a car in another lane. As you're passing a car, assume it's about to move into your lane and position yourself accordingly - and when it does move into you, just glide over to the side and move on with life. Position yourself at stoplights and stop signs at the edge of the lane - or even better, filter between the cars if your local laws allow it. Etc, Etc.
Above all, discard your ego and don't be surprised, angry, or otherwise shaken when a car doesn't see you or does something dumb. Just always have a plan and deal with it. You're not a co-equal member of traffic when you're on a bike, you're a fragile nearly invisible minnow in a sea of distracted half-blind whales. If you try to act like you're a whale too, you're going to have a bad time.
If you can't handle any of that, don't ride. Not saying that in a gate-keepery way, just a reality way. Plenty of times I've self-assessed, realized I was too tired/stressed/distracted to ride safely, and took the car instead - even though I knew that'd mean dealing with all of the traffic and parking frustrations that go with a cage.
Here in the US, those motor scooters are not allowed on highways so any rural area they are useless for anything other than running to the conveninece store.I was excited to read this article, because I am also curious to know why motorcycles are so unpopular in the US, but the article sadly completely skips that question...
The choice of suggested motorcycles is also a bit odd, because not representative of what is popular in countries where motorcycles are popular ...
Here in Europe, the majority of the "motorcycles" are actually scooters (like a vespa, not a lime scooter) and you'll find typically find them with 50, 110 or 125 cm³ corresponding to something around 3, 9 and 15 horsepower (the latter one is enough to reach our highway speeds of 75 mph) They cost about 1500$, 2000$ and 3500$ if you buy new. The 50 cm³ are going extinct, being replaced by electric scooters (still speaking of the big ones) and e-bikes. The difference is that a 45 km/h e-bike tend to cost more than 4000 $, while the electric scooter only costs about 2000 $ (globalization I guess ?)
This also explains where gas powered scooters position themselves compared to ebikes : they cost a lot less and do a lot more (in speed and range). And when you don't need speed and range, the classical bicycle is still king of commute, and beats everything else in price and longevity (I don't live in the Netherlands, yet we still probably have a as much bicycles as people)
In CA, the person that opens the door is charged.What is the law if a biker splits lanes, the motorist doesn't notice, opens the door to say dump a cup of water out and the biker turns into door paste?
Is that criminal? If so for who?
Yeah; lane splitting sounds really really dumb.
Lane splitting is very startling for you because of how sudden and fast it comes and goes, but you have to realize that it's only sudden and startling for you. The motorcyclist had you acknowledged for an eternity before your brief and scary acknowledgement of them.As someone living in San Diego and having lane-splitting motorcycles whizz past me both while stopped and moving at full freeway speeds, I do find them terrifying. And then some of them look back at you angrily for not moving over, as if I had any chance to even recognize they were coming up behind me.
It astounds me that the practice is legal in California, regardless of how bad traffic is.
A couple of months ago I saw a motorcyclist pull up to a popular mountain bike trail parking lot - with a mountain bike strapped on. The rider got quite a number of confused stares from the rest of the riders but she calmly unstrapped the bike and trundled along the trails....For several years (1973-1976) my primary transportation was Honda 750. Carried my 4ft ladder, sheet metal tools and 2 gallon water jug. Unless there were snow plows operating I rode my bike. Later, company vehicles relegated my bike to recreational use. Watch out for crazy "cagers"...
We see this all the time in Colorado. I've also seen someone with a sidecar with a kayak.A couple of months ago I saw a motorcyclist pull up to a popular mountain bike trail parking lot - with a mountain bike strapped on. The rider got quite a number of confused stares from the rest of the riders but she calmly unstrapped the bike and trundled along the trails....
Sadiq Khan (mayor of London) has been saying this for years and is a hate figure for the far right and irresponsible drivers. He keeps getting re-elected.Vast indeed:
View attachment 115753
While lethality of wiping out from a bike is lower vs a pedestrian being hit by a vehicle, the same power law applies, meaning the graph of serious injury and death will look very similar.
Edit: Source https://www.paho.org/sites/default/files/2018-SpeedRoadCrashes_ENGLISH_FINAL.pdf
There’s even better research out there but unsurprisingly all the graphs are in km/h and I didn’t want to open that can of![]()
They're provably the safest moves a motorcycle can do in traffic. Saving time is a nice side effect, but if you actually cared about safety you should be filtering - if you have the bike, temperament, and skills to do so properly. Which could be applied to the entire article - if you have the capabilities, bikes can be great. If you don't, that's cool too.I can’t believe that the author is advocating for lane splitting (not legal here, but done all the time) and cutting between cars to get up to a light. These seem among the most dangerous moves a motorcyclist can do (and incidentally, among the most likely to tick off a car driver). That’s even if you are otherwise a safe rider (which is likely unusual, judging by the motorcyclists I see), wear a helmet (not required here, and often not worn) and the rest. Maybe it’s possible to fairly safely ride a motorcycle on busy streets during commute times (I doubt it, but I’ll give the benefit of the doubt) but I can’t see encouraging those actions, apparently just to save the motorcyclist commute or other travel time, as something a reasonable person would do.
It's always important to recognize our own limitations. Good on you, mate.I have been interested in riding for many years, but my late wife was always worried about the other guy. After being inspired by Neil Peart’s “Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road”, I decided to take a motorcycle safety course. How quickly I changed my mind. At 58, my reflexes aren’t what they used to be. Dream another dream I suppose, it’s just too dangerous out there.
Is there ANYTHING in life that has not been already analyzed, better, by XKCD ?As a long-time electric motorcycle commuter in LA, I both love seeing articles like this, and absolutely abhor reading the comments!
Advantages: 1) Short, reliable commute time, 2) no parking fees, 3) closer parking to office, 4) no gas fill-ups, 5) silent running, etc...
Disadvantages: 1) Greater chance of death/injury
Safe riding to all! ATGATT!
Uh, what? Laying it down means you are going to be separating yourself from your bike, allowing it to take the brunt of the wreck and you're sliding on your gear to safety. You're right about laying-it-down being "already crashed" though. It's a last resort. Times I've seen it done was in reaction to someone blowing a red light though, and not much two tires and a couple of small disc brakes can do for you there. Just let the bike take the hit. It's replaceable, you aren't.
Let me state my thinking up front, as clearly as I can: It’s never a good idea to drop a functioning motorcycle on its side if you’re on pavement.
Laying down your bike is the worst thing you can do 99.99% of the time – it only works in the movies. (And you don’t really think it worked there too, do you?) The rider who says “I knew I was going to crash, so I had to lay it down,” is just too embarrassed to admit that he or she lost control of the bike and/or is an uneducated rider.
Let’s stop kidding ourselves, fellow motorcyclists. It does us an injustice. When we say “I had to lay ‘er down” we are saying we had to crash to avoid a crash. This makes approximately zero sense. In fact, when there is no contact you are worse off from an insurance/at-fault standpoint. When there is no contact, it is a single vehicle crash and you cannot sue anyone for damages.
You cannot expertly throw a motorcycle to the pavement without some kind of training. Are local clubs holding “lay ‘er down” seminars on a sacrificial bike? Have they done this so often that they know where the bike, and they, will go, upon pavement contact? Mustn’t they be spending a ton of money on replacement riding gear and bike parts, or hospital bills for all that skin loss?
I don't want to use public transit. Even when it's faster (it's usually not), I enjoy having my own space too much and not having to share a crowded train or bus with other (often smelly) people.Anything but investing in public transit I guess
Biggest downside for me and commuting with the motorcycle was the weather. Winter with around freezing temps is just too slippery, summer and surprise downpours also are no fun. And if you wear the right protection, any warm day will get you soaked before getting to work. Forget it if you have to wear nice clothes to work.
It's still more fun than a car commute.
Yeah I'll stick with my car, thanks. I personally know of a few family friends and family members that have died or been seriously injured in motorcycle accidents.Information produced by the Insurance Information Institute shows that the occupant fatality rate was 10.5 for every 100,000 registered cars and 59.34 for every 100,000 registered motorcycles. Based on these figures, the risk of a fatal crash was almost six times higher among motorcycle riders.
The most alarming difference is notable when comparing the fatality in proportion to the miles traveled. The III estimates that the fatality rate for motorcycles is 25.67 for every 100 million vehicle miles traveled, which is frankly shocking compared to the mere 0.67 on passenger cars.
Looks like there's very little increase after 50mph. Might as well go for broke.Vast indeed:
View attachment 115753
While lethality of wiping out from a bike is lower vs a pedestrian being hit by a vehicle, the same power law applies, meaning the graph of serious injury and death will look very similar.
Edit: Source https://www.paho.org/sites/default/files/2018-SpeedRoadCrashes_ENGLISH_FINAL.pdf
There’s even better research out there but unsurprisingly all the graphs are in km/h and I didn’t want to open that can of![]()
Why not both?Anything but investing in public transit I guess
I've had a lot of filtering conversations over the years, and this class of example has always baffled me. Not sure why there's apparently an epidemic of people desperately needing to open their doors in traffic to dump things (is your window broken? Why are you so desperate to immediately vacate liquids from your vehicle onto the road?), or why some drivers either don't have mirrors or think that using them to check that it's clear before yolo-ing their door open is impossible.What is the law if a biker splits lanes, the motorist doesn't notice, opens the door to say dump a cup of water out and the biker turns into door paste?
Better for CO2, but aren't motorcycles worse for other pollutants? I think it is due to no/smaller catalytic converter.
Brian
It won’t. But it’ll give you a chance to get the hell out of the way.How the fuck is checking the mirrors going to make that car that's rear-ending you stop faster or avoid you?