Viewing 40 posts - 161 through 200 (of 212 total)
  • Cat & Fiddle "The most dangerours road in the UK" – Really?
  • molgrips
    Free Member

    Sorry mate I didn't see you*

    * you came ramming around that corner so damn quickly I didn't even have half a second in which to clock you.

    LHS
    Free Member

    Quicker to walk.

    Dickyboy
    Full Member

    both feet of the ground so technically he is running 😀

    clubber
    Free Member

    World's fastest runner! Top pic – Vale is it?

    Dickyboy
    Full Member

    running away from the undeniable evidence of having exceeded his skills level no doubt (rossi?)

    failedengineer
    Full Member

    I think there are a few roads in North Yorkshire and Cumbria in the hunt for that dubious title.
    IME backing off mid bend tightens the line, accelerating too soon makes the bike run wide. You should enter a bend on a trailing throttle and start accelerating and standing the bike up when you see the exit, surely?
    Do we really want bikes (or cars) to be restricted in any way at all? Life is dangerous, people will only find another way to injure themselves. I'm sure that, statistically, the roads are massively safer than 30 – 40 years ago and some of the sfaest in the world. But I ride bikes, so I'm biased. However, a lot of people post on here about their superfast German cars – I wonder how many can honestly say that they haven't strayed over the centre line on a bend? Could have killed a biker obeying the speed limit, that.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    failedengineer – Member

    IME backing off mid bend tightens the line,

    Nope – deffo makes the bike run wider. More obviuous on big bikes with wide tyres or non paralellogram shafties You can back off and go tighter but it needs a hefty does of countersteering to make it do so. You may be doing this unconsciously

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Do we really want bikes (or cars) to be restricted in any way at all?

    The difference between people driving like dicks and going say rock climbing or DH mtbing is that on the roads, there are completely innocent parties coming the other way.

    So it is not just about you.

    My wife and daughter could be driving along tonight quite carefully and someone could come round a corner out of control and kill them both*. You have the right to endanger your own life, but not those of others.

    * before you scoff this happens a lot, and to people I've known too.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    #

    clubber – Member

    OK, TJ, I'm not going to argue over what fast means because clearly we won't agree. In the past you've talked about overtaking and going over the speed limit which can be safe in the right circumstances including the skill of the rider.

    Again – not what I said and a different debate.

    Would you not agree though that there's a significant number of accidents where it'll ( training ) make no/very littel difference though and where speed will be an important factor?

    Nope – cos thats not what the research suggests. In fact its the other way round – in a small number of accidents reducing speed would make a difference a large number extra training will make a difference.

    as I said right at the beginning a major issue is that in your training and testing you are not taught to swerve or brake at high speed. learning these things makes much more difference that reducing speed by a few MPH Skill in braking will make more difference to stopping distances than a small reduction in speed.

    iterestingly one of the magazines has been lbbying hard and campaigning for the test and training to be made harder and to incorporate these two things.

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    TJ is this like lifting off in a RWD car?

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Al – nope. its because of the rounded tyres, the distance from the centre line to the contact patch because of the wide tyres, camber thrust and a whole load of complicated things that are hard for me to understand and even harder to explain. it does not involved loss of grip at all. its a geometric effect. Castor angle is involved as well.

    I'll see if I can find an explanation.

    clubber
    Free Member

    Links to the research please TJ. You started this thread saying there were no junctions and that the high number of accidents on the Cat&Fiddle was due to unskilled riders with no other factors and I reckon that both have been shown to be inaccurate.

    As above its people riding to fast for their skill levels and they pay the ultimate price.

    I don't know what the answer is. Teh demographic is middle class middle aged men. They usually they had bikes in their youth and now they have some time and money they buy themselves sportsbikes that are far beyond their capabilities to ride.

    Easily spotted but really hard to know what to do with them to stop them killing themselves

    And average age was 35 which in my book isn't middle aged (well not quite… 😉 )

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    Having the skills does make it safer to go fast, but it doesn't make it right.

    molgrips – Member
    The difference between people driving like dicks and going say rock climbing or DH mtbing is that on the roads, there are completely innocent parties coming the other way…

    That sums it up perfectly. Why should an innocent party's life be potentially forfeited for another person's selfish thrill.

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    Thanks TJ – don't worry about detail.

    Would a quick bit of front-wheel lock not sort out the situation? :mrgreen:

    molgrips
    Free Member

    a small reduction in speed

    Who's arguing for a small reduction? All I am saying is that reduce your speed to the point where you're not going to crash. Hardly controversial, is it?

    That may mean a BIG reduction in speed.

    You are arguing for more skill training – well surely one of the main skills of any rider or driver is knowing how fast is too fast. So we therefore agree…

    clubber
    Free Member

    Interesting read:

    http://mile-muncher.co.uk/dft_rdsafety_035422.pdf

    Rutter and Quine (1996) looked at age and experience in motorcycling safety, and
    from a national prospective survey of over 4,000 riders in the UK found that age
    played a much greater role than inexperience in explaining why young age groups
    are over-represented in casualty statistics. Rutter and Quine explain that more
    emphasis should be given to the consequences of dangerous riding and why training
    is so important: ‘Only when a proper set of underpinning beliefs and perceptions is
    provided for behaviour will skills be turned into safety’.

    The motorcycle accident database has shown that the most common cause of single
    vehicle accidents is a result of riders misjudging the appropriate speed to negotiate a
    bend in the road. A question was therefore included on the questionnaire asking the
    respondents how often, if ever, they have misjudged the speed required to negotiate
    a bend. Even though 69% of respondents appeared to be very experienced, they
    admitted to occasionally miscalculating bends. There were over 200 accidents on the
    motorcycle accident database that were a direct result of a rider losing control on a
    bend and, although the reasons for losing control were often unknown or not
    recorded, it is known that inappropriate speed was the main cause of 27.5% of the
    accidents.

    The over-riding message to motorcyclists is that they must slow down, not merely in
    relation to mandatory limits but also in consideration of various normal road
    hazards, particularly bends. In addition, they must avoid overtaking slower moving
    vehicles in the vicinity of junctions, even if the traffic is stationary and they are
    ‘filtering’ past it.

    Riders’ attitudes
    There were many causes of motorcycle accidents given on the motorcycle accident
    database that involved an element of risk taking. The questionnaire respondents,
    however, mentioned just four broad categories and it was risk taking on the part of
    the riders rather than the other road users that was seen to be a problem by the
    questionnaire respondents.
    The most interesting finding was that a quarter of the respondents (25.5%, n ¼ 141)
    thought a major cause of motorcycle accidents was riders riding too fast for
    conditions. Despite this, however, 58% (n ¼ 143) of the respondents admitted to
    always or frequently breaking the speed limit, with the remaining occasionally doing
    so. The riders therefore made a clear distinction between breaking the speed limit
    and driving at inappropriate speeds that are too fast for conditions (but not
    necessarily breaking the speed limit). One of the respondents to the questionnaire
    who wished to remain anonymous attached a letter to their questionnaire that
    summarised the feelings of many of riders:
    ‘I find that the speed limits set are often completely inappropriate
    depending on the circumstances. . . I would consider riding at 30 mph past
    a school when the children are leaving as being far too fast but on the
    other hand what possible danger could result from travelling along an
    open stretch of motorway at 11pm at night without another vehicle in sight
    at 80 or even 90mph?’
    An examination of the causes on the motorcycle accident database would seem to
    indicate that the respondents may have a point, as travelling in excess of the speed
    limit was only a causation factor in a minority of accidents on the accident database,
    though travelling at inappropriate speeds too fast for conditions accounted for a
    greater number of accidents. The figures would suggest therefore that the riders are
    correct in making this distinction. The lack of importance the riders gave to
    observing the speed limit was also shown by the safety measures given by the
    respondents to the questionnaire. A total of 117 respondents to the questionnaire
    (79.6%, n ¼ 147) considered observing the speed limit as being one of the least
    important safety measures a motorcyclist can take.

    Training initiatives, such as ‘Bikesafe’ in Scotland, described by Ormston et al.
    (2003), have reportedly had some success in using ‘assessed ride’ techniques to
    teach vulnerable motorcyclist groups more defensive riding techniques.
    However, while this leads to an apparently favourable adoption of lower speeds
    in built-up areas, it can increase motorcyclists’ confidence and thus their
    likelihood of adopting faster speeds in rural areas. As a large proportion of
    serious and fatal accidents happen in rural areas, it is far from clear that
    increasing motorcyclists’ confidence in this area would be productive.

    Unashamedly selective quoting I'll admit but it's nothing like the clearcut case that TJ seems to suggest IMO.

    (In the interest of fairness it does agree with TJ's points but they're just some of the factors rather than the only/main/key ones that he seems to be suggesting)

    molgrips
    Free Member

    TJ seems to be making facile points. That is, teaching riders to ride safely is better than saying slow down slightly.

    Well dur.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Clubber – interesting stuff indeed. the first quote is 14 years old This demographic thing is something that has been changing a lot over recent years. I thought I had said there were other causes and so on.

    Also that sort of thing relies both on extrapolating and also is a nationwide statistic., I believe on the honeypot roads the overcooking the corner by born agains is overrepresented compared to nationwide. I can't find the recent bit of data on this.

    All I want to try to show was the reasons why the A537 has such an huge number of dead motorcyclists.

    Finally – an anecdote that hopefully shows a part of my point

    Me and a couple of mates were out for a ride. Nice dry sunny day. Up in the highlands. We were riding " making good progress" – Certainly breaking the 60 mph limit at times but only at 70% effort or so – no where near our limits on a road we knew well. All in our late 30s / 40s with around 100 yrs experience and a a million miles or so between us. Bikes a firestorm, a BMW R1100, a bandit 12 and a ZZR1100. None bar the ZZR over 100 bhp and none supersports bikes.

    We overtook a small group of power rangers on sportsbikes. One tried to follow us ( GSXR 600) and on a sequences of open bends at around 50 mph did exactly what I have described and put his bike thru a hedge, Fortunately he was not hurt. Now we were all doing the same speed. He crashed, we were not even near the limit. His bike was far more capable than ours, he crashed because he did not have the skills to ride a medium speed corner at a relativity modest speed. Seriously if we had been going for it we could have gone round that corner at 70+ mph. Wanting to keep reasonable safety margins on the public road we aere around 50 mph. he was still over his limit.

    focussing on speed is unhelpful. wer were not riding oo fast by any definition. But at the same speed he was riding beyond his capabilities and thus crashed.

    Addressing the skills gap is a far more useful thing that saying " slow down"

    How slow do you want us to ride molgrips?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    TJ all that shows is that some riders are more skilled than others.

    How slow do you want us to ride molgrips?

    Slow enough to a) not crash, b) not crash into anyone else and c) not scare the living crap out of people by roaring past their wings 12" away.

    Not too much to ask is it?

    LHS
    Free Member

    Me and a couple of mates were out for a ride. Nice dry sunny day. Up in the highlands. We were riding " making good progress" – Certainly breaking the 60 mph limit at times but only at 70% effort or so – no where near our limits on a road we knew well. All in our late 30s / 40s with around 100 yrs experience and a a million miles or so between us. Bikes a firestorm, a BMW R1100, a bandit 12 and a ZZR1100. None bar the ZZR over 100 bhp and none supersports bikes.

    You're my hero! 🙄

    This could so easily read:

    We overtook a small group of power rangers on sportsbikes going slower than us and around the next corner there was mud all over the road from a muck spreader coming out of the field and we all piled into a hedge! The power rangers were able to stop because they were riding within the speed limit.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    SApart fromwhen the crash occured we wer riding within the speed limit and well withng the limits of the road allowing for such hazards.

    If were were going flat oput you would be right – but we were not going flat out avoiding a hazard on the road would have been easay

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Wow! Is this thread still going? Are we still at the stage where we all agree that driver/rider training is good and that driving/riding slower is safer (except TJ)?

    {EDIT} ooops, forgot the smiley
    😉

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Wow! Is this thread still going?

    Of course it is, TJ is on it.

    clubber
    Free Member

    TJ no one is disputing the whole countersteering/experience point.

    However your complete inability to see the issue that speed can have demonstrates nicely some of the issues detailed in the report I linked.

    LHS
    Free Member

    when the crash occured we wer riding within the speed limit

    Convenient addition to the story!!!! 🙄

    ChrisA
    Free Member

    Molgrips, in relation to noise a bike revs higher, so for arguements sake, at 40mph if im on my mises' 749r, in third gear, the engine will be at approx 4.5k revs and that will generally keep it on he bottom of the first power band but it will rev upto 13k, in the car, i might be in 3rd gear too, but at 2.5k revs, hence the noise. Granted race cans don;t help, the majority of which, provided they are not stamped 'illegal for road use' are perfectly legal for the road, its at the discression of the mot tester about noise.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    Having read through this, for possibly only the second time I find myself tending to agree with TJ. I'm not a biker. My brother is, and has been since he was old enough to own a bike. Last year he was nearly killed when he clipped the back of a car at 20mph which pitched him into the path of a car doing 50. This has no bearing on the topic in question, just to point out that I'm not ignorant of motorcycles or how they're ridden. I'm going to draw a parallel with driving a car quickly. I don't drive a sportscar, I drive a medium sized saloon with a diesel engine, but, like TJ says, it's quite possible to drive at a speed that other road users would consider excessive without actually exceeding posted speed limits. I regularly find myself behind drivers in modern cars pootleing along at an indicated 40, (approx 36mph), where the limit is 60, and braking into corners that even in my Octavia I can take at 50. There's nothing excessive about how I'm driving, but the perception of others when I go into a bend at that sort of speed with no brake lights coming on would probably be 'bloody lunatic'. I have the road knowledge and skill of around thirty years driving and I know my limits and where I can use speed safely and where not to. I've only gone off a road twice, once when a rear tyre blew out on my dad's old Capri, and once last winter on an icy road at 10mph. Neither resulted in damage, 'cos, like TJ, I know when it's stupid to use excessive speed for the prevailing road conditions.

    MrSmith
    Free Member

    That sums it up perfectly. Why should an innocent party's life be potentially forfeited for another person's selfish thrill.

    because the car is king. even on a cycling forum.

    hora
    Free Member

    That sums it up perfectly. Why should an innocent party's life be potentially forfeited for another person's selfish thrill.

    If we are talking about local communities who need to get to and access their remote homes in that area fine.

    However I think its safe to say that all people entering such roads know that it (and other similar roads) are expected to be respected first and dangerous in many ways (be it gradient, weather/conditions and you need to be concentrating more nevermind other drivers).

    What do you hand-ringers propose next? reduce all NSL's down to 30mph's?

    There are roads in the wider area that are more challenging to any driver. Whats the name of the road that comes over from Holmfirth and joins halfway along Woodhead? Part of the drop down has an exposed/severe drop with no barrier and of course no street lights.

    Stop thinking that its dangerous because lots of people are having head-on's with reckless drivers.

    Theres more to it than that.

    If you want to start nannying people more then where do you stop? If you were born or grew up in a rural or semi-rural area you'll know all about these roads. Average camera's are a good idea on straight roads- NOT on winding roads where you shouldn't be checking your speedo.

    Idiot-city people 🙄 On reflection thats abit harsh. If you haven't been around such roads all your life you really don't know the true ins and outs. The majority of serious accidents/deaths occur on country roads- not because they are race tracks but because of the higher requirements they place on average drivers just to get along them safely.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    CountZero, we are all arguing against excessive speed.

    ChrisA – it's not the noise. It's the sudden appearing in the rear view mirror then barrelling past really close to your car when there's a car coming the other way – that's what I was referring to. Even if there's room, doesn't mean it's very nice.

    Imagine going to the supermarket and running around grabbing stuff from infront of people, barging past really close to people's faces shouting RAAAAAAAARR!!! at the top of your lungs. You wouldn't do it.. so why do it on the roads? I'm sure TJ and other responsible motorcyclists don't do it, but some do. Some drivers do it too, and it's downright antisocial.

    But that is not the issue on this thread.

    hora
    Free Member

    No offence molgrips but are you one of them people that occasionally start to speed up once I draw parallel to them on NSL's?

    ….purely as you think I shouldn't be driving soo fast and reckless to overtake so you'll teach me a 'lesson'?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    What do you hand-ringers propose next? reduce all NSL's down to 30mph's?

    I'm not hand-wringing. We've established that the NSL is not the issue here anyway because almost everyone completely ignores it. All I want is for people to relax, take it easy and stop people c*nts on public roads. People crash for many reasons, but one is wanting to go fast and f*ck about.

    I grew up in the countryside, and these windy A roads are the biggest roads in the area. Loads of people overtaking in stupid places and risking their lives, and lots of accidents, and lots of deaths.

    To illustrate, one big one fairly recently was a lorry driver going through a hamlet just north of Leominster on the A49; there's a sharp (for the road) left hander then right hander, 40mph speed limit. The lorry was apparently going too fast and lost control, hitting another lorry and careering into a house which it partially demolished and set on fire. Both drivers died I think. Amazingly fortunately, the family who lived in the house were on holiday. The road had to be resurfaced, the fire was that bad.

    scraprider
    Free Member

    public roads have speed limits for a reason, if you want to go faster than your driving skills will let you , then do a track day.

    hora
    Free Member

    Drive down Snake Pass at 40mph (nevermind 60+) and you a slight slip of concentration could mean you are on the wrong side of the road or clip a kerb etc.

    Maybe I'm missing something here but I'm struggling to think of many bad driving that I've witnessed on roads around rural Yorkshire.

    I can tell you the ones I've seen on urban and motorways though- daily observations.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Drive down Snake Pass at 40mph (nevermind 60+) and you a slight slip of concentration could mean you are on the wrong side of the road or clip a kerb etc.

    Ah yes.. good point. Now, if you do make a mistake or your concentration slips, if you are going slower you'll have more time to correct! I've made many mistakes whilst driving, but because I am doing everything with plenty of margin for error, I have managed to recover without incident so far.

    I saw and still see tons of examples of terrible driving on the roads of Wales and the Marches. It's mostly people overtaking when they either can't see or there's something coming the other way anyway. And it's not all grannies doing 40mph either. If you drive the NSL you'll get people forcing their way past almost as much.

    hora
    Free Member

    Ah yes.. good point. Now, if you do make a mistake or your concentration slips, if you are going slower you'll have more time to correct!

    At 40 you'd still be firmly on the wrong side of the road there. In winter it can be truly evil.

    Basically around there it can catch ANY driver out. Some roads up and around Huddersfield are 2nd (and even 1st) gear climbs on a few bends/roads.

    Basically the technical equal-to singletrack.

    anagallis_arvensis
    Full Member

    Can anyone explain countersteering to me? I have no idea what it is, although have survived a year on a motorbike with only one crash. Someone once tried to explain it to me for use on my roadbike once, but they failed.

    -m-
    Free Member

    The correct line on a motorcycle places you in a different place in the road so you can see further. One of the common newb mistakes is to use the same lines as a car.

    Just reading through the thread as these ones are always amusing… Without wishing to get drawn into the overall debate it's fair to say that the second sentence above falls into the trap of tarring all drivers with the same brush (which, it appears, it is unacceptable to do to motorcyclists…).

    A good driver in a car will be positioning the vehicle to maximise the 'safe' speed – which may be by maximsing visibility or by optimising the line. A motorbike has the advantage that the rider can position his/her self to a greater 'extreme' due to the width of the vehicle, but it's simply an extension of the same principle that a car driver should be applying.

    Both will also be considering other factors about the respective performance and abilities of their vehicles in selecting their speed.

    And yes, I do ride a motorbike as well as drive a car.

    Coyote
    Free Member

    Certainly breaking the 60 mph limit at times

    Apart fromwhen the crash occured we wer riding within the speed limit

    Huh?

    Northwind
    Full Member

    LHS – Member

    "The belief that just because you are a better driver or motorcyclist than the "weekend warriors" you can be safer at speed is just idiotic. "

    LHS – Member

    "I think TJs points ring true that, if you are a more experienced/skilled biker you can go round a corner quicker and safer than a weekend born again warrior"

    Hmm.

Viewing 40 posts - 161 through 200 (of 212 total)

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