ScumLord wrote: » Probably not, it's not exactly that easy to do the speed limit on a modern bike. The fact is modern road bikes have more in common with their track counterparts than your average car would, they could be plodding along in second gear and still be doing well over 120kph. Outside of choppers and touring bikes, most bikes are made for insane speeds. The problem is many bikes are built with that insane speed in mind and some don't really work properly until their doing those insane speeds.They can suffer from poor braking performance and tyre grip until everything has been heated up. To be fair to most bikers they do have much better awareness than your average car driver. Most of them learn that the hard way too, I don't know any serious biker that's managed to avoid being in a serious collision at least once in their lives..Bikes are inherently dangerous, there's very little that can be done about that other than more training.
efanton wrote: » are you even aware of the rules of the road? it appears not. I think you need to get you highway code book out again for a serious refresher course.It is perfectly legal for motorcyclists to filter between traffic. In most European countries motorcyclist are entitle to use bus lanes and cycle lanes, unfortunately not in Ireland. Did it occur to you that if motorcyclist were unable to pass stationary traffic but instead take up position behind stationary cars, that you journey to work would be significantly longer. Motorbikes take up more far less road space, are far more economical and environmentally friendly, and this has been recognised by cities such as London, where they actually encourage motorcyclists and penalise cars with only a single driver occupying them. Since they implemented these new rules and applying your logic you would expect that the number of motorcyclists being killed in London would have increased since there is now a far higher proportion of them, but the reality is motorcyclist deaths have dramatically decreased. Unfortunately the cause of death for these motorcyclist has not changed with close to 50% being caused by car drivers when the motorcyclist was riding within the law and rules of the road.
rjpf1980 wrote: » Disproportionally they still die. Eliminate motorcycles from the road and a significant minority of road deaths are non existent.
Pac1Man wrote: » But it is their choice and the risks are widely known. Why would you be desperate to lower road deaths? I'm not being smart, serious question.
rjpf1980 wrote: » I'll say it again. If motorcycles had not existed for the past century or so and someone invented them today they would not be allowed on the road. There is zero protection for a cyclist from a collision with another vehicle or contact with the road in the event of a crash except for a crash helmet which cannot stop a head from exploding like a melon, pads on a jacket and trousers or jumpsuit that can be rubbed away in seconds before skin flesh and bone are torn away. The bodies of motorcyclists literally disintegrate at high speeds during crashes. At lower legal speeds death and injury is much higher because there is no physical protection to the rider. He/she is thrown from the bike or crushed under the wheels or flayed alive by the road surface. I haven't seen one poster refute my argument rationally.
X6.430macman wrote: » Motorcyclists just slow down end of story
McDave wrote: » I said overtaking stationary traffic. Including into oncoming traffic. And in cycle lanes, the illegality of which you don't seem to accept. Maybe *you* need to read the rules of the road again.
Kat1170 wrote: » If car drivers had to undertake even half the compulsory training that motorcyclists do the roads would be much safer for everyone :rolleyes:
Slanty wrote: I wouldn't ban bikes but this weaving in and out of the middle lanes is the problem. Just stay in the lane and overtake correctly
rjpf1980 wrote: » Unbelievable!
efanton wrote: » Filtering is LEGAL. Filtering by definition means passing between or besides STATIONARY or slow moving traffic if there is space to do so that does not put any road user at risk. You are also quick to jump to unfounded assumption. I personally do not use bicycle or bus lanes, although I have seen this done. My personal opinion however would be that it would make far more sense to allow motorcyclists to use them as this means they filter in a far safer environment.
bladespin wrote: » It's very rare for a motorcyclist to injure or kill another road user.
bladespin wrote: » Funny how many posts are about filtering yet the main causes of serious accidents with bikes are loosing control in a corner (often within the speed limits) and interacting with other vecicles at junctions (pull outs as per RSA ad).
bladespin wrote: » Think you'll find bikes are little if a threat to other road users. It's very rare for a motorcyclist to injure or kill another road user.
sonofenoch wrote: I do know of a rider who hit and killed a pedestrian a few years ago, was subsequently cleared of all blame ......I do remember him riding the same bike around afterwards which I thought odd, while I don't know if I'd have given up biking I think I'd have given up that bike
bladespin wrote: » Lost a friend last year when a car driver was blinded by the low sun and crossed a solid white line striaght into him, very experienced rider and racer on a charity run, guess it was his fault for being there.
prinzeugen wrote: » There is a poster on boards that keeps posting "motorists kill 200+ every year".. They just look at stats and don't have a clue about how each road death happens. The same poster gave out about some old lad that had a heart attack and mounted the pavement. Some people have pathological hatred for other road users which is worrying!
rjpf1980 wrote: » ...The size of these vehicles and their speed mean drivers of large vehicles cannot see them in time when there are head on collisions in moving traffic
rjpf1980 wrote: » ...drivers of cars and other vehicles pull out into the path of a motorcycle which results in the bike plowing into the side with the driver going under the wheels or being launched into the air for sometimes hundreds of yards..