I love motorcycles, although I don't currently own one, and I roadraced bikes in sanctioned events for about 6 years from 1985 through 1990. I quit racing when my wife was pregnant with our son.Beiruty wrote:I was interested in buying a Can-Am Spyder. However, my wife was against the idea since her Dad died in a motorcycle accident when she was 9 yrs old.
And as a matter of fact, I witnessed one of many motorcycle accidents where the rider did not have a chance against 2-tons of steel hurling at HW speed.
Now, in life we take risks and we live with our decision. However, I feel that most riders are safe riders and most of the time a distracted car driver, a sleepy car driver, or even a drunk car driver knock off a rider dead.
Is my concern justified? Is my wife correct, that riding a motorcycle is putting your self at elevated risk of being injured or killed?
To add a bit, my wife is really really worried if I would use my Spyder to commute to work (30 miles each way on the famous HW-75).
Two points:
- There is nothing inherently unsafe about a well-maintained motorcycle. The key words are "well maintained." When people fail to maintain a car adequately, and that leads to an accident, they are still surrounded by a car, and they still have a reasonable chance of survival. They even have a reasonable chance of suffering no injuries at all. When people fail to maintain a motorcycle, and that leads to an accident, they are surrounded by other cars, telephone poles, curbs, culverts, pedestrians, etc., etc. Draw your own conclusions....
- The bikes themselves may not be dangerous, and yours may be perfectly maintained, and you may be the absolute best rider on the planet, but you still have no control over what other drivers are going to do. So even if all the other driving conditions are perfect, the world in which you ride is still a dangerous world. And as I can tell you from repeated experience on the most famous canyon roads in Southern California, even a single vehicle bike accident can put you over the side of a 500 foot cliff, and then all the maintenance in the world isn't going to help you. The only things that can save you from such a fate in similar terrain are A) judicious use of the throttle, brakes, and steering; and B) a guaranteed lack of other cars to collide with; and C) a road without sand, gravel, potholes, greasy pavement sealer, deer, kids chasing a ball out into the street, black ice, high winds, other out of control bikers, and a host of other environmental factors.
In that particular instance, I was not doing anything illegal or reckless. I was in the intersection, feet down, with my left turn signal on, waiting for an oncoming car to clear the intersection before making my turn. Other cars who had been at the light headed the same direction as I was were passing me on the right when this 16 year old yutz rammed into me. During the 5 or 6 years that I worked in an ER, I saw lots and lots of people brought in who were injured in bike accidents. I have no statistics to report, but I can tell you anecdotally that something like 75%-80% were the victims of someone in a car making an illegal left turn in front of the motorcyclist when the biker had the legal right of way. The car drivers universally claim that they just don't see them.
I still love bikes, and someday, when I'm retired and have the disposable income for one, I'll buy another. BUT... anyone who rides and refuses to accept that the world you ride in is a dangerous one, no matter how skilled you are, is a fool. Anyone who rides and refuses to dress for the occasion, including a helmet, is a damned fool. And speaking of skilled riders, I once went for a ride with a friend of mine and Fred Merkel. Yes, THE Fred Merkel. The man was the then reigning World Superbike Champion (1988, '89), and previous AMA Superbike Champion (1984, '85, '86). He was terrified on that ride, and we were on a low traffic winding mountain road. It is hard to argue with his skill level, and his truthful recognition that a public access highway is a much more dangerous environment than a professional racing circuit where the speeds are triple what we were riding at on the highway.
I'm not trying to talk you out of buying a bike, particularly that Can Am Spyder which I also find intriguing. But I am saying, go into it with both eyes wide open, without being in denial of the risks associated with it. If you can still enjoy it, knowing those risks, then by all means go ahead. But like RPBrown said, there are two kinds of riders: those who've been down, and those who are gonna go down. Another saying: There are bold riders, and there are old riders, but there are no old bold riders.
Have fun and keep the shiny side up.