Archive for the ‘Info’ Category

Deadly Guardrails

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

If you hit the guard rails fitted at the sides of our roads the result can be deadly.

These rails are intended to keep vehicle from running off the road or across into the other carriageway and are only tested for car and commercial vehicle impacts, motorcycle impacts are not considered.

A motorcycle impact with the standard issue is frequently fatal due to the rider impacting the support beams which can lead to dismemberment and/or decapitation.

FEMA, the Federation of European Motorcyclists’ Associations, has has been campaigning for a new standard which takes crash tests with motorcycles into account and have issued a Special Edition newsletter about this.

The newsletter can be viewed on line at http://www.fema-online.eu/ by clicking on this link.

Motion Induced Blindness

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

When riding you should always be scanning what is all around you, it is a mistake to fix your attention straight ahead.

If you do then you will risk missing seeing potential dangers.

An example is to be seen in this link (Click Here)

The effect appears whether you concentrate on the centre blinking dot or on one of the outer fixed dots so REMEMBER

Keep Your Eyes Moving!!

FEMA News Autumn 2011

Monday, November 7th, 2011

The Autumn 2100 edition of FEMA, the road riding motorcyclist pressure group is now available on line HERE and on their main website at http://www.fema-online.eu/

There are articles on Type Approval legislation, the “Back Off EU” protest, the “Road Safety 2011-2120″ proposals, mandatory inspections, there’s a study which shows that motorcycling is beneficial for society and others.

It gives a view as to proposed legislation and to what is being done on the motorcyclists behalf.

Worth a read surely?

Car Safety Systems on Bikes

Monday, May 30th, 2011

The safety magazine “Vision Zero International” for June2011 has an article on bringing in electronic safety systems on bikes, such as speed limit sensing, collision warning, curve warning, intersection support and lane change support.

You can read it at http://tinyurl.com/3qusgkj and then go on to read the rest of the magazine as well if you wish.

F.E.M.A. Newsletter Spring 2011

Monday, May 30th, 2011

The Spring edition of the newsletter from F.E.M.A. is now available “on-line” at http://tinyurl.com/3bdodmo

Some interesting articles and links here.

Changes to Module 1 Test

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

Following on from the review on Module 1 of the Practical Test the DSA are now re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic with some minor changes to Module 1, which are to come into use on 16th May 2011.

First off they are changing the order in which the exercises, “Elements” in DSA speak, are to be done, the intention is that all of the “slow speed” exercises will now be done together, followed by the high speed ones, presumably if the examiner is not happy with your slow riding he will not carry on with the high speed part of the test and so reduce the accident toll.

This will mean that the “Slow Ride” and the “U-Turn” exercises will now be done following the “Slalom” and “Figure 8″ exercises.

The published intention is that on the completion of the “Figure 8″ you will be asked ride across the yard to the “U-Turn” area at a walking pace and this will be observed by the examiner rather than you having to keep pace with him as at present.

Next will be the “Controlled Stop”, for this you will need to ride round the “circuit bend” at the end of the yard, but this first time round it there will be no speed requirement so it’s a chance for you to get the feel of things, and then go straight through down to stop with your wheel in the “stop box” of 4 blue cones.

The entrance to and exit from the “circuit bend” have been “altered to allow the rider to choose their preferred riding line”

Now you need to get up to speed!, it’s time for the “Emergency Stop”.

So it’s round the “circuit bend” again, but this time you need to get round it at 30kph, accelerate up to 50kph and through the speed trap and stop when the examiner raises his hand.

The official release says that they are now going to allow a 5% tolerance on that speed so it will no longer be a fail if you only do 49kph but it is a “Minor Fault”.

All that’s left to do is the swerve,   Oops!, Sorry, that’s the “Avoidance” exercise.

Round the “circuit bend” for the third time, again at 30kph, through the speed trap at 50kph (5% tolerance) and swerve through the marker cones same as always.

You have already done the “Controlled Stop” exercise so you now just need to stop safely near the cones marking the back of the box (the 2 front cones are to be removed before you start the exercise) .

Diagrams of the “New” layout can be downloaded from the “info/Practical Test/Module 1″ section of the XS main site HERE where there are both the “Old Test Layout” and the “Current Layouts” available for download.

Reaction Times

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011

A quick reaction time is definitely to your advantage while on the road, especially if you are in the habit of riding in sheep country.

Here’s a quick test for you to try to see just how good your reactions actually are. “Click here” to try the test.

Review Ordered on Motorcycle Tests (2)

Monday, December 20th, 2010

Further to the blog entry of 9th June this year about a review having been ordered into the “new” style Motorcycle Practical Test.

This has now been completed and in it Mike Penning, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport, states that he “wants to see the practical test delivered as a single on-road event in a way which will maintain riding standards, protect safety and increase accessibility of the test to all candidates”.

The review suggests that the test could now include the hazard avoidance manoeuvre as well as the other specified manoeuvres ‘on the road’ or suggests that the low-speed manoeuvres could possibly be examined at CBT training centres ahead of the main test.

This change would of course mean that there would no longer be the need to take the test at one of the inadequate number of specialist test centres, as is now necessary and so do away with the current, inherently unsafe, need for a test candidate to ride for 2 hours or more just to get to a test centre in order to take a test.(There are reports of some candidates having to ride for over 5 hours to reach their nearest test centre.)

The actual report is on-line at:- http://tinyurl.com/294qsfj

We’ll have to watch out though that this change is not used as an excuse to boost the cost of a test yet again.

When the “new” test was first proposed we were told that it would not be necessary to increase the test fee but they have subsequently boosted it by over 50%. (A motorcycle test is now over £90 in comparison to the £62 it is for a car.)

Free Tyre Pressure Gauge

Friday, November 12th, 2010

Your tyres are all that comes between you and the road.

A major safety factor is keeping them at the correct pressure, the wrong pressure will adversely affect the handling and braking so you need to check them regularly.

Bridgestone tyres are currently running a safety campaign, admittedly aimed more at cars but, one aspect of which is that they are offering a FREE tyre pressure gauge.

If you go to the< http://tyresafety.eu/home>, after the intro video has finished playing you will see, beside the front of the car, a placard “Order a Free Tyre Gauge”.

Click on this and you get the order page for a free gauge.

There are also a set of car oriented safety videos that also hold true for bikes

Got to be worth the effort.


!!THIS OFFER IS NOW CLOSED!!

F.E.M.A.

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

A common complaint among bikers is that “The government, the council, the police, etc, etc, (take your pick) is Anti Bike!”.

To defend our interests in the “Corridors of Power” we have the “British Motorcyclists Federation” (BMF) whose website is at :- http://www.bmf.co.uk, and the “Motorcycle Action Group” (MAG) whose site is at :- http://www.mag-uk.org.

However both these organisations are aimed at the UK “Corridors” and, of course, there are also those of the “Euro Government” to be considered because they can enact Europe-wide legislation that can affect us.

To cover for this, both organisations belong to the “Federation of European Motorcycle Associations” (FEMA) who are looking after motorcycle interests on this level.

There is a FEMA website at :- http://www.fema-online.eu, where you can keep up to date with what is happening and they also publish a web newsletter which you can subscribe to if you wish or you can read on-line at their site.

The latest newsletter is available to view :-  here ,  and it has some interesting content about the proposed coming Type Approval legislation that new machines will have to comply with within the next 7 years, and the back numbers of the newsletter are available on the web-site.

Remember, Just because you are paranoid doesn’t meant that everyone is not trying to get you!.