http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/inde ... _ride.html
Sounds like it was WAY too much bike for her to be learning on...

Moderator: Modsquad
I have seen so many who don't even put chin strap on. At my rider training the instructor ripped a new one in a couple people who tried to get on the bike without chin strap being fastened. Tough to say but it sounds like this person was not correctly checked over by the bike owner on safety aspects and pure stupidity to start on a Harley.speedandstyle wrote:I say you are right on the "too big to learn on" part. But I wonder how fast she was going to have been killed from head trauma even with a helmet. Of coarse it might have been the wrong size helmet or one of those skull cap types that offer little protection.
Precisely.gn2 wrote:Presumably he would have been just as dead without a helmet.
Safety gear doesn't eliminate risk, it reduces risk.
Non of my business but does being an X-ray technician have any part in the leukaemia?Mel46 wrote:By the way, when I turned 18, I was in the military and had never driven before. I was an X-ray tech fresh out of military training school when I went to my permanent base out in nowhere land (west Texas). If you didn't have a vehicle you had to walk to town, and everywhere else. I bought a Harley Sportster from a patient who had just crashed his Triumph motorcycle and needed money to repair it. He was in a cast from head to toe. His riding friend took me out to a deserted back country road and taught me how to ride by having me stay in 1st gear while riding up and down the road. Then he taught me to shift up and down to 2nd gear. We practiced for several days before he let me ride that road at 35 mph back and forth for a mile. Some of those roads hadn't seen traffic for years. This was one of those roads. After a week i could ride quite well. Then i practiced turns and other things that would be on the driving test. He got me the book, and I got my license. I got my license to drive a car a year later. If you are young, and you have plenty of time and space, you can learn on a Harley. I wouldn't recommend it on a Sporster, though. It turned out to be a good and a bad learning tool. Good in that i learned how to control a beast. Bad because it was a beast, and when it wanted to fall over, it would fall over. A riding buddy bought the small Harley 150 at the time and he had a lot less balance issues....but then i could ride 2 up. He couldn't. Like I said, good and bad.
We were told by an instructor on the Performance plus day at Cadwell Park in May...gn2 wrote:You might be surprised to learn just how slow the impact speeds helmets are tested for.
You are right Mel, I apologizeMel46 wrote:I would take offense at that term.
ive rode big machines for38 years. sold my Goldwing 5 years ago. me and the woman bought 2 pcxs. 4 weeks in we were in a parking lot for her to practice, I was in a slite corner, hit the brakes and slide at least 5 foot, cracked 2 ribs,and hit my helmet on pavement. it was like it hit a pach of ice. still don't know exectly what happened I was on my ass before I knew it.maybe less weight bike ?????Mel46 wrote:I would take offense at that term. However, for those of us who love our scooters and have moved down to them from big bikes because of the fun factor, we can be injured just as much on a scooter as on a bigger bike. I haven't seen any older riders on scooters not wearing a helmet.
However:
I have seen young people who obviously don't think they can be injured on a scooter. I saw a young girl, probably a teen, riding her scooter at 45 mph (the speed limit on the particular street she was on) with the following as her attire: flip flops, bathing suit top, shorts, and a helmet that was not buckled. Oh, and no eye protection either.
homie wrote:You are right Mel, I apologizeMel46 wrote:I would take offense at that term.I was off my meds and coming away from another thread when I posted.
http://www.hondapcx.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=4749
You probably locked the front wheel.earlleecliffton wrote:still don't know exectly what happened