No need for Gear

a53x
06-04-2004, 04:08 PM
Riding without boots and crashing might cost you some road rash or foot mash or even in an extreme case might lead to amputation. You might never walk without a limp. You might battle a weight and fitness problem for the rest of your life. You might never walk with pain. But it probably wouldn't kill you.

Riding without gloves and crashing might cost you some road rash or a
Munched hand or the severe, excrutiating pain of mangling a body part rich with nerve endings. Or you could lose a finger or two. It could cost you the
ability to play ball with your son, to properly feel the gentle curve of a womans breast, or to hold a beer. But it probably wouldn't kill you.

Riding without at least an armored jacket and leather trousers or full leathers or an Aerostich or even just a leather jacket and jeans and crashing might cost you serious road rash. You might grind off a nipple. You might embed gravel in your elbow. You might get beef jerky all over your back. You might grind off your kneecap or have a scar resembling Australia on you calf like a friend of mine does. You would be scarred for life and not be able to walk on a beach shirtless without feeling self conscious. You might end up like Kevin Spacey's character in "Pay It Forward" and have to deal with the same awkward moment every time you remove your clothes with a new lover. But it probably won't kill you.

Riding without a back protector and crashing in all but rare crashes would be inconsequential. However, there are so many variables out there- curbs, fenders, poles, guardrails, debris in the road- any one of these could be the golden BB that nicks your spinal cord in just the wrong way and leaves you in a wheelchair for life. Or, maybe you just have constant sciatic pain in one leg. Or you can't move your legs. Or you have to wear diapers for when you @#%$ yourself, and/or a colostomy bag you have to pull out of your pants leg and squeeze your waste out into the toilet at a bar like a guy I know. Or you can't move from the chest down. Or from the neck down. Are you good at working joysticks with your mouth? Or maybe you might need a respirator? Or 24 hour care? Certainly, there are impacts that are completely forseeable that would permanently injure you even with the best back protector in the world. But there are crashes and subsequent impacts that even mediocre back protectors can make that little bit of difference in- the ones you get up and walk away from, sore all over, but *walking*. Do you want the last time you walked to be when you walked out of 7-11 with a pack of smokes and hen got on your bike? Those precious few steps out the door and over to the bike to be the five steps you remember the rest of your life because the next time you were off the bike you were lying strapped to a backboard staring at the headliner of an ambulance, tears running down your face because you couldn't feel the little piggies and you were almost ready to vomit at the stench of your @#%$ because you lost control of your bowels? Riding without a back protector and crashing might not make a difference, or it might make all the difference in the world. It might not kill you, but it might make you wish it had.

And, finally, helmets. Riding without a helmet and crashing might be of no consequence. You might never even touch terra firma with your head. Or you might give yourself an asphalt facelift. You might get a concussion that results in only a bad headache the next day. You might get a serious concussion that lands you in the hospital for endless CAT scans and MRIs, and for the rest of your days be plagued by migraines. You might fracture your orbital and lose your vision. You might fracture your skull and end up fully functional but with a horrible Frankenstein like scar and a metal plate that bothers you on cold days and sets of metal detectors in airports. You might have a closed head injury from which you don't awaken from for hours or days or weeks or months- all the while your mother, father, sister, brother, children, workmates, and/or riding buddies come a visit you, filling an utterly depressing hospital room into a gauche jungle of flowers and bright card saying "get well soon!" that you never see or smell. Sure, you might awaken completely normal besides the hole drilled in your head to reduce pressure. Or you might awaken a little fuzzy, unsure who these people are. Or you might awaken and have to re-learn everything it took you all your life to learn, eventually returning to normal or even better like Harrison Ford in "Regarding Henry". Or you might awaken a man-child, drooling and laughing as you try to stack blocks, wearing sweatpants and a t-shirt signed by your mother, father, sister, brother, children, workmates, and/or riding buddies- which you will never read. Or you might have an open head injury, from which the "you" you know will most likely never return. The rest of your life -be it a day, a week, a month, a year- will consist of feeding tubes, the endless beep and whoosh of the heart monitor and respirator, and the drip-drip or IV fluids, catheters in your rod, and feeding tubes. Of course, you won't mind all of this, you'll be in a dream land no one knows about. Your body will waste away and atrophy. Eventually, the shell that used to be you would give out, and your loved ones would have to make the most grueling decision of their life. Or, you might die on the road, fluffy gray brain matter mixing with blood and cerebro-spinal fluid. Perhaps you last ride would be twenty miles an hour
down the street by your house combined with an impatient young driver and an ignored stop sign. Or perhaps it would be a ride on the freeway and a
pothole denting your rim and popping the front tire off the bead sending you into the guardrail. Or you might go out in a blaze of glory qith a 100 mph wheelie ending the wrong way. Whichever way, would make maybe a 10 second news story depending on where you live, maybe a paragraph buried on page 32B of the paper. Riding without a helmet could be of no matter- or it could mean the difference between going on as you are now, or having life taken awy from you as if God flipped a switch.


I can live without toes or a mangled foot- but I choose to try and prevent that. I can live with a hand that looks like a burn victim's and maybe relearn to write with my left hand- but I choose to try and prevent that. I can live with a scar in the shape of Australia on my calf- but I try and prevent that. I can live with road rash on my torso and arms- but I try to prevent that. I could live in a wheelchair, agonizing through every day, but I chose to try and prevent that.

I can't live as a man-child. I've already played with blocks. I only drool when I sleep.

We all make choices. Gear can't always save you. All the best leather, denim, Cordura, Kevlar, fiberglass, and plastic is useless when fate throws the Immovable Object or the Irresistible Force in your path. But I choose to stack the deck in my favor. If it all ends up for naught and the stacked deck and the cards up my sleeve end up losing to Fate's royal flush, so be it. But I'll try.

-Author unknown-

slodsm
06-04-2004, 04:18 PM
Pretty good read and very true

VinRR
06-04-2004, 04:26 PM
Very good read. Hopefully it will give people who dont wear gear a reality check.

monkey
06-04-2004, 05:01 PM
Damn, I never really thought of it in that light before. Really makes one think

R

hotrod7
06-04-2004, 05:31 PM
Deep and true :shock:

usmcr6
06-04-2004, 05:50 PM
I like it. I always wear at minimum jacket, boots, gloves, helmet, and jeans. Optimally I will add onto that a back protector, leather pants, and my racing boots.

D208Rider
06-04-2004, 06:10 PM
So true...
I was walking to lunch today, and saw a young guy (early 20s) getting on his CBR F4I (o1 I think) wearing nothing but shorts and a T-shirt. I almost went over to him and said "hay man where are your learther's" not to be a jerk, but to get this idiot into the right frame of mind. Well I didn't, I crossed the street and thought to myself "It's none of my business" but in fact it is my business... anyone who isn't wearing the correct gear indangers us all. If for no other reason than it promotes the wrong behavior to those who may consider riding.

It can be safe (relativly) if one thinks and acts intelligently, wears the proper gear, and respects his/her life and the power of the machine they ride.

Okay, I'm steping off my soap box now... :D

Raimey7
06-04-2004, 06:23 PM
Very true.

cvlighthouse
06-04-2004, 06:30 PM
A good time to ride naked is on christmas morning....

JonRR
06-04-2004, 06:45 PM
Well, I have to admit to being a bad seed already. I got my bike last Friday, rode last weekend with helmet, jacket and gloves on all weekend, even in the middle of the day (Houston in June is hot, mesh jacket, butt-naked, whatever).

Then this week riding to work (I live 1.5 miles from work, speed limit of 40 or less the whole way) I've been wearing gloves and helmet but I haven't been wearing my jacket. It's Houston, it's hot... but I think I'll start wearing my jacket next week.

jumbalaya
06-04-2004, 06:48 PM
Wow... very good read. Makes you think about the consequences (usually unforseen by the young and brash) of riding without gear. Some of the best advice I got before I started riding, was from a friend of mine: "Ride like you are invisible to the other drivers, and dress for the fall, not the ride, as if you haven't gone down yet, eventually, you will."

westhondapons600rr
06-04-2004, 07:03 PM
:clapping:

Bikini Hunter
06-04-2004, 07:08 PM
Hopefully some people will listen to this good advice. Unfortunately, I know some that won't.

hanshinji
06-04-2004, 07:31 PM
very good advice. got me to think about getting boots and back protector..

Moeman
06-04-2004, 08:00 PM
excellent write up to me the fact is simple i would rather loose sweat than blood and no matter how much gear would cost its very primitve compared to hospital bills be safe evreyone and always wear your gear :lol2:

maztheman
06-04-2004, 09:20 PM
true 'dat! however why waste time typing "common sense" we all know

Moeman
06-04-2004, 09:22 PM
this is passed on for the new riders and wanna bees thanks the guy or have a positive comment man :bitchslap: or do not read it

maztheman
06-04-2004, 09:26 PM
**** you, freedom of speech (or press) there is no negativity in that statement....

dres79
06-04-2004, 09:28 PM
very very true. good post

Moeman
06-04-2004, 09:37 PM
maz you are MR KNOW IT ALL :bitchslap: :bitchslap: :bitchslap: in case you have not noticed there a bunch of new riders buying RR and joining this forum daily just like there is lot of riders going down if you got helpful info pass it on or shut the hell up and go do your stunts if i pissed you off oh well :bitchslap: :bitchslap: :bitchslap: :bitchslap:

dres79
06-04-2004, 09:41 PM
this is the first fight i have seen on this sight, but moeman is right, it's for the newbs

Moeman
06-04-2004, 09:46 PM
somebody will learn the hard way some day :roll: and dres thanks man 8-) his point of freedom of speech might be legal but his approach and picking of words suck ass

dres79
06-04-2004, 09:53 PM
no problem, i hate when people f**k up a good thing. and i enjoy this sight very much and hate seeing stupid s**t like that

thingamajiggs
06-04-2004, 11:08 PM
this article has moved me far more than any pictures of accidents i've ever seen :neutral:

hawaii600rr
06-04-2004, 11:26 PM
Great read. Thanks!!!!!!!!!!1 8-)

b-b00gie
06-05-2004, 03:15 AM
You should also wear your helmet, full leathers, back protector, boots and gloves around the house, town and work. I mean, you could fall down the stairs and break your neck with out it. You could slip and fall in the shower. You could get hit by a milk truck.

I hear about this stuff all the time. Everyday thousands of people die in the US die each day and so many of them could have been saved by some A* gear. :bitchslap:


Let's get a grip people. YES, I wear my jacket, helmet, gloves, but yes, I'll also cruise around town in a T-shirt. I dont see anything wrong with it at all. What is the difference of riding around town in a t-shirt, or riding a bicycle, crossing the street, etc?


Motorcycles have been around a long time. Road rash, severed limbs or not, people have been riding bikes w/ minimal gear LONG before sport bike racer wannabees have been hitting the streets wearing full leathers and preaching about why you need full gear when cruising around town.

I know this will probably spark a huge argument, but I just want to voice my opinion and hopefully you will take it for what its worth. I'm not condoning riding without gear. I wear a jacket often, but I'll admit, sometimes I ride w/o one.


A fact of life is there are dangers all around you. You can get hurt or killed in your home or in public doing just about anything. Unless you're going to start wearing full body armor when you're walking around anywhere in public, PLEASE save your soapbox. :roll:


I'm ending my rant now, because its 3am and I have some riding to do tomorrow. Yes, I'll be wearing my gear. 8-)

Taha
06-05-2004, 04:13 AM
Very true.. I had an accident back in '85 and did not put on a helmet. Result: broken jaw (juice and soup only) for 3 months

D208Rider
06-05-2004, 04:14 AM
Yep... Have to wear those leathers everywhere if you really want to be safe.... ;-)

In truth, I used to do the same thing. T-shirt, hell, tank top & lightweight beach pants. Only on occasion of course... but that was many years ago. I survived the young and stupid years, now I'm old and experienced but still learning.

I think my point is this. For young riders who get on a bike and think it's cool to ride around without gear in addition to little or no experience, well it can be quite hazardous to your wellbeing; not all are so lucky to survive young and stupid. Now for those with some rides under their belt, and a certain amount of confidence on a bike.... live & ride how you want. After all, you know what you’re getting yourself into by not wearing gear, but the inexperience rider may not.

I can tell you from having ridden in 5 major US cities over 20 years that things are getting more and more dangerous out there. Why? I do not know. Perhaps its location, I'm in LA for the moment and it is insane in this city. Cagers drive around with more attitude and lack of respect for other people than I have ever experienced anywhere else. Where am I going with this...? WEARING GEAR IS A GOOD IDEA!! Especially these days. However, if some one chooses not to, then fine, that's their choice.

Yes, "you can get hurt or killed in your home or in public doing just about anything" however, I believe the idea set fourth in the original post on this thread was to minimize the possibility of injury. You can die falling out of an airplane, but you can minimize that risk if you have a parachute! A rather extreme if not bad example I admit, but you get my point. :D

By the way, I'm going to stay on my soapbox as long as I damn well please!! :razz:

a53x
06-05-2004, 11:07 AM
If I'm in the neighborhood (my subdivision and connecting ones) I won't gear up. In the parking lot at work if I'm moving from one spot to the next, I won't gear up.

Anytime I'm in traffic..at least a mesh jacket , boots, gloves and lid. Under the mesh..tank top.

Sure we could ride hundreds of miles w/no gear and not suffer an accident but it only takes one jerk off to ruin your life.

Check out what happened to a buddy of mine. He posted this on the Georgia Sportbike Forum.

-----------

I'm going to confess my stupidity as a squid in hopes of encouraging another not to make my foolish error.

I almost bit the dust a moment ago on 120/278. A Ford Explorer (I think) had been following me and revving his engine right up on my rear. This was ticking me off pretty good, so I gunned it ahead a little (1st mistake), and the SUV made his way up next to me in the adjacent lane.

The guy driving had his girl in the pax seat and they were giving me looks and revving like he wanted to race and that's where I made my 2nd mistake.

He jumped ahead, and I took the bait and right at 86mph I caught him.
This is where my race turned into a very close call.

The azzhole didn't just want to race. Apparently he wanted me dead, because he swerved at me forcing me into a breaking frenzy onto the shoulder of the slow lane. My bike began to wobble like mad, and seeing cars coming up on me in my mirrors I hit the throttle only to be dumbfounded that my bike wouldn't go. It took me about two seconds to realize I had a death grip on the clutch. I was so freaked out by what this guy did that I had locked up while trying to come to a controlled brake on the shoulder from almost 90.
And then my 3rd error; I gunned it and went after the guy. Now I'm doing about three digits before I catch him and I'm all up in the passenger window giving them my best salute....and they're just laughing at me.
Luckily, before I made a 4th and possibly last bad I noticed the turn for my house and cooled down.

I have read Profficient Motorcycling and More Profficient Motorcycling, and I know all about the Whimp-o-mania syndrome. I guess reading about it doesn't always work to prevent it. I fell for it, and I almost lost it. I never in a million years thought a young couple driving an SUV would attempt to run me off the road, but it just happened not twenty minutes ago right here where I live.

The punk deserves a beating, but I blame myself for falling into his trap. I could have gone to jail at the least and died at the worst. I just thank God that I was able to calm down and realize how stupid I was being, because I was seriously about to follow these two home.

Anyway....I don't want to be any longer winded in this, so please take my experience for what it's worth. There are obviously people out there who take racing a little too seriously


------------------

These are the types of jerks that plauge our streets. So for me It's gear up or stay home.

uberspeed
06-05-2004, 12:03 PM
I'd read it before, and I listened to it. Even in South Florida heat my Alpinestars TZ-1 and GPS3 boots are on me as well as helmet and gloves. Ride safe!

typeshx98
06-05-2004, 01:01 PM
Nice write-up. I just knew by the end of the article there would be people killing the thread with why should we wear it. LoL..

Good job.
I am on the toilet and made a good reading out of it. :bounce: