| ▲ | diggan 5 hours ago |
| > They were all careful riders too, the incidents being caused by distracted / aggressive drivers. I'm not sure how true that is, even when the cause is distracted/aggressive drivers, unless the drivers actually hunted them and collided with them on purpose. Defensive driving is a thing for motorcycle drivers too, and if you take care you'll avoid even distracted/aggressive drivers too. With that said, it of course isn't risk free, I think in my country (Spain, lots of motorcycles in/around the cities/towns), just about 60% of those who drive motorcycles have never been in any accident ever[0], and that's including very dumb ("average") people so if you're more careful than the average driver, I'm sure you could get those odds to stack in your favor. - [0] https://www.dgt.es/export/sites/web-DGT/.galleries/downloads... Table 59. "ACCIDENTALIDAD" |
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| ▲ | lloeki 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| > I'm not sure how true that is, even when the cause is distracted/aggressive drivers Very. It's possible to make no mistake and still lose. My wife got hit-and-run when bicycling to work and she's exceeding careful and defensive in her riding. Her carefulness is probably what allowed her to catch a glimpse of the car in the corner of her eye and swerve at the last minute to not be caught head-on by the car
and sent flying hundreds of meters away. She's "lucky" to even have made it, suffering debilitating neck pain every day and night, abated only by roughly a half through invasive surgery, a pain she will have to endure for the rest of her life which at the current rate of life expectancy is the next fifty years. Meanwhile the distracted and hurried driver who didn't bother to check around their A pillar blind spot drove away scot-free. That's one example. I have many such stories of cyclist and biker friends alike, many of which don't ever ride between lanes. |
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| ▲ | diggan 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | > It's possible to make no mistake and still lose. Sure, no doubt about that. But again, if people (60% of the riders in my case) manage to never be in an accident, and that's including a wide range of people, then surely the odds are greater of never being in an accident if you're careful. Still, sucks she had that experience. But it's important to realize that for every accident, there are thousands of people riding every day without a single accident in their life. But of course it's harder to think about that when you had someone in a accident and that person is close to you, I understand that. | | |
| ▲ | lloeki 4 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | I don't think anyone's disputing that being careful increases your odds of avoiding accidents. Instead what I wanted to call out is that even if infinitely careful and drive defensively without fail you can still get into an accident, and you don't need to be hunted down or intentionally collided into+. Ultimately at a large enough scale it's all about odds, and it takes but one occurrence to go from "I've been fine so far" to "my life is upended". And like all statistical
things, with a low enough sample size you're
going to get an unbalanced result one way or the other. + On that note I wish drivers were made aware of CBDR https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant_bearing,_decreasing... | | |
| ▲ | diggan 4 hours ago | parent [-] | | > Instead what I wanted to call out is that even if infinitely careful and drive defensively without fail you can still get into an accident, and you don't need to be hunted down or intentionally collided into+. And again, seems to be massively different depending on the country. Locally, ~60% of motorcycle drivers claim to never have been in any accident, and that's including even careless people, so surely the claims of "even careful motorbike drivers will be in a accident" are over-exaggerated. |
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| ▲ | theshackleford 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | > (60% of the riders in my case) 60% of the riders still alive? |
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| ▲ | 9991 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | What if the mistake was riding a bicycle? You don't seem to be coming at this from the perspective of someone who is really thinking about safety. Sorry to be callous about it. You're understandably angry. It's one thing to say you accept the risks of a risky behavior, and yet another to declare nothing could have been done. | | |
| ▲ | dijit an hour ago | parent [-] | | It’s absolutely sick that we think of cycling as being dangerous and risk seeking behaviour. I’m coming from a part of the world that doesn’t needlessly look down on cycling (its common for nearly everyone to cycle in Copenhagen/Malmö) and the idea that people should become drivers because its safer is a total tragedy of the commons and would not hold much weight here - the cities would be crushed under the necessary weight of roads and cars. Other parts of the world need to get some more cars off the road by making safer infrastructure, it’s ridiculous. |
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| ▲ | jdietrich 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Even if you're an incredibly skilled and careful rider, there are a multitude of accident types that are just completely out of your control. If you hit a diesel spill on a roundabout, the outcome is pure fate. Defensive riding only gets you so far - staying at home is the only realistic way to defend against the possibility that the driver in the next lane will spill his coffee and swerve into your path, or a driver waiting at a junction will abruptly pull out in front of you because he wasn't looking. At least as importantly, the consequences of accidents are vastly magnified for motorcyclists. I know of people who have died in relatively low-speed crashes because they were unlucky enough to slide straight into a piece of road furniture or land head-first on a kerb. If you look at the accident statistics, a large proportion of fatalities and serious injuries involve low-powered motorcycles travelling at ordinary speeds on ordinary urban roads. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/... https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/reported-road-casua... |
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| ▲ | sfn42 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | > driver in the next lane will spill his coffee and swerve into your path You can significantly reduce that risk by simply staying away from others and avoiding situations with a large speed differential. If the lane next to you is going 20mph, don't go 40+ next to them. There are a lot of these things you can do, that most people don't because "it's not their responsibility". |
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| ▲ | frereubu 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| Risk is a product of likelihood and potential seriousness of consequences. The reason I consider motorbikes too risky is that the potential seriousness of consequences is extremely high if you're going at any reasonable speed. And to flip the presentation of your stat around, that means 40% of motorbike riders have been in an accident. That sounds really high to me given the potential consequences! |
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| ▲ | diggan 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | > And to flip the presentation of your stat around, that means 40% of motorbike riders have been in an accident. That sounds really high to me given the potential consequences! It sounds scary because it involves every type of accident, even minor ones. Useful to think about how many cars have ever been in accidents too, which should be around the same. The problem with motorcycle accidents is the fatality rates, just as you say, not the percentage of minor+major accidents. |
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