Warm weather, the things you see!
Warm weather, the things you see!
Author
Discussion

MTBR

Original Poster:

328 posts

243 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
I don't want to start another what not to wear thread, but....

Spotted on Burnham high street, yesterday evening.
A rider on a tatty sports bike, wearing shorts and a loose shirt, with a small child on the pillion. The child was also in shorts and a T shirt, trainers and no crash helmet.

The rider was clearly speading and had just made a hash of a down shift when I saw him.

words fail me!

y2blade

56,252 posts

236 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all

i love the summer smile hot girls in small clothes are my fave cool

i dont give a toss what others wear in there bikes !






RemaL

25,071 posts

255 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
agree, amazed to see what others do wear or lack of it. up to them but not worth thinking what would happen to them if they come off.

and yes women with less clothes is nice

Davel

8,982 posts

279 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
It's one thing to choose to ride vulnerably yourself and take that risk - but to risk a child's life/health and not even ensure that they wear a helmet is reckless and stupid.


Totally agree with the rest though. Hot summer and skimpy clothes - oh yes!

Edited by Davel on Monday 16th July 15:59

runnersp

1,061 posts

241 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
MTBR said:
I don't want to start another what not to wear thread, but....

Spotted on Burnham high street, yesterday evening.
A rider on a tatty sports bike, wearing shorts and a loose shirt, with a small child on the pillion. The child was also in shorts and a T shirt, trainers and no crash helmet.

The rider was clearly speading and had just made a hash of a down shift when I saw him.

words fail me!
So very wrong. Although I once saw a bloke on a Fireblade in full Dainese kit and Arai lid and his G/F was on the back in jeans and a fabric jacket (not a bike jacket) with a crappy little pisspot lid!

aeropilot

39,296 posts

248 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
MTBR said:
I don't want to start another what not to wear thread, but....

Spotted on Burnham high street, yesterday evening.
A rider on a tatty sports bike, wearing shorts and a loose shirt, with a small child on the pillion. The child was also in shorts and a T shirt, trainers and no crash helmet.

The rider was clearly speading and had just made a hash of a down shift when I saw him.

words fail me!
Incredible especially so after that horrible fatal accident on the M25 the other day involving a pillion riding 11 year old.....frown

BryanC

1,125 posts

259 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
Guys - don't flame me because I am a relative Newbie but this seems the appropriate time to ask why and when biker boots.
I wore some high sided soft boots for my DAS because it seemed to be the thing to be seen to be done, but most of my riding is on the daily commute - not quite fast or rough roads, and at speeds which quite frankly a racing cyclist could achieve.
Is anybody able to expand on the right gear for these (rare) sultry hot days we see.
Constructive comments wanted.
Regards
BryanC

TPS

1,860 posts

234 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
Sorry to hear about your foot.Sadly there is an example of why to wear decent bike boots.I have had a bike crash and gone flying down the road.All i can say is im glad i had my full leathers,gloves,decent lid and decent bike boots on.

slim_boy_fat

735 posts

260 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
Just back from a holiday in Canada, you out to see what they wear over there.

In 17 days i never saw any other safety gear than a helmet.

High 30's most of the time so its understandable.

m3psm

988 posts

242 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
I recently got hit (by a bike) whilst stopped at a pedestrian crossing. Hit the tarmac pretty hard and slid a little. I came out of it with a few aches but was unscathed because I had leather jeans, MX boots, textile armoured jacket and leather gloves on. Checked the clothing and gloves badly scuffed, textile jacket scuffed though the outer layer, boots scuffed and jeans scuffed. This was with me moving at 0mph. Had I been missing any of the basic gear I'd have limped away with some fairly deep wounds.

A mate got caught out by a bus doing a surprise left turn on him, sandwiching him between the bus and a low wall pushing his ankle against the wall. He broke his foot but had MX boots on. Without the boots he'd have ripped his foot off. This was at about 10mph in the city.

The easiest way to work out what not wear is to work out which limbs you can do without and dress accordingly wink

Personally I'd rather sweat a little on a hot day than watch my daughters growing up from a wheelchair (or worse)

Busa_Rush

6,930 posts

272 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
BryanC said:
Guys - don't flame me because I am a relative Newbie but this seems the appropriate time to ask why and when biker boots.
I wore some high sided soft boots for my DAS because it seemed to be the thing to be seen to be done, but most of my riding is on the daily commute - not quite fast or rough roads, and at speeds which quite frankly a racing cyclist could achieve.
Is anybody able to expand on the right gear for these (rare) sultry hot days we see.
Constructive comments wanted.
Regards
BryanC
Last week I came to a corner at night, slowed down, gently lent into the corner and the bike went from underneath me. That corner had just been resurfaced and was full of loose gravel. I was doing no more than about 30ish mph at most, national speed limit, could have easily been doing 40-50 had I felt more confident/bullish/in a hurry.

Fortunately I had the right kit on but the boots have deep gouges in them where the weight of the bike pushed them into the gravel, the leather trousers are scraped, the jacket was ripped open on the elbow (this is an expensive Dianese textile jacket with armour) and my £100 gloves have strips of leather missing from the palms where I tried to save myself. I landed on my right side, twisted and landed again on my left side.

Had I not been wearing this kit I'd have a broken/badly damaged elbow, no skin on either palm/thumb, no skin on kuckles, possibly broken ankle/leg and some nasty gravel rash. I was also wearing a Forcefield back protector.

All I can say is that the kit I bought was the best £1200 I've ever spent. Apart from a few minor bruises (wrists mainly) I'm fine. I will never go out without all the correct kit.

black-k1

12,632 posts

250 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
For those that are so worried about the effect of an accident when not wearing full protective gear I strongly suggest that they try the full armored suit. It’s metal all around and strong enough not to require the wearing of a helmet. The only down side is the weight/balance issue. To help get over that, there is a wheel in each corner. These do reduce mobility but they do mean you won’t get knocked over at the traffic lights. I can’t remember the name of this equipment but I’m sure it’ll come back to me!

Be careful not to pass judgment on what risks other choose to take. Riding a motorcycle, regardless how much protective clothing is worn, is a risk that many would deem too great. The only option for them is to ban motorcycling totally.


Edited by black-k1 on Tuesday 17th July 06:25

Rawwr

22,722 posts

255 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
Leaving the house everyday is a risk. It's what measures you take to reduce those risks that count.

black-k1

12,632 posts

250 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
BryanC said:
Guys - don't flame me because I am a relative Newbie but this seems the appropriate time to ask why and when biker boots.
I wore some high sided soft boots for my DAS because it seemed to be the thing to be seen to be done, but most of my riding is on the daily commute - not quite fast or rough roads, and at speeds which quite frankly a racing cyclist could achieve.
Is anybody able to expand on the right gear for these (rare) sultry hot days we see.
Constructive comments wanted.
Regards
BryanC
Just remember that these guys see a lot more hot days than most of us do, ride a lot more miles than most of us do, have to push the envelope in order to respond to emergency situations and have access to some of the best biking gear in the world yet, when it’s a warm day this is what they choose to wear.



Wear what you feel comfortable in.

catso

15,687 posts

288 months

Monday 16th July 2007
quotequote all
black-k1 said:
Wear what you feel comfortable in.
yes Indeed.

Wedg1e

27,002 posts

286 months

Tuesday 17th July 2007
quotequote all
black-k1 said:
Tut. Look at that line. I could get the ST13 up the inside of him with a pillion on, braking, and changing CDs at the same time wink

black-k1

12,632 posts

250 months

Tuesday 17th July 2007
quotequote all
Wedg1e said:
black-k1 said:
Tut. Look at that line. I could get the ST13 up the inside of him with a pillion on, braking, and changing CDs at the same time wink
I had already passed him on the inside and was just out of shot in the photo! laugh

MTBR

Original Poster:

328 posts

243 months

Tuesday 17th July 2007
quotequote all
Now there is an idea, anyone up for some "Barge racing"? Steel framed Pan Europeans, with compulsory hard luggage. Pillions would be fun, but I doubt we could get that passed the circuit owners!

The perfect antidote to garages full of half prepared "race" bikes, sitting on stands with the tire warmers on, (while the owners rattle on about "chatter", "rear wheel steering" and "catching it on their knees" ...and then take a minute ten to get round Brands Indy.)

runnersp

1,061 posts

241 months

Tuesday 17th July 2007
quotequote all
MTBR said:
Now there is an idea, anyone up for some "Barge racing"? Steel framed Pan Europeans, with compulsory hard luggage. Pillions would be fun, but I doubt we could get that passed the circuit owners!

The perfect antidote to garages full of half prepared "race" bikes, sitting on stands with the tire warmers on, (while the owners rattle on about "chatter", "rear wheel steering" and "catching it on their knees" ...and then take a minute ten to get round Brands Indy.)
Could I participate on my BMW K100? I've got panniers, top box and heated grips!

black-k1

12,632 posts

250 months

Tuesday 17th July 2007
quotequote all
runnersp said:
Could I participate on my BMW K100? I've got panniers, top box and heated grips!
Pssst runnersp! whistle Want to cheat? If it's the 16v BMW then I have a chip that'll up the output to about 120bhp evil so you can walk all over those Pan thingies! hehe