Author Topic: riding techniques  (Read 2907 times)

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Offline old smokey

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riding techniques
« on: June 05, 2012, 10:03:52 PM »
I've realized that when I ride a newer bike with strong front disc brakes that I use only 1 finger for applying front brake pressure. When I ride older bikes with drum brakes I use 4 fingers on the front brake.

Since a promotion at work brought me to middle management, I now dress nicer for work and carry dress shoes in a backpack on the bike. That has me wondering if the backpack would maybe have worse implications during an accident (if landing on my back does it give more distance for my head to travel before meeting pavement?)

Just last week a co-worker took out a deer 20 minutes after sunset in his F250 on the very road I ride to work everyday.... :-\

And the Wisconsin DNR wants to buy more elk from another state to help build up the population here because the few that are here are being killed by cars!

It seems like the warm weather has us making fewer posts here so thought I'd submit some general ramblings.
'67 350 GTR undergoing repairs with a '75 Yamaha TX500 front end


rocketman

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Re: riding techniques
« Reply #2 on: June 06, 2012, 07:31:39 PM »
 Aren't wombats really nasty? Do you worry more about runnin one over, or having it latch on and chew your tire off?  Mark.

Offline old smokey

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Re: riding techniques
« Reply #3 on: June 06, 2012, 09:54:23 PM »
so are these varmin mainly daytime creatures, or do they move around at night also?
'67 350 GTR undergoing repairs with a '75 Yamaha TX500 front end

Offline RayK

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Re: riding techniques
« Reply #4 on: June 06, 2012, 10:37:37 PM »
Old Smokey and Mark
To answer your questions
Kangaroos are mainly a problem night time & early morning and at dusk. Wallabies (smaller than Kangaroos) can be encountered at any time of day or night. Wombats are mostly around at night and if you hit one it will roll your car as they are like a large rock on the road. They are only nasty if you crawl into their burrow they will try to crush you against the wall of the burrow. Lots of dogs have been killed this way.

http://www.smh.com.au/environment/conservation/wombats-fall-victim-to-cars-in-reserves-20100717-10f5k.html

Ray
« Last Edit: June 07, 2012, 06:15:16 AM by RayK »
BS 175DT, BS 50 Sport x 1, BS 90 Mountain x 3, BS 90 Deluxe, BS 90 Sport x1, BS 60 Sport, BS 90 Trail, BS100 Sport.

Offline coxy

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Re: riding techniques
« Reply #5 on: June 07, 2012, 03:18:02 AM »
wombats are like hitting a large lump of lead

 


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