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Topic: After Accident Report: Tourmaster Venture Air Pants, Leather Gloves  (Read 1173 times)

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25knots
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« on: November 21, 2011, 04:42:30 PM »

David Hough's Proficient Motorcycling has some convincing statistics showing accident rates going up, not down, as motorcyclists move into their second year of experience.  The reason, he suggests, is that as we get more confident and more aggressive, we start to work our bikes a bit harder, and take risks that you just wouldn't take during the first year.

Well, I guess I'm a little ahead of schedule because I've been riding for six months and in the last two I've started to feel much more confident and in control of the bike, feeling much more stable leaned over in turns, and better able to calculate speed, breaking and shifting.  Basically, I've got more comfortable being an aggressive rider.  I stay within the bounds of my ability (I don't speed (too much  Wink ), but enjoy riding my GS500 with purpose.  I'm not sure that's why I had a low-speed low-side crash this afternoon, but I'm guessing it accounts for part of it.

So here's what happened.  I went for a quick loop on the country roads north of my town right after work.  Its a a route I've done more than a few times on my motorcycle, and even more times on my bicycle, though this was the first time I've done the loop in this direction.  The weather was great, around 70 degrees and bone dry.  It was late afternoon, but there was still plenty of sun light.  Simply put, conditions were great.

Approaching a stop sign at an uphill T intersection, I put the breaks on and came to a safe halt.  The road surface there is a rough, chipped macadam that you'll find on lesser-traveled country roads.  The road it joined continues uphill to the right and level to the left, which is the direction I was headed.  I looked left and right down the clear road.  Then I rolled on the throttle, moved forward, and looked, leaned and pushed left to make the turn.  Next thing I new I was on the ground in the middle of the intersection, my left knee and hand on the deck, my bike revving like an angry bull.

The bike had some road rash but was mechanically fine.  The only damage sustained was to my Tourmaster Venture Air Pants


As you can see, the double layered 1680 Denier Ballistic Nylon knee panels weren't as ballistic as I would have imagined.  Fortunately, the CE hard plastic knee armor protected my knee completely. I was impressed by how well it stayed in position during the slide, as it didn't move right or left off the center of my knee.

All in all, I didn't have a scratch on my body.  I remain surprised, however, by how easily the nylon came apart.  I couldn't have been doing more than 10 miles an hour when I went down, and I don't think I slid more than four feet or so.  My leather glove, on the other hand, did much better.  There's a little scraping, but no holes or tears.  Interestingly, its not a motorcycle specific glove.  

Its just a nice leather glove that my mom bought for me at a men's clothing store.  They've got wool liners and are super comfortable.  Apparently they're also pretty sturdy.  This isn't breaking news, or anything, but leather is better.

After I had gotten myself and my bike off the road, and made certain I was okay, I walked to the intersection to check the road surface.  It turned out that the whole intersection was covered with loose road surface, the same color and texture as the road itself.  Because the road surface was black, it was hard to see how loose it was from the bike.  Plus, because the road to the right goes uphill, I think some of the road surface had washed down the hill and accumulated at the intersection.  In any case, it was much less stable than I thought, and clearly I took the start of the turn too hard, with too much throttle and too much lean.  I really wasn't going that fast, but obviously I miscalculated none the less.

So, lessons learned.  The ballistic nylon was not nearly as sturdy as I would have thought.  On the other hand, I had never really thought of the knee armor as that useful, but obviously its very functional.  That couple millimeters of plastic kept me from having a really nasty road rash and a bloody ride home.  Most importantly, I'm going to be much more careful about watching the road surface, even at low speeds.  Its amazing how quickly gravity takes over once friction lets loose.
« Last Edit: November 21, 2011, 07:11:58 PM by 25knots » Logged

He said that most men were in their lives like the carpenter whose work went so slowly for the dullness of his tools that he had not time to sharpen them.
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« on: November 21, 2011, 04:42:30 PM »

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mugwump58
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« Reply #1 on: November 21, 2011, 05:57:06 PM »

 Wink Sounds like it worked out as well as possible. The gear worked.  Ride safe.
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« Reply #2 on: November 22, 2011, 02:36:29 PM »

This is a great post.  Thumbsup

Glad you weren't hurt. Valuable lesson learned.

Give your mom a big kiss for giving you those gloves, hand injuries suck. Gloves are the second most important piece of riding gear. Get yourself some good, motorcycle specific gloves as soon as posible, the best you can afford.
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« Reply #3 on: November 22, 2011, 03:19:16 PM »


This is a great post.  Thumbsup

Glad you weren't hurt. Valuable lesson learned.



I didn't feel comfortable with my mesh gear so I went to perforated leathers.  I don't stay as cool but peace of mind is worth it.

+1 to buying a good pair of motorcycle gloves.
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25knots
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« Reply #4 on: November 24, 2011, 03:26:52 PM »


Give your mom a big kiss for giving you those gloves, hand injuries suck. Gloves are the second most important piece of riding gear. Get yourself some good, motorcycle specific gloves as soon as posible, the best you can afford.


I'll give her some love, but she's not finding out what its for Wink  .  She's already not so happy about the whole motorcycle thing and telling her about the accident would not improve her opinion.

You're right about getting motorcycle specific gloves, and I'd add that I think gauntlet style gloves are the way to go.  My brother had a low speed accident this summer while we were touring together.  He was wearing a full suit of gear and was generally fine, but he did get a bit scraped right below his wrist.  What happened was that the sleeve of his jacket hiked back up his arm as he slid it along the ground, even though the sleeve gusset was pretty tight.  He was wearing short, wrist length gloves, so the area right below his wrist wasn't protected.  I think a gauntlet glove would have protected him.

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He said that most men were in their lives like the carpenter whose work went so slowly for the dullness of his tools that he had not time to sharpen them.
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