Posted on 11/30/2006 10:29:41 AM PST by absolootezer0
A Suzuki racing bike screaming at 80 mph in a 25-mph zone slammed into Gigliotti on Oct. 4 as she was leaving her job at Long Beach City College, igniting a fireball inside her Ford Escort.
"It is not uncommon to see these kinds of accidents with motorcycles, particularly high-powered super bikes," said Raymond Dennison, the Long Beach detective who investigated the crash. "The whole function is to go as fast as they can."
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
Depends on the road.
since he works for the LASLIMES thats not gonna happen anytime soon...
"Its like saying I didn't see that Yield Sign."
Except yeild signs don't travel and 100 mph.
IN a 25 mph zone it is.
when I was working as an EMT, in my off crews, we called these guys "Future Organ Donors"
I don't believe the coyote WANTED his Acme rocket sled to crash into a mesa, either. But is was a foreseeable probability.
"80 is hardly screaming. 180mph is screaming."
I'd be screaming long before 180.
Taking himself out of the gene pool makes him a Darwin candidate.
Killing an innocent women, on the other hand, just makes him a scumbag.
Any accident that involves a vehicle doing 80 in a 25 is at least partially the fault of the guy doing 80.
Ask any rich personal injury lawyer who specializes in car accidents.
Except the yield sign wasn't going 80 mph. I bike going that fast was not in the location that a reasonable peron would look for approaching traffic, and , depending on the intersection, may not have been visible at all at the time she made the decision to pull out.
Legally they're both at fault.
I'm not a lawyer, but I doubt it.
I agree with you, but as a lifelong rider, I am more concerned about the lack of riding skill possesed by some Harley posers who buy Harleys to feel manly. Say "countersteer" to a group of Harley riders and one may know what it means. Do the same to a group of sportbikers, and a lot of them could probably describe it. There are posers on sportbikes, too, but the nature of them kills off the idiot much faster.
Mandatory insurance forces people to share risks. Since the risk is shared, some people then take on greater risks because they don't have to bear the entire cost of their risky own behavior. For some reason insurance companies are not real impressed with risk takers.
Those of us in the non-motorcycle community call guys who do 80 in a 25 mph zone assholes regardless of their ride.
"If those things were made to be ridden on the back wheel the steering fork wouldn't be in the front."
That's just there so you have something to rest the bike on when it's parked.
:0>
yell it from the handlebars brother...ditto all that as I've owned 24 bikes so far......oh and not one was a Harley. Why I notice is the new bike- go fast attitude of the article's intention. New is bad and NEW is too fast
so it says but I am reminded and agree of a piece in MOTORCYCLIST by the great Mitch Boehm back in the day when the Honda CBR 6oo was in her 2nd generation. Mitch reminded that while test riding the bike and marveling her
power to speed he said " hell an old Honda Hurricane is
still more bike than 98% of all riders can handle."
It ain't the power of the bullet,it's the brains of the shooter.
Bingo.
"Depends on the road."
Not really. It assumes the road is ridable at 80. And if so, it's like going 40 in your car. 80 simply isn't fast on one of these bikes.
"hell an old Honda Hurricane is
still more bike than 98% of all riders can handle."
Agree 100%. There are very very few (Sport) bikes on the road today that can be used to their full potential by anyone (on the street. Certainly not by this middle aged beer bellied rider.
;)
I'm no physicist but how much worse could the impact of a 500lb Suzuki GSX be than that of this 680lb "oversized" harley??
but the driver of the car can't get off the hook by saying I didn't see the motorcycle
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.