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Quote from: Moparnut72 on December 10, 2019, 11:38:44 AMI just quit the whole APBA thing or I intend to. **************Back in the stone age when I was racing and foolish enough to allow myself to be "volunteered" to help with testing & organizing and developing classification rules along with my late friend Gene Whipp the volunteerer) - we didn't have canopies! Therefore our helmets were so important. The canopy rules, which has saved many lives, was enacted after my friend Dick Fullom was killed in Key West along with Mike Poppa- who took my place in that ill fated Cougar cat after I refused to throttle that death trap flowing a very dicey test off Ft. Lauderdale. NO Canopy, rolled over- necks snapped. Helmet would not prevent that! Dick was the best and a good Pal. I still have 1 of my old signal orange Bell lids along with the old Bell black helmet bag and with my blood type on the helmet. Memories...I wasn't running in the league you were. I ran C Stock runabout. A 60+mph 13'sheet of plywood somewhat under control. I started running at 62 years old, guess my common sense was out to lunch. And they say motorcycles are dangerous. Go figure.kk
I just quit the whole APBA thing or I intend to. **************Back in the stone age when I was racing and foolish enough to allow myself to be "volunteered" to help with testing & organizing and developing classification rules along with my late friend Gene Whipp the volunteerer) - we didn't have canopies! Therefore our helmets were so important. The canopy rules, which has saved many lives, was enacted after my friend Dick Fullom was killed in Key West along with Mike Poppa- who took my place in that ill fated Cougar cat after I refused to throttle that death trap flowing a very dicey test off Ft. Lauderdale. NO Canopy, rolled over- necks snapped. Helmet would not prevent that! Dick was the best and a good Pal. I still have 1 of my old signal orange Bell lids along with the old Bell black helmet bag and with my blood type on the helmet. Memories...
Arai has a poor safety rating? Tell that to MotoGP, Indy and F1 racers.
pretty sure they know it, as just about everyone does. As I recall from my research Arai refused to comply with some sort of criteria, resulting in the very low ratings. Not "my" rating......I don't buy them cuz they're wildly expensive. Doesn't mean they're not a good lid- just not in compliance with the folks that do the ratings.
From my research recently Arai has poor safety ratings.
I'm curious if your Arai copy passes any of the tests, or if the certificates are counterfeit as well?
I suspect that that doesn't matter - the position appears to be that the Arai is wildly expensive and so it doesn't matter what the safety rating is, and the Chinese "copy" is extremely cheap so it doesn't matter what the safety rating on THAT is either.Now that we've "done our research", we find that the statement:"Fit and comfort are subjective. Safety rating is performed in a lab and the results are objective and compared to other tested helmets. ..... isn't really true. It depends on whose doing the testing and what they are testing for. A helmet might be a very safe one, but if it doesn't get subjected to a particular standard, it can "be said to be" unsafe .. It's a subjective assessment after all.Also, the statement "Arai has poor safety ratings" (partly as a result of this subjectivity) is a meaningless statement in the real world. Yes, you might get an "A" on your debate team, or try to convince a brain-dead jury to award someone a billion dollars for breaking his neck jumping off a cliff, but otherwise it's just a collection of words. I think that the whole powersports world knows that you are not risking your life by using an Arai rather than a Shoei or a Bell.Well, that's enough of that. Lannis
This is the equivalent of Consumer Reports failing the Porsche 911 because of the lack of ground clearance and rear seat entertainment options. The Porsche 911 sucks at both of those, and Porsche could improve both of those if they wanted but it wasn't part of their design plan. Holding them to that and parroting the poor review is just not fair.
Hmm , so I delved into this "Arai helmets are unsafe" thing ,Did anyone say they are "unsafe?" I know I didn't.
Guess I wasn't clear. I "knew" this was a cheap copy. Rather obvious. An Asian builder knocking off another Asian company that has a poor safety rating worldwide actually doesn't bother me a bit. These lids are quite nice for the price, and I intend to enjoy mine for a few years.In the 70's & 80's I was an APBA board member & active offshore powerboat competitor. Our helmet choices were somewhat limited back then, and there was an ongoing bruhaha regarding open face vs full face lids. Many old timers felt the full face would hinder life saving efforts and promote "drowning" when tossed into the raging ocean at speed. There was much, WAY much discussion and the controversary raged for a decade or more. I was part of a team tasked with investigation & wet testing and almost "drowned" myself a few time while doing rough water testing. Fun, but dangerous. Many soggy helmets were created. I actually cracked 2 Bell full faces while crashing in races. still have 1 of 'em in my shop. Scary stuff. I did learn tons about helmets & how they were made way back then. They are so much better now thankfully. I enjoy all the comments- good, bad & ugly.....but I am aware of risks and know something of which I do.From my research recently Arai has poor safety ratings. Sorry you'll have to do the research yourself this time, as I've already done it. As I recall they were rated in the 20's in a 1-10 listing, pretty far down there. I realize this is because they refuse to comply with some rating criteria or another, but they do enjoy a very poor rating out there. Of course I realize they are nice helmets BUT WAY overpriced. My customer who is a helmet expert confirms that Arai & many others have many/most of their parts made in China. I do not have his current knowledge, so please refrain from the hateful remarks. Just the messenger here guys.BTW- I recently bought 2 new LS2 lids from Motorcycle Closeouts for under $100. They are $300msrp and very well made.
************ Yes. Interesting analysis. Sorta like some declaring my beautiful, well built $70 Arai copy to be a horrid death trap, without even seeing nor examining it. Just not fair, but interesting discussion nonetheless.
Let's chill fellas . DustyI'm with Dusty, and I remind myself why many of my riding buds choose not to post on forums, which is sad because those guys can impart so much helpful knowledge. We can all learn from each other, and what I'm learning from this forum is, well, I'll not elaborate. I "did not" say Arai were "unsafe". Never even thought it. I said the "truth" that they have a very poor rating, which is a proven fact. I never "dissed" Arai. I feel some posters have explained quite well why their rating is so poor. I personally don't care what lid you prefer. I have a shelf full of 'em, even an older Arai I rarely wore cuz it didn't fit well. Let my Grandson wear it when in my sidecar. I like 'em all. Here in FL where I live I see scads of HD riders out & about with either NO helmet or a silly beanie (to comply with a weak helmet law). Safelt rating?? Those folks are nuts! We often see riders wearing "flip flops." Wonder how they shift.