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Are you looking for a real answer ? Dusty
I don't know exactly what that implies, but your input is welcome as long as it is respectful.
Respectful yes , because motorbikes are my life . If it took your lovely wife a year to approach a motorcycle after a driveway tipover , that is more of an issue than how much protection the bike needs . Addressing this is the more important problem . So... how do we handle this . well , a beater dirtbike and hours riding in the dirt until your wife attains some level of skill and confidence . No traffic , reduced chances of causing her or the bike harm , and skills learned in the dirt are invaluable . Dusty
That was very respectful thank you. I shouldn't minimize her crash. Our driveway is a good long slope and she hit the ground really hard. It was more than just a tip over. It was a bonified crash. I've thought about a dirt bike and have her ride it until she's more comfortable, but she has zero interest in riding in the dirt so that's a no go.
Dirt riding doesn't make anyone a better rider...
Uh , go right on believing training in the dirt isn't safer and a great way to develop skills there NP . Dusty
Yeah , if we believe Kenny Roberts , Colin Edwards , Nicky Hayden , Marc Marquez , Barry Sheene , Freddy Spencer , Eddie Lawson , Ken Maely , Dick Mann , and our own KRGlorioso , training in the dirt is one hell of a good way to develop motorcycle riding skills . Dusty
I also developed a lot of broken bones and 7 months in hospital. But thanks, Dusty, for my 15 seconds of fame!Ralph
No one needs to fall in a motorcycle mishap to be a motorcyclist, like saying you need to get in a car accident to be called a driver. The only people saying that are the ones who dropped or fell, plenty never have and probably never will. Its one of cliches that just gets repeated.....
Well, OK, there is a group of motorcyclists who never drop their bikes, the ones who never ride them. Nice and safe in the garage.And maybe one more group, those with poor memories.
Trying very hard to stay out of this one (although, for the record, I'm with Dusty on the dirt bike training). But I take issue with this "never dropped a bike, never rode it" thing. I've been riding for over 50 years, both street and dirt. Perhaps closing in on a million miles. Sure, I've dropped dirt bikes more times than I can count. Playing in the mud is part of the fun. But I've never dropped a street bike in all that time. I average around 30,000 km a year on roads, in town, touring, commuting, you name it. I have lots of friends with lots of similar experience, dirt and street, most of whom have never crashed a bike on the street. Hell, I've been rear-ended twice at stop lights on city streets and not dropped the bike. I'd rephrase that as "those who've never dropped their bikes, and those who've had insufficient training and practice, starting with small low-powered light-weight bikes, and working up gradually as they get better". In my mind, there's really not much excuse for just "dropping" a motorcycle on the road, other than perhaps getting hit by another vehicle out of the blue.