bikesnbones wrote:slparry wrote:What people generally don't realise is if you come to a sudden total dead stop at anything over 30 mph or so it doesn't matter whether you have £40 or a £400 helmet you still have a good chance of dying as your brain continues to move inside your skull and mushes against it.
Exactly, and this is what people fail to realize.
CE approved 1.5mm leathers with plastic coated polysterene inserts don't prevent broken bones and internal injuries.
If you lose it on the road, hitting a solid object like a lamppost, or another vehicle is going to become an issue long before gravel rash.
An example of that is racing.
On the track, deaths are rare because most of the time riders just slide away.
At the IOM TT, deaths are sadly relatively common, despite the riders wearing identical protective kit.
Hit a dry stone wall at speeds over 30mph, and you're as likely to die in full protective gears as you are in a T shirt.
Don't get me wrong.
I wear protective gear, but I don't put all my faith in it.
It's a problem, the safer cars have become with ESP, ASC, ABS, seatbelts, airbags etc etc just mean that people extend the speed to a new danger level. Jasper Carrot once quipped that he thought the best safety feature for cars would be a 12" spike on the steering boss, it wouldn't half make people drive more carefully