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Motorcycle Accident Lawyer Blog
Friday, February 27, 2009
Allstate and Perewitz at Bike Week
Dave Perewitz is the owner of Perewitz Cycle Fabrications, a bike-building business that he started in his father’s backyard shed 30 years ago. On Perewitz’ website you can see photos of some of his bikes. He has teamed up with Allstate to promote motorcycle safety and with Allstate personnel he will be traveling around the country to major events.
First up is Bike Week in Daytona, Florida this coming weekend. He has built a “little bobber” for Allstate which will be on display and then raffled off later in the year. At Bike Week he will be at the Allstate Garage and is welcoming people to come by and visit. He will have a computer there and will be happy to help you design a bike on it with a virtual build.
At that Garage you can also have a massage, sign up for the “little bobber” raffle, get cool in a misting station, and enjoy free internet access. Perewitz will be answering questions and signing autographs and photos.
The focus is motorcycle safety and he will be promoting Rider’s Edge classes. Anyone who takes one of these classes will receive a special insurance discount from Allstate.
Allstate’s safety focus is intersections. The company has some “intersection modules” that it bought from the Motorcycle Safety Foundation and they include a DVD and some printed material. Allstate has donated such modules to driving schools and libraries around Orlando and Daytona.
Allstate will also have a supply of driving tip cards to distribute free. On one side they have tips for riders and on the other side tips for drivers. They are designed to raise awareness among both riders and drivers of safety considerations.
If you have been injured in a motorcycle accident and need some legal help, please contact us for an experienced motorcycle attorney.
posted by JennyK at 5:02 PM
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Friday, February 13, 2009
An Extra-Daring Bike Stunt
An Australian group of freestyle riders called the Crusty Demons are currently touring New Zealand performing stunts. One of the members, Cam Sinclair of Melbourne, did a double backflip last week on his 250cc dirt bike. He launched from one ramp, flew about 18 meters in the air (about 54 feet), did two reverse revolutions, and landed on another ramp 15 meters away (45 feet).
There was a crowd of 8,000 watching and they leaped to their feet as soon as he landed. Sinclair is only the third person to succeed in this stunt and the other two are U.S. riders who have abandoned it for safety reasons.
Sinclair had practiced this stunt over 100 times with a foam rubber landing pad and had also performed it in Sydney, landing in the harbor. On this occasion in New Zealand there were no safety measures.
Far from regarding this as a triumphant conclusion, Sinclair sees it as a beginning.
“It’s opened the doors to some big things that I've got to work on – trying to do some variations," he told a New Zealand reporter. "I want to start taking my hands and feet off (while airborne) and stuff like that."
Sinclair has been a rider since the age of five. Six months ago he crashed and broke a collar bone and has had other broken bones and “lots of concussions and battle scars along the way”. He plans to do stunt riding for only six more years.
Motorcycle riding on the U.S. highways is far less likely to give you broken bones and concussion than a double backflip, but they are nevertheless real dangers. Bikers are killed continually on our roads. If you have sustained any severe injury in a motorcycle accident and would like some legal support and help, please contact us for a motorcycle accident attorney in your area.
posted by JennyK at 3:33 PM
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Friday, February 6, 2009
Helmet Laws: Some Pros and Cons
There is an online poll on the topic of whether helmets should be required for all bike riders. Being a hot topic, it has 230 comments posted so far. Here is a summary of the arguments put forth.
In Favor of Helmet Laws
- Just as everyone in a car must wear a seatbelt, so every biker should wear a helmet.
- Helmets save lives and protect the less skilled riders.
- If a vehicle driver is in an accident with a bike rider and the biker is killed, the driver will have that death on his/her conscience for life and that isn't fair.
- It isn't fair to other drivers to create traffic backups by being in an accident without a helmet, being killed, and thereby causing an accident investigation.
- Helmet laws would help to keep insurance rates down.
Against Helmet Laws
- It should be a matter of personal choice. In places with no laws many people wear helmets anyway if they judge it to be safer.
- A helmet law would be the beginning of endless government meddling. Next would be a law requiring full-face helmets; then a law requiring neck braces; then one for spinal armor to prevent broken backs. Then it would be illegal to wear shorts or any clothing which didn't meet some government standard or other …
- People drive convertibles without wearing helmets and ride in school buses without seatbelts. So why shouldn't bikers ride without helmets?
- Motorcyclists are the most skilled and attentive operators on the road. Bikers should not have to suffer a helmet because of the inattentive driving of passenger vehicles.
- Helmets reduce your range of vision, block your hearing and overheat your head, all of which makes you less in control of your riding.
Only four states have no helmet law whatever. Twenty states have mandatory helmet laws for all ages. Twenty-four states have helmet laws for riders over specified ages. Two states have laws with both age and insurance requirements. You can see a color-coded map at the Bikers’ Rights site and links to pages on each state.
If you have been badly injured in a motorcycle accident and need some legal assistance, please contact the law firm of Hardesty Tyde Green & Ashton, P.A. in Jacksonville, Florida.
posted by JennyK at 2:01 PM
2 comments
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
“I Didn’t See Him,” Said the Motorist?
The CAR 2 CAR Communication Consortium is a non-profit European organization. It is focused on increased road safety through inter-vehicle communication. They would like to establish a European industry standard based on wireless LAN components with guaranteed European-wide operability. Eventually they plan to go world-wide.
European roads are forecast to have heavy increases in vehicle kilometers. CAR 2 CAR held their second Forum in 2008, with lectures, workgroups and discussions on “Car-to-X-Communication” – referring to the great variety in types of vehicles which use the roads.
They plan to use radio to interlink vehicles and the road infrastructure so that drivers will be informed of any potentially unsafe situations. A uniform radio frequency has already been established of 5.9GHz. Research institutes are involved, and suppliers of hardware and software. Car manufacturers are also joining forces with the Consortium:
- Audi
- BMW
- Daimler
- Honda
- Open
- Volvo
- Fiat
- Volkswagen
Honda’s Implementations
Honda has an Advanced Safety Vehicle project which is part of the CAR 2 CAR group. They are using GPS data to warn a biker when he is on a collision course with another vehicle and when he is in another vehicle’s blind spot.
The rider will see lights at the base of the windscreen whenever he is approaching danger and by wearing a Bluetooth-equipped helmet will be able to hear a warning also. One might wonder about the blind-spot communication, since GPS is accurate only to about 17 feet and to be in a vehicle’s blind spot one would have to be closer than that. However, Honda has not given any details on that yet.
By increasing communication between all road users, the CAR 2 CAR Communication Consortium hopes to reduce accidents and keep the roads safe. No longer will a motorist be able to say, “I didn’t see him”, as a reason for having collided with a motorcycle.
It is not known when Honda’s new bike will be available.
posted by JennyK at 4:09 PM
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