A
Anonymous
Guest
I've had two driveway drops and one crash.
1. I was warming the bike up on the driveway. Left it running, put the kickstand down & walked away. I glanced back in time to see my new SV rolling itself off of it's kickstand. Bent handlebar and both brake levers bent.
2. The SV was even newer. I was trying to start out and merge with traffic. I had kicked it all the way down, so I assumed it was in first gear. It wasn't. The tranny was new, and it just wouldn't go down to first unless I rolled it a bit forward or backwards. So after killing it twice, I gave it a bit more gas the third time. I jumped out from under me and fell over. Same deal, bu on the other side. Bent handlebar, broken clutch and shifter.
3. The real crash. I was coming up to a nice tight 20 mph (marked) turn on a freshly paved road. The problem was that I was going 70 and the sign with the turn speed limit was overgrown with bush branches. I slowed down to 45, as that is usually enough for unmarked curves. It wasn't enough for me at that time. I leaned way over, just short of scraping pegs. I should have leaned further. I knew I wasn't going to make it so I stood the bike up and braked hard until I got onto the gravel shoulder. I went through the shoulder and into the grass. I was going straight and only about 20 mph by that time. I gave it just a tiny bit of brakes, both front and rear. The rear locked up immediately, as grass on sport-touring tires doesn't grab too well... I fishtailed a few times before low-siding and sliding in the grass for a while. The handlebar was badly bent, and I had mud ground into the whole ride side of my bike, jacket, helmet, gloves, fork, etc. Very embarassing, even though no one saw the actual crash. Riding home with the mud on me and such... I remember what went through my head at the time too. "Oh sh!t, I'm crashing!" Slow-mo, very surreal.
I haven't crashed my GS. I think I've gotten crashing out of my system now.
1. I was warming the bike up on the driveway. Left it running, put the kickstand down & walked away. I glanced back in time to see my new SV rolling itself off of it's kickstand. Bent handlebar and both brake levers bent.
2. The SV was even newer. I was trying to start out and merge with traffic. I had kicked it all the way down, so I assumed it was in first gear. It wasn't. The tranny was new, and it just wouldn't go down to first unless I rolled it a bit forward or backwards. So after killing it twice, I gave it a bit more gas the third time. I jumped out from under me and fell over. Same deal, bu on the other side. Bent handlebar, broken clutch and shifter.
3. The real crash. I was coming up to a nice tight 20 mph (marked) turn on a freshly paved road. The problem was that I was going 70 and the sign with the turn speed limit was overgrown with bush branches. I slowed down to 45, as that is usually enough for unmarked curves. It wasn't enough for me at that time. I leaned way over, just short of scraping pegs. I should have leaned further. I knew I wasn't going to make it so I stood the bike up and braked hard until I got onto the gravel shoulder. I went through the shoulder and into the grass. I was going straight and only about 20 mph by that time. I gave it just a tiny bit of brakes, both front and rear. The rear locked up immediately, as grass on sport-touring tires doesn't grab too well... I fishtailed a few times before low-siding and sliding in the grass for a while. The handlebar was badly bent, and I had mud ground into the whole ride side of my bike, jacket, helmet, gloves, fork, etc. Very embarassing, even though no one saw the actual crash. Riding home with the mud on me and such... I remember what went through my head at the time too. "Oh sh!t, I'm crashing!" Slow-mo, very surreal.
I haven't crashed my GS. I think I've gotten crashing out of my system now.