• Required reading for all forum users!!!

    Welcome!
    Register to access the full functionality of the GSResources forum. Until you register and activate your account you will not have full forum access, nor will you be able to post or reply to messages.

    A note to new registrants...
    All new forum registrations must be activated via email before you have full access to the forum.

    A Special Note about Email accounts!
    DO NOT SIGN UP USING hotmail, outlook, gmx, sbcglobal, att, bellsouth or email.com. They delete our forum signup emails.

    A note to old forum members...
    I receive numerous requests from people who can no longer log in because their accounts were deleted. As mentioned in the forum FAQ, user accounts are deleted if you haven't logged in for the past 6 months. If you can't log in, then create a new forum account. If you don't get an error message, then check your email account for an activation message. If you get a message stating that the email address is already in use, then your account still exists so follow the instructions in the forum FAQ for resetting your password.

    Have you forgotten your password or have a new email address? Then read the forum FAQ for details on how to reset it.

    Any email requests for "can't log in anymore" problems or "lost my password" problems will be deleted. Read the forum FAQ and follow the instructions there - that's what we have one for...

  • Returning Visitors

    If you are a returning visitor who never received your confirmation email, then odds are your email provider is blockinig emails from our server. The only thing that can be done to get around this is you will have to try creating another forum account using an email address from another domain.

    If you are a returning visitor to the forum and can't log in using your old forum name and password but used to be able to then chances are your account is deleted. Purges of the databases are done regularly. You will have to create a new forum account and you should be all set.

Crashing stories.

Carter Turk

Forum Sage
Charter Member
I know this is a sore subject and not something people look forward to doing on a motorcycle, but it happens. It happened to me 6 times in my 22 years of riding. I recall each one vividly. I'm wondering if anyone cares to share their incident(s). I think your current age and type of bike would be enlightening.

I'm 39.

1) Night. 1980 GS 750ET left hand downhill sweeper 45-60mph following friend on GS 450. On coming truck turns left in middle of turn. Modulate front brake. Miss bumper by a hair. Gravel on asphalt, go down instantly, tumble numerous times. Bike goes 30 feet down a ravine. I get up uninjured (age 17). I realize my friend has crashed too. His bike unridable-forks bent, front wheel rubbing against engine. Truck driver helps pull my bike out. No key in the ignition. Truck driver says he's going to get a light, never comes back. We forget to get his license-adrenaline. I find my key when car lights pass by. We leave his bike at a strangers house and double up on my bike and ride home.

2) Clover leaf on ramp. Recent rain, but road is dry except for residual on oil line in the middle of on ramp (appears dry). 35mph, banking in to a steady lean angle, back tire goes away (Michelen M45), I slide upright on my butt in 501 Levis. Bike slides infront of me on its right side towards a yellow curb. This is all that's seperating the on ramp from the off ramp.

Cars are waiting for a stop light on the other side of the yellow curb. My bike contacts the curb with both wheels simultaneously. Suspension compresses and launches the 750ET into the air to land on top of the hood of a lady's Ford Escort before landing back on the on ramp in third gear still running with the chain slapping around the sprockets. The kicker is I had taken my crashbars off the night before and failed to put the bolts back in. 3 bolts. What an idiot! So when the bike slammed back onto the onramp, the front mounting bolt under the exhaust manifold rips right through the aluminum surrounding it. I get a ticket for failing to remain in control from the State Trooper. The damage to the Escort is $700. I ride the bike home with just the rear engine bolt under the carbs holding the engine to the frame. The engine hits the gas tank each time I shift. I'm 17.

3. Large motorcycle road rally from Seattle to Whidbey Island via a map. At least 200 bikes meet in Northgate Shopping Mall parking lot. Maps are handed out. Random groups of about 6-10 start heading out. Don't ask me why, but I'm riding the same bike and for some reason have failed to install the two bolts I took out the night before the last crash. So I have one bolt holding the engine to the frame. I hook up with some roadracers from the local Bellevue Suzuki Dealership who raced at SIR (now Pacific Raceway). One of the guys, John Doyle #444 was the current #1 plate holder (1983). These guys met every Sunday morning at Denny's in Redmond to ride. Anyone was welcome, so I rode with them a few times prior. Their skill was way beyond my scope of talent. They questioned my bikes condition, but didn't stop me from joining them. We head out and proceed to terrorize all the local roadways. Looking back, it was really really bad behavior. Flying by anything that got in our way in a group of 5, three of us with pipes. There was no speed limit this day.

We get lost on Snohomish backroads, rapping through the wooded rural area on unfamiliar roads. We're doing about 85mph in 5th when we find ourselves upon a semi-tight 90 degree turn. I was last in line, John the leader, sweeps through and gets sucked out to the white line in the opposite lane, sparks are flying off the right peg of his wife's Seca 750. The second guy on a highly modified KZ 1000 does the same, sparks flying. The third guy on the brand new Interceptor 750, only months old, gets sucked past the white line onto the gravel shoulder and manages to keep it upright. The guy infront of me, on a 78 OHC CB 750, starts wallowing because this turn was slightly banked entering in, but had three pronounced bumps and on the exit of the turn it completely flattened out. He trys to wrestle it through, but its hopeless, he's going down, he's carrying way too much speed. He's still fighting it as he leaves the road leaning hard right . The bike digs in and pitches him over the highside into the woods. I hit the three bumps and know immediately I'm not going to make this turn, there's no way. Oddly, I'm not fearing for my life and head straight for the woods.

As I left the road, I leaped off my pegs into the air and seperated from the bike. I remembered feeling two blunt impacts against my thighs before I finally came to rest face down on soft leafy mulch dirt. I wondered if I broke anything. Disoriented, I tryed to stand up. Nothing seemed broken. Where's my bike, I thought. I spun around and noticed it laying there about 25 feet farther in. I stood there dazed for a few moments when I heard motorcycles approaching. It was the other three guys.

I heard them talking to the guy who crashed infront of me. He was conscious, but hurt badly. Punctured lung, damaged spleen broken leg in two places. He was wearing full leathers. One of them said, I thought there was someone else. One of them wandered around looking while one went to call for an ambulance and the other stood by the injured rider.

One the guys searched around and cleared a few sapling branches out of the way and noticed I was standing there a fair distance in the woods from the road. Are you alright? he said. I think so, I said. He shook his head and smiled in disbelief. The bike had cleared a narrow swath deep into the woods. Mostly small saplings about inch and half thick or smaller. I was wearing a helmet, jeans, hightop tennis shoes and a ski jacket. I rode home with bent triples, severly bent bars and another ticket.

I later heard the guy on the Interceptor crashed head on into van north of Arlington on Highway 9, but managed to leap off his bike before impact, landing in a bush on the side of the road, uninjured. I think the two remaining guys called it day after that and never made it to Whidbey Island. I'll write about the other three later if you're not bored by the first three. Carter
 
Re: Crashing stories.

Carter Turk said:
It happened to me 6 times in my 22 years of riding.

Have you considered public transportation?????
 
crashing stories

crashing stories

This happened 21 years ago, I was a foolish youngster. Yeah, you can say that again. Wingnut you comment was a bit well, nevermind.

Earl I'm not following your abbreviation. Too tiring to spell it out? By the way, your wisdom on bikes is worthy. Carter
 
Re: crashing stories

Re: crashing stories

Its a common abbreviation. LMAO....laughing my ass off. Or, as sometimes put ROTFLMAO.......rolling on the floor laughing my ass off. :-)

Earl

Carter Turk said:
Earl I'm not following your abbreviation. Too tiring to spell it out? By the way, your wisdom on bikes is worthy. Carter
 
No motorcycle crashes in 16 high-speed, high-mileage years of riding! :D :D

No speeding tickets EVER on my bike. I've been pulled over and warned at least a dozen times, but I always catch a break by being sober and polite, wearing a helmet and proper riding gear, having an actual motorcycle license and insurance, and riding a safe, well-maintained bike with good tires.

Cops are really tired of surly, unlicensed drunks on ratty Hardleys, and they're perfectly willing to cut a break for a nice guy just out enjoying his machine. Cops also pay a lot of attention to how well you're paying attention -- if it's obvious you saw them as soon as possible (slow down immediately and nod or wave as you go by), they at least know you're aware and safer than 99% of the doofs out there. If they have to chase you 15 miles wth the lights on and siren blasting, they're not going to think much of your skills...

I rarely ride with a group or even with a buddy, which cuts the risk of getting in over my head. And let's not forget the MSF Rider Course and the MSF Experienced Rider Course, both of which are subsidized in my state and are screaming bargains.
 
Crashing stories

Crashing stories

Got pulled one Sunday morning by a copper,lights and music,you know the drill,nearly sh*t myself! When I asked him politely why he had stopped me he said "Do you know where I can get a regulator for a Suzi GT550?" 8O :o What I replied was "sorry,officer",what I was thinking would have got me a spell in the chokey!
 
Crashing stories

Crashing stories

Bwinger,

Are you suggesting I was drunk and impolite. I was neither. The tickets were a result of being involved in an accident.

Tickets and cops aren't really what the post was about anyway. It was more about the "moments" I think many of us have had on our motorcycles.

I don't mean to be negative, but your reply seemed a little "chin up".
Carter
 
Carter, he was not implying that, I think he just was saying that he has gotten out of speeding tickets by being sober and licensed.

Thank you for sharing the stories, please continue with the other three. It is something each of us thinks about in the back our minds, but doesn't want to think about.

It's sobering reality.

~Adam[/u]
 
Sorry Carter, I wasn't implying anything about your skills or sobriety. It's just that your tales triggered a few of my memories and I went off on a completely different tangent.

I took a lot of chances myself when I was younger, and the only reason I never ended up pruning the roadside shrubbery was dumb luck. Now that I'm older and wiser, I still manage to scare myself silly on a regular basis. I've been involved in two accidents in cars (one my fault) that would have killed me on a bike, but they're not nearly as entertaining as your tales. I especially enjoyed picturing the engine mounted with only one bolt!

I've always thought it rather cruel that cops can show up and give you a ticket as you're watching your bruises bloom and wondering what to do with your mangled bike. Sort of adding insult to injury.
 
I wrecked my bike 30 minutes before i was going to leave for gettysburg bike week today . I was testing out my new ignition to make sure it was road worthy ,pulled into my drive way ,gased it alittle and the damn throttle stuck open , i grabed the front brake in panic and it drug it for 10 feet and i kissed the back of my truck . I now need a new front end and a head light and I have A sore wrist . Worst of all i had to goto bike week in the neon , blek! .
 
DirkDiggler said:
I just wrecked my bike 10 minutes ago ! seroisly .

Sorry to hear that man. I see that you're alive. Are you otherwise OK? Was it the KZ440? Just this morning I put a big fat bid on a kz440 stator. Huh.

Michael
 
Youre lucky a sore wrist is the extent of it. Next time, might want to consider pulling in the clutch and flipping the kill switch. You can still use both brakes while doing that. :-) I also think you learned an important point at a small price. Careful maintenance and attention to mechanical details can keep you from becoming a decal.

Earl


DirkDiggler said:
I wrecked my bike 30 minutes before i was going to leave for gettysburg bike week today . I was testing out my new ignition to make sure it was road worthy ,pulled into my drive way ,gased it alittle and the damn throttle stuck open , i grabed the front brake in panic and it drug it for 10 feet and i kissed the back of my truck . I now need a new front end and a head light and I have A sore wrist . Worst of all i had to goto bike week in the neon , blek! .
 
had i had another few feet to think i woulda hit the clucth or the kill switch , but as it goes shoulda woulda coulda .
I thought i had licked the throttle problem by lubricating the line oh well , all this did for me was xcelerate my new plans for the bike, a alot of 4130 , some chopping ,fire up me tig welder and build me a japchopper .
 
Crashing stories

Crashing stories

Bwinger, Thanks for clarifying your post. It just made me feel like a little peasant way down low is all. No worries.

As far as the other three go, the third one was silly. It's true though that accidents happen within five miles from home.

3. Happened in the winter months in the Northwest. Cold night followed by clear day, I'm heading less than a mile from my house to feed my girlfriends cat and bend through a shallow S- curve going about 20 mph. A 30' evergreen is shadowing the roadway like a steep triangle. Where I pass through the shadow is only 3 feet wide. My front tire passes through, leaning ever so slightly to the left. Down I go instantly, like some one yanking on the road in those old RF900 commercials or the Road Runner cartoons. Black ice! The bike only slides about 5 feet, but the swiftness of the impact was great enough pop a Costco size grape hole in my stator cover.

A neighbor is tending to his yard while watching me in sort of panic, pick up the bike quickly and immediately start thumbing the starter button. He pipes up "I wouldn't do that if I were you" I said "Why?" " You have no oil in your engine " At that moment I hadn't even noticed. So there I am standing next to my bike in front of this guys yard with a giant puddle of very black engine oil pooling right in front of his driveway. He's not pleased but offered rags and a garbage can to swipe up the mess.

I went through different options in my head, trying to figure out how to get my bike back home only 3 blocks away. The problem was, I lived at the top of hill, not a big one, but steep enough to cause problems pushing.

Pushing was what I chose to do. I decided to do the switchback approach with front brake assist. 10 degrees at time. When I got to the edge of the road on one side I'd grab the brake adjust body position and push and grab the brake while turning the handlebar in the other direction to keep the bike from rolling backwards. I got about 1/3 of the way up the hill when a neighbor saw me pushing 540 pounds of motorcycle up a hill and offered to help. We pushed to the top and got in the the garage. Carter
 
I've had probably 6 or more slow speed dumps on my bikes, all stupid and harmless stuff like trying to rooster tail the rear tire sideways on a dirt road or falling at a traffic light. I did however have one real crash, and I'll never forget it.

The bike: a 74? Honda CB 350
My age: young and dumb 16

I was going about 60mph around the Ayer, MA rotory. I was about 3/4 of the way around when a car entered the rotory in front of me. He didn't do anything wrong as I am sure he looked and didn't see me. I slammed on both brakes but the front was a little grabbier and I high sided. Thank god for the Mass helmet law or I'm sure my stupid head wouldn't have had one on. I slid right into the gaurdrail and hit one of the uprights square with that helmet, an old Bell. It cracked across the entire length- in half- but stayed together and did it's job. Thankfully the bike slid further than I did and hit the gaurdrail further down the rotory. Also thankfully it was September and a little chilly, so I had jeans, gloves, and a jean jacket on. Still I got a broken collerbone and arm, severely sprained ankle (would have been better if it broke), and bad road rash on the entire right side of my body. Needless to say I couldn't ride home...
 
Reading this thread has stirred up some memories...
1984 - I was 19. I'd just bought a 'cherry' '80 GS750ET a week or two earlier. I'm riding with Carter T. (yep, this one), he's riding his battered warrior GS750ET (that bike was...different...special...). He's more experienced than I, he's leading.
We're scratching our way up Sunrise on Mt. Rainier. Beautiful, sunny morning, cool humid air, the bike is singing. I love this bike!! Waaay more potent and solid than my '79 GS550EN!! Short straight, we blast past a van; second gear, third, pulling hard. :twisted: Left hander coming, down into second, hard on the binders. Carter is through; the corner is tightening up - A LOT!
TARGET FIXATION!!! I see a tree midcorner. There is 8-10ft. of gravel shoulder, then...nothing...a steep slope, hundreds of feet down. I'm not going to make it. 20-25 mph, I 'watch helplessly' as I run wide...the front washes out...I'm down in the gravel. NOOOOOooooo!!!!
Dust. Sunlight. I'm a bit scuffed, but OK. Silence - wait a minute - my bike's running steadily at about 5,000 rpm - where is it??? It's wedged against the tree I was staring at, between the front wheel and header pipes. Without that tree, it's off into the abyss. Adrenalized, I run over and shut it off. Here comes the van...he's pis$ed, scared, he has a rope. We start to drag the bike out.
Here comes Carter. Here comes a Park Ranger. Here comes a 'failure to maintain control' ticket.
The bike was scuffed (gauges, tank, turn signals, alt cover, etc.) but rideable. The left handlebar is bent straight up, I'm clutching 'thumbs-up.' Three-hour ride home, lots of time to think about my now 'less-than-cherry' 750. Learned some lessons about vision that day. :oops:
Ted
P.S. I've been back to have a look. They have completely reworked that corner, much gentler, wider and a turnout shoulder. Couldn't even definitively ID my nemesis/savior tree.
 
My most memorable "crash" (and a friend's) happened within a week of each other.. just a couple of years ago...

Me: 33, on an '80 GS850 GL. At the time, a decrepit heap of stuff held together with duct tape and good wishes.
Him: 36, on a very, very new Shadow. Preeeeeety chrome..

Gorgeous day, in fall, in North Texas, and he and I are riding down Main Street in Denison. I'm leading, he's staggered off of me, and I come to a light. No problem, downshift, brakes, no itch. The bike stops just as I put my boot down...in fresh oil. Over to the left we go. Bonk. A few scratches here and there, and a really cranky rider, but no damage otherwise. Worst part was my friend laughing maniacally behind me.

So a couple of days later, we're riding around again, just killing a pretty afternoon, and he passes me, pointing at his gas tank. Needs fuel...so I follow him into a gas station, and I'm sitting and idling while he's going to fuel up.

Aside: "Pay at the pump" *must* have been the great idea of a motorcyclist. You need not even dismount. It's amazing.

My friend swipes his card, and swipes it again, looks miffed, and swipes it again...no dice. The reader is hosed up some way. So he dismounts and starts to go inside. Just as he gets away from the bike, he realizes that he did not put the kickstand down. Bonk. With me laughing like a spotted hyena right behind him. Scratches in his pretty new chrome, but that's it.

In four years of riding, that's the worst I've done. Had one other little drop on a gravel road, but I stepped off as it went down, and didn't even get my leather dusty. Guess I'm just lucky, eh?

--David
 
Back
Top