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27 answers

The odds definitely increase that you will die in a wreck on a bike. But it is so much fun to ride, so much better than being in a car, that for many (like me) the risk is worth it. Sort of like SCUBA or sky-diving or rock-climbing. Sure, it's a lot more dangerous than sitting in your living room in a bathrobe tickling the cat and eating bonbons all day, but you are going to die eventually from something anyway. Why, the odds are, you will die in the bathroom (most household deaths are in the crapper), but does that mean you should never bathe again?
I agree completely that you should take the MSF rider safety course. It is great, cheap and will give you a good basis of skills to keep you alive while you are learning to ride.
Wear your protective gear (helmet, jacket, pants, gloves, boots) and try not to ride beyond your skill level.
With those caveats, you can and should ride for a long time.

2006-06-14 08:25:20 · answer #1 · answered by Grendle 6 · 1 1

Look, Kemuel - if you want to buy one, you're probably going to. What you do with it afterward is what matters!

My suggestion to you is to find your local Motorcycle Safety Foundation course (a.k.a., the MSF) and take the course. They provide the bikes, the helmets, etc. You get to tool around on a motorcycle all day, and learn how to be safe.

If you don't like riding after that, then at least you know that you should not buy a bike. If you do, then you're going to get a 10% discount on your motorcycle insurance, you'll have some safety know-how, and you'll probably get a waiver to take the riding portion of your motorcycle license test.

Take the MSF ($180), and then consider the bike.

P.S: I wish I had a buck for everyone that told me that buying a bike was going to get me killed.....I've never wrecked or even come close, and I'd be a millionaire!

Oh yeah - wear a helmet!

2006-06-14 07:13:17 · answer #2 · answered by gatesfam@swbell.net 4 · 0 0

Depends on just how suicidal you are. Many people buy motorcycles and live long healthy lives. A more accurate question may be , Do you thing that someone in a car will kill me if I ride a motorcycle? Most fatalities on motorcycles are not suicidal, meaning the motorcylist doesnt kill him or herself. Some nut in a car runs over him or her.

Nothing in life is completely safe. If you are afraid, you have no business on a motorcycle. Fear takes away ones edge, so don't ride a bike if your scared.

2006-06-15 21:34:41 · answer #3 · answered by jack f 7 · 0 0

The odds of being in a motorcycle are no greater than being in an accident in a car/truck. Fatality rates among those accidents, however, are high on a motorcycle. Of course, this is mostly due to NOT being in a cage.

If you treat the bike and the road with respect and keep aware of your situation and what is going on around you, you shouldn't have any problems. Enroll in the Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF) Basic Rider Course. They have a lot of information that will help you to be a safer and more capable rider.

2006-06-14 06:16:26 · answer #4 · answered by snyder650 1 · 0 0

the actual buying of a bike will not be fatal unless you have a heart attack from the price. Don't get anything fancy!

most fatalities occur because the rider is under the influence of alcohol or drugs (might not be "legally drunk" but the effects are still powerful).

take a motorcycle safety training course.

www.msf.org (motorcycle safety foundation)

2006-06-14 08:17:13 · answer #5 · answered by queenbee 3 · 0 0

I hope so. This way I may be able to collect your social security.
Seriously though, Get a Suzuki sv650 or mid performance bike after you have taken a weekend rider course. I did after 15 years of riding and still learned something. If you don't try, you will never know. You can sit home and watch Dr. Phil and you will be safe or you can ride and experience life. DO IT!

2006-06-14 10:03:18 · answer #6 · answered by chevydavehartwig 2 · 0 0

no you wont...if ur a beginner first learn how to ride a bike then take the motorcycle safty course and get urslef a 100 or 250 cc bike and get use to it before u get urself a bigger one...motorcycles are as safe as cars all depends on the driver

2006-06-14 07:30:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I got this old trivia statistic on my Palm Pilot that says that riding a motorcycle is the greatest "risk of death" activity:

Extra deaths per 100,000 people:
2000 motorcycling
500 Smoking
400 Deep sea fishing
120 car racing
24 mining
20 farm workers
14 rock climbing
6 influenza
.01 lightning strike
.002 hit by falling aircraft
.00006 hit by meteorite

2006-06-14 10:28:42 · answer #8 · answered by James K 1 · 0 0

I merely went by this quandary myself. I went for a mid-determination helmet. I chosen the Icon Hooligan helmet. that's amazingly comfortable and has a lot of vents. It in wonderful condition my head properly, better appropriate then distinctive the intense end helmets. It fee $250 and that's DOT and SNELL qualified. If the helmet has DOT and SNELL stickers, that's a competent high quality helmet. SNELL has intense criteria. There are some a lot less intense priced helmets by ability of HJC that I also seen, yet they merely did not in wonderful condition me as well. i in my opinion would stay far off from DOT in reality helmets, they are reliable, yet i'm paranoid and wanted the most secure helmet i ought to have sufficient money! make effective that the helmet suits your head. that's going to be somewhat tight and gained;t flow round at the same time as that's strapped on. undergo in thoughts, the pads will compress as you position on it better. attempt all of them on. locate what's the most comfortable for you. Vents are a effective function, i love mine because inspite of the actual undeniable truth that that's an entire face, I stay effective and funky even on warm days because there are distinctive vents. For less warm days, i visit close the vents and stay warmth.

2016-10-14 04:01:48 · answer #9 · answered by belfast 4 · 0 0

As soon as we're born we start dying.
Take a good rider course, and ride like everyone on the road is trying to kill you (because most of them are.. usually not on purpose though). And finally... know your abilities and respect your scooter.
I've been riding for 35 years & haven't died yet. Probably will soon, though (heart problems!).

2006-06-14 18:30:05 · answer #10 · answered by JD 2 · 0 0

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