No the camera doesnt pic up led brake lights well, has something to do with the frequency of the leds and the frame rate of the camera. They were solid to the human eye.
In my opinion, the rider in front can not cause an accident except in a few situations. If the rider in front crosses the center line, gets hit by an oncoming car and gets flung back into the following rider or causes the car to cross the center line into the following rider, or the rider in front suffers a catastrophic failure which dumps anti-freeze or oil on the road surface which the following rider can not avoid then the rider in front is at fault.
A safe following distance has to account for an unexpected slow down. Here's a story to illustrate, it happened in Arkansas, but it could easily have happened in the areas we ride in. I was on 16 in AR, a great road which runs from east to west about 80 miles long. Fairly tight and twisty on the east end and open sweepers on the west end. I picked up a tail of two locals. They weren't too tight on my tail, but they weren't 2 seconds back either. I came over a hill and saw deer and broke hard. One rider came by me on the right and the other on the left. Needless to say, after this incident they increased their following distance significantly.I hope that everyone who reads this doesn't need to come by me on the brakes to figure out that their following distance needs to accommodate the unexpected. Of course, we all sometimes ride behind people and think "why the hell are they slowing down" or "why the hell are they on the brakes". Even though 9 times out of 10 or even 999 times out of 1000 they might be on the brakes needlessly in our opinion that's twenty twenty hind sight. It is pretty much impossible to tell why someone is on the brakes until after the fact, and after the fact is generally too late when there is a real reason for someone to be on the brakes. Following distance is for the unexpected. If we knew what to expect we wouldn't need any following distance.
He (Gely) was NOT hard on the brakes. He only slowed from about 80 to 65 before the crash and the guy in front was pulling away already at 65. That's only a decrease of 15mph over the course of two long turns on highway 95. Take any modern sportbike and get hard on the brakes and you will watch the speedo RAPIDLY decrease from 70mph.... I can probably scrub off from 80-40 in 2 seconds on my 660lb bike.
My questions is this, how far is a safe distance? my definition of a safe distance would be enough room to avoid hitting the bike in front of you, by going around them and or braking. Using my logic (which may or may not be right) I would say the guys in AR were "safe", now if you logic is they should stop behind you then they were unsafe. My thought is this if the definition of safe is stopping behind somebody that has stopped, the gap "should" be about 4 to 5 seconds for most riders (some it should be more), under most riding conditions, 1 second to realize the bike in front is stopping and 3 to 4 to get the bike to stop safely.
...You still have to consider that if you were both traveling at the same rate of speed, and that lead bike got a second on the brakes jump on you (likely it would be more) that lead bikes rate of speed even after the following bike is on them (brakes) for all they are worth is still lower than the following bike........Thus the trailing bike is still closing the gap on the lead bike all the way til it stops--which could easily be in excess of 165' at just 60 mph ( given a 1 second head start on the brakes for the lead bike)....
.......it appears that you were barely speeding and barely slowing down. again, pure speculation on my part. perhaps the decrease in speed from 70 (tops, maybe more like 65) to 59 when you stopped (*ouch!*) was more influential than i think it was, but like a lot of crashes
Quote from: aschendel on November 06, 2011, 01:09:37 AM.......it appears that you were barely speeding and barely slowing down. again, pure speculation on my part. perhaps the decrease in speed from 70 (tops, maybe more like 65) to 59 when you stopped (*ouch!*) was more influential than i think it was, but like a lot of crashesI saw 82 on the speedo as he was exiting the first mild curve. The point I made (earlier) was that sort of speed on Wis 95 is begging for all sorts of things to go wrong. Not to mention, Joe Law comes around the corner and you're going to be making a donation to the county.
Quote from: gely on November 06, 2011, 02:30:50 AM Also, before we got to this point, you almost crash once already. Dont worry Gely, i dont blame you for the crash. Were u a factor? of course. But thats my fault, not yours.
Also, before we got to this point, you almost crash once already.
Finally if you are all butt hurt about some criticism for something you openly share on a forum--you better get off the forums. There is always going to be someone you don't like, someone who doesn't like you, people who think differently. Perhaps it isn't even that they don't like you, perhaps they are just using an opportunity to make a point? If you are set on sticking around, you have 2 choices--grow some thick skin and take it (hopefully learn and grow so your butt sore will go away) or continue whining like a little baby and continue to blame everyone else with your woe is me song.... This isn't aimed at any one person in particular-----so read into it whatever you desire.When I direct it at someone in particular, believe me you will know it !
Nothing like a broken femur to put thing is perspective.I look at this is my first and final lesson. If i break this femur again im gonna be in alot of trouble with the metal rod in my leg.
Also, turned off your camera and removed it from your bike in case the cops wanted to look at the video clip.Mike- Were all learning something from your unfortunate accident.
pkpk- If you think 82mph is too fast for Wis 95, I can only conclude that you have not ridden with people here much.
Quote from: Objurgate on November 06, 2011, 11:29:53 PM...You still have to consider that if you were both traveling at the same rate of speed, and that lead bike got a second on the brakes jump on you (likely it would be more) that lead bikes rate of speed even after the following bike is on them (brakes) for all they are worth is still lower than the following bike........Thus the trailing bike is still closing the gap on the lead bike all the way til it stops--which could easily be in excess of 165' at just 60 mph ( given a 1 second head start on the brakes for the lead bike)....I don't think the closing rate is a material consideration until you get to higher speeds.At 60 mph a 2 second gap is 176 ft. Assuming both bikes stop in the same distance, if the second bike starts braking 1 second later than the first bike it stops 88 ft behind the first bike. There is still a potential for ass packing based on differences in the rate of stopping at different speeds. If one bike achieves 90% of its stopping in the first second of braking while the other achieves 10%, even though their total stopping distances are the same, a collision during stopping becomes much more likely. At 60 mph though, the test panel data for most bikes show stopping distances in the 100-125ft.range ('98 VFR 108ft, 2003 ST1300ABS 124ft). 88ft is a significant gap relative to these stopping distances. 88 feet is 88% of the shortest stopping distance. As stopping distances increases disproportionately with speed, I'd think more like 180-200 ft stopping distance @80 mph and a 1 second gap yields 117 ft the likelihood of collisions due to differences in stopping rates increases. 117 feet is 65% of the shortest stopping distance. So as speed increases and stopping distances increase disproportionately the percent extra stopping distance you get for a given time gap gets smaller. Which is why it makes sense to increase following distances as speed increases. You need to maintain your stopping cushion as a percentage of total stopping distance to guard against collisions due to differences in rates of deceleration at different speeds.
Quote from: gely on November 07, 2011, 12:51:54 AMpkpk- If you think 82mph is too fast for Wis 95, I can only conclude that you have not ridden with people here much. I've ridden with Ray, Tony, Vince, etc for over 10 years now. Ridden with Tony longer than that. I've done over 80 on that road myself. There are reasons why I stopped doing so. Just because you wind up doing 80 with other riders only means you haven't had the pleasure of learning my lessons. State highways and busy roads are not good places to do 80+. Coming down the hill into the twisities outside Arcadia at 80+ leads me to believe you were doing faster speeds prior to this. The fact that you are having to ride the brakes through the first hard corner leads me to believe you were caught off guard and probably lulled to some extent by the speed. Go ahead and rationalize all you want. But you might not get away with that corner braking next time and wind up lowsiding into Joe Public on a right hander.