OK first of all I have to tell you that I white line, or lane share.. It is
legal in California and it saves me time on my 75 mile one way commute. Well
Yesterday on my way to work I made the traffic report. I was passing a blazer
in the carpool lane and all of a sudden she decided that she was going to get
out of the carpool lane. She made a couple of mistakes that got me in a pinch.
First of all she was getting out of the carpool lane over the double yellow
line.. Second she turned on her blinker while she was already turning. So her
mirror clipped my handlebars and sent me shooting to the right I slammed into
another car and my foot twisted between the car and my bike.. I am way lucky
that I had on my el cheapo $25 Wal-Mart Leather boots. I have a gash that went
across the heal of my boot that went all the way through the leather. If I was
wearing tennis shoes or work shoes It would have cut down to the bone. I didn't
break any bones, but i have a bad sprained ankle. I went to the hospital in an
ambulance so I am not sure who the CHP deemed at fault..
Dale Johnson
klr owner to be?
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- Posts: 147
- Joined: Thu Jun 01, 2000 11:18 am
pinball
Dale, Bummer!
I live in California and sometimes am paid to split lanes on my bike,
delivering documents. It's the only way to go, and the safest. But
it's not for everyone.
I feel the need to add that you might not have been watching the lady
in the truck that sideswiped you closely enough. You definitely can
not trust any other driver on the road near you to do any thing
correctly. You must assume they are going to make a stupid move at
all times. Plan on it.
The CHP mostlikely will name you as being at fault, as you may have
to right to share lanes in California, but if doing so you are
usually put at fault in the event of an accident.
In sum though, my position is this: It is far better than being
crushed between two tailgaters in heavy traffic.
pinball
hope your ankle is ok dale. bill is probably right, from what i know. i
split lanes on my way to work, but i do so very nervously, for exactly the
reason you describe. when possible, i try to go between cars that are next
to each other (naively hoping they won't sideswipe each other). i get
especially nervous if one lane is moving and the other isn't. people seem
more prone to pull out suddenly then.
you can oftentimes get advance notice of people's intentions by watching
them (not necessarily their signals). a driver that impatiently looks to the
side and/or in the mirrors is definitely thinking about doing something like
changing lanes.
i hope your bike is ok too.
-mark weaver
> -----Original Message----- > From: Bill E Goat [mailto:monahanwb@...] > Sent: Thursday, October 19, 2000 10:16 AM > To: DSN_klr650@egroups.com > Subject: [DSN_klr650] Re: Pinball > > > Dale, Bummer! > > I live in California and sometimes am paid to split lanes on my bike, > delivering documents. It's the only way to go, and the safest. But > it's not for everyone. > > I feel the need to add that you might not have been watching the lady > in the truck that sideswiped you closely enough. You definitely can > not trust any other driver on the road near you to do any thing > correctly. You must assume they are going to make a stupid move at > all times. Plan on it. > > The CHP mostlikely will name you as being at fault, as you may have > to right to share lanes in California, but if doing so you are > usually put at fault in the event of an accident. > > In sum though, my position is this: It is far better than being > crushed between two tailgaters in heavy traffic. > > > Visit the KLR650 archives at > http://www.listquest.com/lq/search.html?ln=klr650 > Support Dual Sport News... dsneditor@... > Let's keep this list SPAM free! > > Visit our site at http://www.egroups.com/group/DSN_klr650 > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > DSN_klr650-unsubscribe@egroups.com > > >
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klr owner to be?
Drive down to Southern California and buy it from Temple City Powersports,
and save a buck or two. Actually close to a thousand dollars. That would
more than pay for the trip down and back, unless you drive a forty foot
mobile home.
Russel'r DSN_klr650@egroups.com
Subject: [DSN_klr650] Re: KLR owner to be?
I got my KLR A15 for under $5700 out the door here in Northern California.
That's the best price around. The highest was over $6400 OTD. That's what
they cost here, nothing anyone can do. If you don't buy it someone else
will. Just for reference the Yamaha R1's that MSRP for under $10,000. Go
for
almost $15,000 + fees. Same for the Honda RC51's.
Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2000 20:53:08 -0500
From: Jim Nesrsta Subject: Re: KLR owner to be?Bill,
I just got my new KLR a few months ago in San Antonio. I don't think I
got a great deal. It was $5300 drive out and I didn't even get a helmet
out of the deal! You should be able to do better than that. I was too
anxious to get riding again after an 18 year layoff. It's a great bike
so far. Just don't try to do stuff that a two-stroke dirt bike can do.
I have progressive fork springs and a steel reinforced front brake line
on order. At 265 pounds I need all the stopping power I can get.Jim
Nesrsta
Bill Wallen wrote:> > Hi, folks. New list member, but I don't own a KLR>
YET.>
_________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at http://profiles.msn.com Visit the KLR650 archives at http://www.listquest.com/lq/search.html?ln=klr650 Support Dual Sport News... dsneditor@... Let's keep this list SPAM free! Visit our site at http://www.egroups.com/group/DSN_klr650 To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: DSN_klr650-unsubscribe@egroups.com>I'm in research mode, trying to determine which >dual-sport to buy. I ride a Ducati on the street, but
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