My very good friend Miles called me a couple hours ago. He was right outside Denton, Texas on I-35. There was a wreck up ahead and a couple cars pulled over.
There was a guy on the side of the road. He was about 10 or 12 feet from his Harley UltraGlide. He was flopping around in the road like a fish out of water. No helmet of course. Miles said the hole in the top of his head was about as big around as a beer can. He was still twitching a little...eyes wide open staring off into the sky.
Did I mention he wasn't wearing a helmet?
The Harley was wrecked but Miles said it really didn't look that bad. Said it looked like he'd hit something doing maybe 30 or 35 mph. It broke the fairing and bent the forks but the frame didn't appear to be bent. Just a two inch hole in the top of his head. Not sure but probably had something to do with the fact he wasn't wearing a helmet.
It's sad to think how his family will react. How his kids will cry when they hear about their daddy. How his mother will be crushed because the order of life reversed...he died before she did.
You know...I can't remember...did I mention he wasn't wearing a helmet?
While helmets are not fail safe, there are certainly very effective preventing permanent head injury and/or death in a majority of cases. And while I am no fan of helmet laws, I will strongly encourage all my riding friends to use a helmet. If you are stupid enough not to wear one then you can suffer the consequences. I do feel you should have to pay for your own stupidity and provide your own medical coverage and not require the collective taxpaying base to pay for your carelessness. And Florida's $10,000 proof of insurance is NOT enough. Most serious head injuries result in medicals bills far in excess of $50,000.
Bear in mind these statistics don't tell the whole story. These general stats do not distinguish between a full faced helmet and a "brain bucket" The Hurt Report showed that 35% of head injuries in motorcycle accidents, the impact was on the jaw. In these cases anything short of a full faced helmet are ineffective.
Motorcycle Helmets
In 2003, fifty two percent of fatally injured motorcycle riders were unhelmeted. Many of the helmeted fatalities were not full faced helmets.
Two-thirds of unhelmeted fatalities were in states without a universal helmet law.
NHTSA research shows that, in potentially fatal crashes, helmets have an overall effectiveness of 37 percent in preventing fatalities.
In 2002, helmets saved an estimated 1,005 lives.
At 100 percent use, an additional 579 lives could have been saved in 2002 alone.
Only 58 percent of motorcyclists were observed to be wearing helmets according to the 2002 National Occupant Protection Use Survey (NOPUS).
There was a guy on the side of the road. He was about 10 or 12 feet from his Harley UltraGlide. He was flopping around in the road like a fish out of water. No helmet of course. Miles said the hole in the top of his head was about as big around as a beer can. He was still twitching a little...eyes wide open staring off into the sky.
Did I mention he wasn't wearing a helmet?
The Harley was wrecked but Miles said it really didn't look that bad. Said it looked like he'd hit something doing maybe 30 or 35 mph. It broke the fairing and bent the forks but the frame didn't appear to be bent. Just a two inch hole in the top of his head. Not sure but probably had something to do with the fact he wasn't wearing a helmet.
It's sad to think how his family will react. How his kids will cry when they hear about their daddy. How his mother will be crushed because the order of life reversed...he died before she did.
You know...I can't remember...did I mention he wasn't wearing a helmet?
While helmets are not fail safe, there are certainly very effective preventing permanent head injury and/or death in a majority of cases. And while I am no fan of helmet laws, I will strongly encourage all my riding friends to use a helmet. If you are stupid enough not to wear one then you can suffer the consequences. I do feel you should have to pay for your own stupidity and provide your own medical coverage and not require the collective taxpaying base to pay for your carelessness. And Florida's $10,000 proof of insurance is NOT enough. Most serious head injuries result in medicals bills far in excess of $50,000.
Bear in mind these statistics don't tell the whole story. These general stats do not distinguish between a full faced helmet and a "brain bucket" The Hurt Report showed that 35% of head injuries in motorcycle accidents, the impact was on the jaw. In these cases anything short of a full faced helmet are ineffective.
Motorcycle Helmets
In 2003, fifty two percent of fatally injured motorcycle riders were unhelmeted. Many of the helmeted fatalities were not full faced helmets.
Two-thirds of unhelmeted fatalities were in states without a universal helmet law.
NHTSA research shows that, in potentially fatal crashes, helmets have an overall effectiveness of 37 percent in preventing fatalities.
In 2002, helmets saved an estimated 1,005 lives.
At 100 percent use, an additional 579 lives could have been saved in 2002 alone.
Only 58 percent of motorcyclists were observed to be wearing helmets according to the 2002 National Occupant Protection Use Survey (NOPUS).
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