- Sat Dec 14, 2013 8:46 am
#3007
When I was younger, The motorcycle test was a guy following you around on another bike, but by the time I actually took it, it was a part one and part two test.
I remember it well, winter , damn cold , and for one lesson it had snowed! This was my initial experience of a bike on snow, a Suzuki A100 two stroke.
I got to the school that the BMF used for training and ran into a snowdrift. I got off the bike, pulled it through/over the drift and continued on to the car park. The instructors had come in a car, and only a few other guys had turned up, either in more cars or one frozen guy that had walked! I was the only guy to turn up on my bike, needless to say, practical lessons were out!
We did a little theory, but things got much more interesting a one of the instructors told us about biking around the Paris ring road.
There had been no speed limits then and he was doing about 120 MPH down the fast lane, when he saw a Mercedes in his mirror quite some distance behind him. He checked again a few seconds later and it was right behind him, giving him a bit of a shock as he flung his bike into the next lane. He guessed the Mercedes must have been doing about 180! It had been his first experience of being followed at that speed!
So I got my part one and two, and ripped up the 'L'plates!
What was then the 'new' two part test seemed a little complicated, but I have just looked on gov web site. No wonder there seem to be fewer bike riders nowadays, they even have to issue a flow chart to show how to pass!

I remember it well, winter , damn cold , and for one lesson it had snowed! This was my initial experience of a bike on snow, a Suzuki A100 two stroke.
I got to the school that the BMF used for training and ran into a snowdrift. I got off the bike, pulled it through/over the drift and continued on to the car park. The instructors had come in a car, and only a few other guys had turned up, either in more cars or one frozen guy that had walked! I was the only guy to turn up on my bike, needless to say, practical lessons were out!
We did a little theory, but things got much more interesting a one of the instructors told us about biking around the Paris ring road.
There had been no speed limits then and he was doing about 120 MPH down the fast lane, when he saw a Mercedes in his mirror quite some distance behind him. He checked again a few seconds later and it was right behind him, giving him a bit of a shock as he flung his bike into the next lane. He guessed the Mercedes must have been doing about 180! It had been his first experience of being followed at that speed!
So I got my part one and two, and ripped up the 'L'plates!
What was then the 'new' two part test seemed a little complicated, but I have just looked on gov web site. No wonder there seem to be fewer bike riders nowadays, they even have to issue a flow chart to show how to pass!

REOC 15084
Tabellarius de verbis. Ostensor gaudium
Tabellarius de verbis. Ostensor gaudium