- Fri Dec 02, 2016 2:34 pm
#64879
Well,,, speaking as someone who started riding 41 years ago,,,, I am opposed to compulsory safety kit.
Wear whatever makes you comfortable on your bike by all means, if folk are more comfortable with "all the gear all the time" that's fine by me. Just don't expect me to do the same. I don't jump on my bike expecting to have an accident or get injured, I know these things are possible of course, but I'd much rather rely on my skill and judgement to avoid an accident in the first place than to rely on what I'm wearing to keep me safe.
I live in France, and we've recently had gloves made compulsory for both rider and pillion. That seems perfectly sensible you might think, and to be fair I do always wear gloves, I always have, mainly because I find it uncomfortable to ride without. But the French government went one step further and said we all have to wear CE approved gloves. Now me and my missus have 3 pairs of bike gloves each, summer, winter, and spring / autumn, and only 1 pair out of the 6 has a CE label. Obviously we are not going to rush out and replace 5 pairs of perfectly serviceable gloves, so we are now law breakers.
The ABS issue is slightly different, on the one hand it can shorten stopping distances in the wet, on the other hand there will now be riders who've never ridden a bike without it, so best hope they never decide to buy a classic bike then?
There was a huge debate in the UK bike press back in the 1980s around "risk compensation theory". The idea that if you gave someone a car fitted with all the latest safety aids they would then take more risks because they felt "safe". A few years ago I was parked up in my Humber Super Snipe in a small town in northern Spain and an English guy with a new Mercedes SL parked next to me. He then started to tell me that my car was dangerous because it didn't have seat belts and went on to tell me that his was the safest car currently on the market because of it's computer controlled suspension. He actually said "you cannot roll this car, I know, I've tried"!
What worries me is that now people are buying bikes that they expect will get them out of trouble with traction control, ABS, etc.
I'm just glad I learnt to ride / drive at a time when we actually had to learn how to control all that stuff ourselves.