While I am now convinced that offering a HP solution was probably a bad idea lol! Yeah would be kinda hard to do a Dyno test on the roadside...
However, I am more convinced than ever that the graduated cc program combined with the Motorcycle Safety Program is still the way to go.
As far as getting the course out to to the rural areas, if you have taken the test, I believe Sid and Noella Peterson out of Saskatoon will train you to become an instructor, then you can go back into your own area and train others. They volunteer and the money they make goes back into the program I believe as a non-profit. It was under their training I learned good riding skills and unlearned years of bad skills respectively.
Before the course I thought I was a safe rider, but after I realized that there was a great deal that could of got me killed.
Two things are glaring apparent to me in the course of this discussion.
1. Being a rider for years, while it will put you into most of the situations you will have to learn how to live, and have to get out of by trial and error, no, I agree does not mean you are a safe rider.
It does however give you wisdom you cannot learn any other way. To say that someone who has decades in the saddle and someone who has a few years in the saddle have the same school of hard knocks of the road is laughable at best. Try living through all of your 2.5 major accidents SGI says every biker is supposed to experience in their lifetime and you might get a feel for that. Miles will learn a fella.
2. New riders, who may very well equally be safe drivers do not necessarily equate to equally safe riders. Yes the traffic laws are the same but riding in traffic is a whole 'nuther animal. To say otherwise is just not dealing with reality. You have to keep your wits about you way more than in a car and a 50km/hr crash can kill you.
Thanks 78oldwing for the stats, lending some numbers to the issues we are talking about.
One question posed was how many kids really get their learners and hop on sport bikes and end up killing themselves. While I do not have numbers on that, go onto 8th street in Saskatoon on any given summers nite and see the 16-20 somethings on sport bikes, in packs, side by side (not staggered) doing wheelies and stoppies and other stupid things in traffic with no regard for their lives ,no exit plan, and no regard for the lives of others, and you will become very aware something has to be done. Riding a motorcycle in traffic is a full time job already without being crazy on top of that. In talking to most of these people, (yes there are harley riders that DO talk to sport bike riders) I find that a number of them have not taken the motorcycle safety course and like me, from my past, thought that all the years dirt biking etc... made them "in control" of their motorcycle. There is a big difference between "in control" and Safe.
While I find it curiously entertaining and mildly amusing at the stunts that can be done (On a Closed Course) with motorcycles, you want to impress me, come back alive and not have killed anyone, impress me with your safety when I ride with you.
I keep hearing that riding a small bike is unsafe on the highway etc. I had a 250 yamaha exciter that could do 120km/hr and it was just as safe as my harley, just smaller and more maneuverable. It may not of been as cool but it got me to point a to b safely. The bottom line that makes riding safe or unsafe is the rider.
As far as car vs. bike or single vehicle bike accidents, I honestly do not know the numbers, but I do know if you are safe on your motorcycle, you should never be in a situation like that to begin with. The reason people have motorcycle accidents is that they have no exit strategy. You should have 2 additional places you can go if you ride defensively (like every cager is out to kill you.) If you daydream like you do in a car it will kill you. Every accident is preventable and every risk can be managed. Riding a motorcycle entails more risk than a car. Managing that risk keeps you alive.
In managing the risk in this case, education, learning exit strategies and much more in a motorcycle safety course helps you do that. A slower, nimbler motorcycle does as well. Before you learn to fly an CF-18 you learn to fly a prop plane.
How many of us have rode by someone smeared on the highway we found out was inexperienced or lost someone personally, due to their own lack of experience? In my life there have been too many. I shudder every time I see a kid on a sport bike who boasts he didn't take the motorcycle course and doesn't need it because he knows "how to ride" and then proceeds to perform stupid human tricks on his bike in traffic.
Smaller bikes mean a smaller horsepower ratio, less weight, and a chance to get out of a situation a bigger bike, with a larger engine may have you committed to plain and simple. If smaller bikes were less safe on the road than big bikes they would of been pulled off the highway a long time ago and the department of highways would not of even approved them so 'nuff said. Smaller bikes are also the reason safety courses use them so you do not get into trouble as fast.
I honestly do not know how to merge the old and the new systems together, the only thing I can think of is everyone who hasn't had their motorcycle training, make it mandatory and all have to, just like they are doing with water safety and boating now.
As far as bringing in the graduated cc process, existing riders with their motorcycle safety course could possibly ride their bikes through the various aspects of the course, and if they can show they can control their motorcycles safely, I think they should have a pass. A day refresher and a quick recertification test. If not, then have them drop down to a cc level that they can. I think that is the only way parity between the two classes of existing and new riders would work.
I Remember I once was one of those unsafe riders on too big of bikes, out there for years before I took my motorcycle safety course.
All new riders would have to do the same.
Oh yeah... I had my accidents BEFORE the motorcycle course.
Further muddying the waters
I know I am gonna catch flack for this one so let 'er fly LOL!
Moose