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#1 (permalink) |
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Super Member
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Bikesafe
I did the Warwickshire Constabulary Bikesafe course at the weekend. It's billed as an introduction to Advanced Motorcycling. It cost £95 & in my opinion is the most worthwhile 2 days I've ever spent on a course.
The course is run by Police Motorcyclists (Nationally) for motorcyclists of all standards. This one was based at the Heritage motor museum at Gaydon (10 miles up the road from home). The basic premise is safety, simply by being hazard aware & adopting a proactive riding style. The first morning is theory. They've spent a few quid recently on an 'Interactive DVD', which shows the right & wrong way to do things. There's no pressure & plenty of coffee. After lunch, we hit the road. As well as serving Police motorcyclists, civilian riders are also recruited as observers. Typically they are either IAM or RoSPA observers. The ratio is 2:1 candidates to observers*. They try to pair you with people of similar biking background / talent. I was paired with a guy largely, I think, because he had a FZ6 (brand new 08, 300 miles on the clock). * They have to be called observers, as they are not allowed to teach or instruct, due to the insanely litigious environment we now live in. The initial stint is an assessed ride, a few miles with one candidate at the front, observer in the middle & the other candidate at the back. Then the candidates swap place, a few more miles then a debrief. I lead the first stint & within a mile it was obvious, me & my partner were something of a mismatch, in that we had to stop & wait for him at the first junction. But, that's OK, he was a bit paranoid about over revving his new baby & I can understand that. You ride your ride & the observer assesses you under normal riding conditions. When we swapped, I just toottled along at the back. Stop for a debrief, my ride was described as 'Enthusiastic'. After which we did a stint where we followed the observer & (tried to) put in practice what we had been told in the morning. Nice cup of tea, another feedback session. Then another blast. I lead this time for about 15 miles along a road just made for bikes. At 75/80mph we soon lost my partner, but we waited for him up the road. At this point, I was concentrating hard on applying new techniques rather than the benefits to be gained from them. My mate caught us up, & we followed him back to base. More coffee, more feedback. The next day, there was another observer available, so me & my partner were split up. Coffee out the way we hit the road, most of the time I lead. We stopped regularly to discuss the pros & cons of the previous few miles. We did a loop ending up back at base for lunch. Another de-brief & then back on the road. I made a quantum leap after lunch. The techniques I had been concentrated on started to come naturally. Suddenly, I was just in the right place on the road, hazard aware, overtaking smoothly, just smoother overall. And, 10 to 15 mph faster than I had been in the morning, but more in control. The last stint of the afternoon I followed my observer - an old boy, in his 60s on an ancient Pan European - I topped 105mph trying to keep up with him. I've ridden the same stretch of road many times, probably just as fast, but never so competently. More coffee, another de-brief & a goody bag. I went home a happy chap, peeled me leathers off & crashed out for an hour & a half. I'm sold; I've been in touch with the local branch of the IAM with a view to joining & taking the test. If you have any inclination at all to do some further training, I highly recommend this course. You will benefit from it no matter how good you are. Bikesafe - Motorcycle Rider Safety
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Phil "Dave's not here." '07 FZ6 SA in super cool Gunmetal |
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| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to pedwards89 For This Useful Post: |
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#2 (permalink) |
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The number of the beast
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Stevenage near London UK
Bike: FZ6 s2 07
Posts: 638
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Re: Bikesafe
Glad you enjoyed it.
I'm doing bikesafe this Sunday, it's only on the day but I am thinking about having a look at IAM afterwards.
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Remember; A Good emergency stop is one that you can walk away from, A Great emergency stop is one where the bike can be used again. ![]()
Last edited by fast blue one; 05-14-2008 at 05:11 AM.. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: UK
Bike: FZ6S
Posts: 54
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Re: Bikesafe
glad you enjoyed your course Pedward, I would take issue with one thing though...
Bikesafe courses vary enormously throughout the U.K. I have just declined one locally as it was to cost £65 for 4 hours! some Police forces run them effectively free. Yours sounds very worthwhile, I had decided to spend the £65 on profffesional 1 2 1 training as I thought that was better value, but now it appears I can get on a bikesafe course with a neighbouring Police Force, together with some other Club members. Any quality training is better than none, some is obviously better value than others. Surely there should be a national standard of these things, or are the Police just doing what they are told by the Government, and paying lip service to cost/quality of the product. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Birmingham, UK
Bike: FZ6 S2
Posts: 1,463
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Re: Bikesafe
Sounds like you had a productive couple of days.
What do you think you go from it that you did not know before?
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"I am not a number — I am a free man!" |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: West London
Bike: 2007 FZ6-S2
Posts: 1,022
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Re: Bikesafe
Has anyone on here done the London Bikesafe? I hear it's pretty good and they may have more good commuter/city riding tips than other places.
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David '07 FZ6 Fazer S2 in stealth Black, CAT1/2 alarm, stainless Scorpion cans, Puig dark smoke screen, bd43's dual headlight mod complete with uprated Xenon bulbs, Yamaha (GIVI) 45L detachable rear 'courier' box, frame sliders, center stand removal, red reflective rim tape, Reiobard's swing-arm stickers, Conti RoadAttack tires, full sticker removal ![]()
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#7 (permalink) |
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The number of the beast
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Stevenage near London UK
Bike: FZ6 s2 07
Posts: 638
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Re: Bikesafe
My bikesafe joining details have just arrived.
According to the letter, what Herts Police do is a couple of hours or so of briefing and assessed rideout followed by the de-brief. They also have "other attractions" including local training organisations eyesight testing security advice and various displays. All in all sounds good and it's free.
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Remember; A Good emergency stop is one that you can walk away from, A Great emergency stop is one where the bike can be used again. ![]()
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#8 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Fleet, Hampshire, UK
Bike: FZ6-n
Posts: 23
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Re: Bikesafe
Hey Phil,
Ta very much. I hadn't really thought about a BikeSafe course, but then I received my Sticker from Mark today and he'd popped in a few leaflets in too, one of them about BikeSafe. You post your review on the same day, I'm thinking that it's a sign to book myself on! I'm still fairly new to biking so am just starting to think about where I should be in the road and the best ways to overtake or filter. Sounds like this course could help me a lot now that the basics are coming more naturally. Thanks again, Dave |
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Super Member
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Re: Bikesafe
Quote:
Going to try the other group next week.
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Phil "Dave's not here." '07 FZ6 SA in super cool Gunmetal |
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#10 (permalink) | |
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Super Member
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Re: Bikesafe
Quote:
A lot of it was "Statements of the bleeding obvious". However, to an old fart like me who passed his test 30 years ago with zero training (as long as you could ride around the block without falling off you got a license) it was an eye opener.
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Phil "Dave's not here." '07 FZ6 SA in super cool Gunmetal |
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