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The crash studies don’t lie.
Average riders use their rear brake too much, don’t know what lowside and highside crashes are (and what causes them), and say there’s little they can do to keep from crashing—thinking when their time comes, it comes.
Average riders make errors that account for half of all crashes, don’t know how to react when a driver makes a mistake, and choose whether to wear a helmet based on whether their riding buddies wear one.
Average riders do the same things average riders did decades ago.
An NHTSA study in 2012 found that motorcyclists were 26 times more likely than car occupants to die in accidents (per mile traveled). A similar NHTSA study in 2018 showed that riders are now 28 times more likely to die in motor vehicle traffic crashes.
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