PaulF wrote:
Should people have to use a motorcycle before being allowed to drive a car?
Simple answer Yes
Simple answer... no.
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I understand how the weather can impede my braking ability (wet roads, greasy roads, leaves on roads, oil {diesel} on roads.
Cars aren't endowed with magic brakes or tyres that make them immune to the effects of a slippery road surface, and as a pedestrian I'm also well aware of the detrimental effects of leaves/ice/diesel on available grip.
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I understand about the wind literally blowing me even in a car into a different lane....
I've never been in wind strong enough to blow the car I was driving completely into the next lane, but know about the effects of a strong head/cross/tailwind on vehicle performance.
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I drive on the gearbox rather than the brakes: I am nearly always in the right gear at the right time - both up and down through the box.
I currently drive an auto so gear selection is more or less out of my hands now, but I still try to avoid touching the brakes in normal driving (and in a big heavy auto with no engine braking and a seemingly inexhaustible ability to keep on rolling long after you've lifted off the gas, that's even harder to achieve than in a small manual with so much engine braking you feel like you've hit a brick wall the moment you lift off), and my car driving instructor was very VERY insistent on me learning about correct gear selection from an early stage in my lessons.
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From experience, I realise how hard the road surface is, how much it hurts if you hit it, how some other arsehole can put you in all sorts of trouble.
Granted, that's not something you can learn just through car driving, but neither is it something you can only learn through motorbiking. The question was raised earlier whether this thread was referring to pedal bikes as well as motorbikes, and I think it's an important point to raise. In my earlier years I cycled on a daily basis - to and from uni and around the city and surrounding area on sightseeing trips - and the ONE time I ended up parting company with my bike was exactly how many times I needed to learn that I never wanted it to happen again. I wasn't even injured, beyond a slight graze and some bruising, but the sudden transition from riding along quite happily to being dumped on the hard unyielding ground was what taught me the lesson, not whatever pain and suffering was caused as a consequence.
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I learnt how to be the biggest 'wanker' imagineable: If others want to race - let them get on with it; there is a long queue to the cemetary, if they want to jump it that's their prerogative, etc.
I couldn't agree more, yet I never went - at least not deliberately or knowingly - through the "being a wanker" stage in order to feel like this. To me it's just pure common sense and self-preservation, I don't need to have experienced what it's like to be the driver inside a badly driven car to know that I want to keep as big a distance as possible between myself and anyone who does drive like that.
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Riding a motorcycle has made me the driver I still am today - aware and alert; and understanding of my (and my vehicle's) limitations.
If it's worked for you, then brilliant - that's one more driver on the roads who's got safety in mind. But there are other ways for drivers to achieve the same level of awareness and alertness, learning to ride a motorbike isn't the only option, nor should it be forced on anyone.