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Deleted member 4439
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Is it that the driver blindly pulled out in front of the motorbike? Or that the motorbike wasnt in sight when the driver pulled out but was going that fast he appeared out of nowhere and couldn't slow down? I'd say a bit of both in all honesty. It's easy to just poi t fingers at drivers for pulling out.
Happens to me everyday (not necessarily motorbikes) the road I live on, as I pull out on the the main road, to the right it bends round to the right, and with cars parked right up to the junction I literally cannot see up one direction until I'm on the road. Add to that people coming down at 40-50mph all the time, it's an accident waiting g to happen.
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Exactly this, which is why as a biker it is equally your responsibility to read the road ahead and anticipate. I'm now 3 years into having returned to biking after a 20-year break (simply down to not having the facility to keep a bike without it being stolen). Over the course of the first year I road extensively with an advanced riding group. In year one, I must have had up a dozen instances of 'car-driver' fault, whereas over the last 2 years I think I've only had one, and that was indeed a rare occurrence in which it was obvious to me that this was a car driver in a hurry and who was likely not to spot me. (I'd already planned my defensive behavior and we both came to a controlled stop).
I'd say that on the whole, motorcyclists need to look at themselves first.