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The
Odd Duck In The Group
Is
still part of the family
You are the
lead bike and have a decision to make ... all of the motorcycles
are similar except one: it is a trike or a hack. What do you do
with it?
There are
only a few situations in which I will not allow a motorcycle, of
any kind, to ride with my group. First, if it is not street legal,
it does not go along. If the rider is impaired in any way, he is
not allowed to join us, regardless of the condition of his bike.
If the group leader requires that helmets must be worn in his
group and the rider of a bike refuses to wear one, he rides in
another group. Other than those few conditions, I don't care if
the motorcycle is a Honda, a Harley, a Ninja, a trike, or a hack.
They are part of the family and welcome to join me (until they
demonstrate unsafe practices.)
A trike or a
hack presents some unique concerns for me, however. For example,
they are wider than the other bikes and effectively must use the
full width of a lane. And they, neither of them, are capable of
using counter-steering - they are literally steered through the
curves.
So? Well,
whether you know it or not, a bike that follows another bike
obtains several visual cues from the bike ahead of them. These
cues are used by the following biker to better anticipate what
they must do in order to stay on the road and out of trouble. Such
things as lean angle and brake lights are examples of these cues.
There is no lean angle on a trike (or most hacks) and braking
patterns are different for these kinds of motorcycles and yours.
In other
words, you cannot casually assume that you follow one of these odd
ducks the same way you do any other motorcycle.
Further,
because they are so wide you, when following one of them, are
unable to see as much of the road ahead of you as you are used to.
As the lead
bike you can help the group out by assigning such an odd duck one
of two positions within the group. If the rider of one of these
bikes is strong enough and you have confidence enough in him/her,
you can ask that person to ride drag for you. This very neatly
solves all of the major concerns you might have. On the other
hand, if that rider is not known to you, or is not qualified to
ride as drag (or does not wish to do so), then that bike should be
assigned the second to last position in the group.
In the
second to last position that bike directly affects only your drag
bike. Since that bike is assumed to be the most competent/prepared
of all the rest of the group, it is reasonable to assume that the
drag bike can deal with the odd duck. (The drag bike should
stretch out his/her following distance to about twice normal to
account for there not being a normal width escape path within the
lane ahead of it.)
If you have
two 'odd ducks' and more than one group, they should be assigned
to separate groups. If there is only a single group, the 'odd
ducks' belong at the rear of the group or in a separate group of
their own.
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