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Someone has No Idea how to Ride!

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  • Опубликовано: 13 дек 2023
  • "King of the Road" 2-month online course: moto-control.shop/subscription/
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    you can join: / @motocontrolen
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    🏍️🏍️🏍️
    On Moto Control channel you will find videos about motorcycles, motorcycle riding techniques, tips & tricks and online motorcycle training for beginner and advanced riders!
    A little info about me. My name is Andrei Bodrov, originally I'm from Moscow, Russia, and now I live in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Back in Moscow I was a motorcycle instructor and creator of Moto Control Beginner & Advanced motorcycle rider courses, which quickly became the most popular courses in Moscow (well, at least the advanced one😁). My advanced training course makes emphasis on slow speed riding techniques at first (such as good clutch and throttle control, proper riding posture, proper use of vision, etc.), then proceeds to more advanced techniques (such as aggressive braking, trail braking, maximal lean angle). The course incorporates a lot of exercises from DOSAF slow speed riding (similar to police rodeo like motorcycle training in USA), braking and cornering exercises and motogymkhana style riding. And now, since I actively learn English - I decided to post some useful videos for both your and mine practice!😉
    🏍️🏍️🏍️
    Since everyone writes this, it's necessary, I suppose 🤷, so here we go. Disclaimer: Ride at your own risk, you are responsible for your own safety. Me, Andrey Bodrov and my channel, Moto Control disclaim any liability incurred in connection with the use of riding techniques from this channel. Use common sense, wear full protective gear and ride in a safe and predictable manner!
    #motorcycle #motorcycles #moto

Комментарии • 539

  • @briangc1972
    @briangc1972 8 месяцев назад +230

    "That was no an accident. The way he rides, that was his destiny." 🤣
    I'm going to use that line. Thanks for the laughs.

    • @peglegjim57
      @peglegjim57 Месяц назад

      Yep.
      I’m stealing that one too. 😎

  • @Dangerwiggles
    @Dangerwiggles 8 месяцев назад +240

    Thank you for calling out these riders who have poor control and choices.

    • @adammcallister2260
      @adammcallister2260 8 месяцев назад +4

      There’s a channel called MotoClips UK. It’s a catalogue of what not to do. 80% of clips are of horrific riders and awful choices. They’re usually followed up by a slew of abuse, arguments and gesticulations, too.

    • @africanpirate972
      @africanpirate972 7 месяцев назад

      Agreed they make all the other riders look bad.

  • @adammcallister2260
    @adammcallister2260 8 месяцев назад +48

    Top video. When the gravel clip came up, my immediate thought was “get everything sorted before you start the turn”. Make sure you’re in the right gear, indicator on, brakes on, get ready for observations just before you turn. Making adjustments through turns will upset the bike. Looks like we had a case of target fixation, too.
    Rule number 1 on a bike is: Regardless of who has priority, you lose in a fight.

    • @skoorchignat
      @skoorchignat 8 месяцев назад +6

      Yamaha guy strategy

    • @mikejankowski6321
      @mikejankowski6321 8 месяцев назад +6

      Also, the road you want will not evaporate if you miss it. Abort a badly set up turn, go straight, turn around properly, and come back. See that a lot with cars cutting across lanes in dash cam videos.

    • @bmo3778
      @bmo3778 7 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@skoorchignat I usually do what the Yamaha rider did. Braking, no swerving, then continue my riding, no need to honk, yell, nor rev in anger.
      If I am shocked after a close call, I stop by the road side, wait for a minute to calm down, then proceed the journey with a clear mind.

    • @bmo3778
      @bmo3778 7 месяцев назад +1

      I think this rider at least tried to do something which resulted in reducing the damage: slowing down. I see many riders turn without slowing down. I admit I sometimes do that ✋ And after this video, I will try not to do that again😅

    • @aluisious
      @aluisious Месяц назад

      @@mikejankowski6321 BUT I WANNA TURN NOW

  • @gizmoZG
    @gizmoZG 8 месяцев назад +109

    People ride in the blind spot and get pissed when someone merges into them -.-'

    • @ElenaZoro
      @ElenaZoro 4 месяца назад +15

      It's really stupid to ride there. But also, in my country, car drivers are educated to make a shoulder glance before switching directions. It's a very important part of driving a car in full sight and being aware of your surrounding. So there is a little reason to be pissed on car drivers, if they never check the blind spot.

    • @gizmoZG
      @gizmoZG 4 месяца назад +8

      @@ElenaZoro Oh i agree, but also positioning yourself where you can always be seen is really important.

    • @Recklesshade
      @Recklesshade 3 месяца назад +1

      @elanazoro I remember the school lesson about it here in the US but man it feels like I can count on one hand I've seen it be done while riding. A skill people forget or take advantage of blind spot monitoring to be lazy.

    • @aluisious
      @aluisious Месяц назад +1

      You can ride right next to someone 3 lanes over, they pull up on a Sunday afternoon with no traffic, look you in the eye, and they still merge right into you. These people are NPCs.

  • @seethruhead7119
    @seethruhead7119 8 месяцев назад +13

    This is a good channel
    Even when it's clearly the cars fault, it's your responsibility to make sure you stay alive on the road.

  • @stevek4449
    @stevek4449 8 месяцев назад +15

    When in doubt, buy more time to decide by slowing down before next decision is forced too quickly.

  • @Gorvaunity
    @Gorvaunity 8 месяцев назад +42

    Thanks for the video!
    A long time ago someone told me "in a motorcycle crash, it doesn't matter who's fault it is, the one who's getting hurt is always you". And I like your explaining here. Always try to avoid accidents. Don't stand your ground. Just survive to ride another day.

  • @witjas123
    @witjas123 8 месяцев назад +23

    My favourite: “It’s not even an accident… it’s more like.. destiny!!” 😂😂 brilliant!

  • @Mus.Anonymouse
    @Mus.Anonymouse 8 месяцев назад +44

    Great analysis. Too many riders think they are strong and mighty, however on a bike you are weak and vulnerable. Your only pro's are agility and speed (of breaking). A defensive riding approach is a must to survive.

  • @mattthomson1689
    @mattthomson1689 8 месяцев назад +20

    Love your reviews! My folly: country 2-lane empty road....missed my turn, so continued to next turn onto dirt road, executed a magnificently controlled U-turn and slowly rolled up to a stop sign and stopped to revel in my skill.....placing my foot down, not fully realizing I was at the bottom of an upward slope, my foot simply contacted free air and the Concours followed my foot all the way down! A friendly passerby assisted with getting upright again. 😂

    • @GertjanZwiggelaar-mo4tz
      @GertjanZwiggelaar-mo4tz Месяц назад +1

      Same thing happened to me. I stopped to see if there was a problem with a one ton farm wife's truck parked in the middle of the road right next to a major intersection out in the 'country'. Another farm woman was standing on the road and leaning into the cab as the two women were discussing whatever women discuss when parked in the middle of a road right next to an intersection from one secondary hwy onto another one. I stopped on the left side because there was no other place to go. I put my foot down, expecting contact with the ground as I was looking to the right and wondering WTF? is wrong with these women or perhaps there is a problem. Anyway, there was no ground to contact and my bike began to tip over and I was helpless to keep it upright. The entire weight of the 500 pound bike came to rest on top of my left foot via the left foot peg. Good thing I wear gear and good quality boots. However, two years later I still have pain in my left foot exactly where the peg made contact. My doctor told me the foot was not broken but I suspect there is nerve damage. Lesson learned: Always look where you put your foot down and where you kick stand is going to go. Another lesson learned: Do not trust truck or car drivers. Expect them all to be deaf, dumb, blind and total morons. Ride Safe you all and thanks for this presentation.

  • @NooBiker
    @NooBiker 7 месяцев назад +7

    I think you are pretty spot on.
    For the shout lady: if you put yourself in the *blind* spot... don't expect to be seen!!!

  • @XiangUK
    @XiangUK 8 месяцев назад +37

    Please do more of these. Ive been watching a lot of motostars and as a brand new rider, i'm not always sure what the rider did wrong. It's REALLY helpful to get good explanations this early on in my riding career so I don't make the the same mistakes. Your videos have been super helpful so far. Thanks!

    • @PartyChicken407
      @PartyChicken407 8 месяцев назад +1

      One big one : tires need to be warmed up. No hard riding on cold tires.

    • @XiangUK
      @XiangUK 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@PartyChicken407 thank you for the tip, it's much appreciated 👍

    • @stevewalker2028
      @stevewalker2028 8 месяцев назад +10

      Motostars isn't good learning for a new rider. Most of the clips involve dumb, drama queen bikers who caused their own problems (or failed to see an obvious developing hazard). Then we get the mirror smashing & rev bombing tantrums. Watch Moto Control or Dan Dan Fireman for useful advice. Good luck with your new bike!

    • @5280MTM
      @5280MTM 8 месяцев назад

      @@stevewalker2028 I have learned so much from @DanDanTheFireman. He's advice is rock solid.

    • @XiangUK
      @XiangUK 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@stevewalker2028 thanks for the advise. There is a lot of cringe behaviour in the videos and I want to keep far away from it, hopefully being more like the Yamaha guy! 😀

  • @dgk42
    @dgk42 8 месяцев назад +11

    This may seem silly, but I spent years riding a bicycle before I had a motorbike. Those years taught me that falling is painful as well as many techniques to avoid falling or to avoid a painful fall. Yes, motorbikes are bigger and heavier, but many techniques are the same.

    • @myrdhina
      @myrdhina Месяц назад +4

      Acting like you've invented the wheel here. Nobody misses that similarity, but I don't feel bicycles learned me all that much about motorcycle riding. You can ride a bicycle without mastering countersteering at all, try this on a motorbike and it will get you killed.

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 25 дней назад +2

      @@myrdhina​​⁠
      You’ve obviously never ridden a bicycle above single digit speeds. It’s okay, I understand, not every motorcyclist is physically fit enough to get a bicycle above 9 mph, that’s why you rely on a motor rather than pedaling. I suggest you borrow your little brother’s bicycle and ride it down a steep hill with a curve. Then you’ll realize that you don’t know what you’re talking about. The main difference in countersteering a bicycle is that most people don’t realize they do it because bicycles are ridden slower than motorcycles so they lean and countersteer much more subtly.

  • @MrAntonLucas
    @MrAntonLucas 8 месяцев назад +11

    Thank you sir, may I have another? I watch motorcycle crash videos to try to learn and figure out what I would have done differently but having you do it is even better. Hope you will continue with this.

    • @NoFrictionZone
      @NoFrictionZone 8 месяцев назад +2

      Much better than Dan the fireman🤙

  • @JHJHJHJHJH
    @JHJHJHJHJH 8 месяцев назад +5

    11:10
    I was taught to overtake or don't overtake but never sit in a lane next to another vehicle.
    Hang back until you have space in front to complete the move in one go. If you don't have power in the bike to get clear, (looks like a lower power bike here) then just stay back. I would never sit next to a car like this.

  • @Heivang
    @Heivang 8 месяцев назад +31

    More of this! Love your stuff. Your videos and courses helped me get my license and keep on learning. Thanks for sharing your knowlege.

  • @s2k442
    @s2k442 8 месяцев назад +26

    Great explanation of what exactly happened and how to avoid mistakes. It is one thing to see these crash videos and try and figure out yourself. Your explanation of why it happened is great.

  • @englishsteve1465
    @englishsteve1465 8 месяцев назад +12

    This is the best technical instructional channel for motorcyclists on YT by a long way. I've been riding over 40 years and I still learn from this channel. I also like Ryan F9 for the style, humour and info but for pure knowledge and motorcycle physics, this is where it's at, no doubt in my mind.

    • @felipedourado5721
      @felipedourado5721 8 месяцев назад +1

      I'm also what people may call a seasoned rider (30 years of motorcycling) and just like you I'm always learning from Andrey's videos. I also (again, just like you) appreciate Andrey's sense of humor as much as I do when watching Ryan F9. Two of the best motorcycling channels here in YT.
      Mr. Darcy and Ol'Man's channel displays good moments of irony asperse on their clever texts as well.
      All the best from Brazil, ride safe mate. ✌

    • @PartyChicken407
      @PartyChicken407 8 месяцев назад +2

      Motojistu also gets a nod from me for being helpful.

    • @M3ANDER
      @M3ANDER 8 месяцев назад

      Same here ... riding since 35 years ...✌

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 25 дней назад

      Contrary to what they say, even an old dog can learn new tricks. Every rider develops bad habits and seeing them in others exposes our bad habits to ourselves. Every rider who takes safety seriously should constantly reinforce and add to their existing knowledge.

  • @KuroAno
    @KuroAno 8 месяцев назад +4

    9:53 That's the Paris Périphérique, a highway that surrounds Paris. Lane splitting is only legal in some parts of France (Paris is legal) when traffic is slower than 50 km/h, basically when there is congestion. He shouldn't have been splitting lanes.

  • @avothfis
    @avothfis 3 месяца назад +2

    Your comments are clear and simple. Easy to understand. Thank you.

  • @frodelangset9790
    @frodelangset9790 8 месяцев назад +8

    Agree to all you say in this video. Also, for the first guy, I think this is about the path he selected to go. He might have gained some lean angle (wider turn, less lean angle) if he had initiated the turn a bit later and a bit more to the right. Look at the guy behind him who is filming. He is actually turning more to the right to fulfill the previous turn more before initiating the next turn farther to the right. I think the problem for the guy crashing already started in the previous turn that he should have initiated later and farther to the left and also enden farther to the right to prepare for the curve he failed in. My two cents!

    • @r1learner178
      @r1learner178 8 месяцев назад

      Start wide, finish tight.

    • @bryn494
      @bryn494 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ride according to the road and visibility. Too fast into a turn means heavy leaning at the worse moment, too fast in general is simply asking for it. Ask me how I know :D

  • @lloydsharman367
    @lloydsharman367 7 месяцев назад +13

    What a fantastic, extremely pleasant young man. He explains and illustrates in a calm, simple, and humorous manner. So much more realistic and natural than our American 'friends'.

    • @thenormalberries6767
      @thenormalberries6767 7 месяцев назад +1

      Glory to Ukraine.

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 25 дней назад

      Please stop using America’s internet and America’s RUclips. Only America’s friends should use them, anybody else using them is a hypocrite. 🤡

  • @filipvrijders7994
    @filipvrijders7994 18 дней назад +1

    Very good instructions and I m glad this channel exist. I recommend it to many riders I know, especially the younger and newer riders. Like you said in one of your videos: learn of others their mistakes. But also learn from those who know it better, like listening to a sensei😊: he went before you on the path.
    I am riding since the 80’s and I m still alive, so are my 2 friends and we are hitting the apex of 60. That means we learned a lot by experience and by listening to others. We had no schools, there were no instructors… So use that knowledge! I lost 5 friends in crashes😢.
    Big advice: open your eyes, anticipate. Leave your ego home and your emotions, like the Yamaha person and know, you still learn every day.
    The only ones who are close to perfect are people like Valentino and co.
    To get there is a ver long and painful learning curve with hundreds of crashes. Every year there are 164.000 crashes in al devisions together!
    Did anyone ever see Valentino Rossi brag about his skills?
    Gentle, calm, friendly…And above all: courageous, which means the night before a race , beeing nervous and a little afraid, but having the balls to overcome.
    Those are examples, I think.

  • @Naptownstreetsquid
    @Naptownstreetsquid 8 месяцев назад +4

    So glad you are making these videos. I hate all the videos floating around of the road rage against "cagers" who want to kill us. It's all so ridiculous and if you ride you will run into these things all the time. We as riders must be skilled and aware It's just the deal end of story.

  • @brandoncoleprice
    @brandoncoleprice 8 месяцев назад +2

    I believe that You are much more informative and thorough then most other motorcycle channels that do this type of content . Keep it up it’s awesome.

  • @rolty1
    @rolty1 3 месяца назад +2

    I love your sense of humour, earns my subscription!

  • @kitsura
    @kitsura 8 месяцев назад +7

    In Carno42's case he lingered too long in the right car's blind spot. I would usually stick to the left side of the car so that he sees me in the mirror or if not I can easily just split lane once he merges to the left.

    • @MrBCRC
      @MrBCRC 8 месяцев назад +2

      If you look at it again you will notice that it was a brief moment where the rider moved across to get a look at the traffic ahead. For the rider the bike would have disappeared into a blindspot.
      It may be an unpopular opinion but this is the precise situation where an exhaust that's louder than a sewing machine would have prevented an incident.

    • @MarekSchimara
      @MarekSchimara 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MrBCRC Doubt it, the sound would be coming from the back into a reasonably soundproofed car, also probably the radio is on / the driver is chatting with passengers / driver is on their phone / has hearing problems...). Better assume noone can hear you. I ride but I also have a car and very rarely hear any "loud pipes". Mostly annoying the pedestrians or revving at traffic lights (that one's really usefull isn't it ...).

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 25 дней назад

      @@MrBCRC​​⁠​​⁠
      Yes, it appears that you might be correct, the rider briefly moved left to possibly peek at traffic ahead; however, he did that while approaching parallel to the vehicle in the left lane, which made him invisible. Yes, loud pipes might’ve helped, but not making that mistake would’ve definitely helped. He lingered too long in their blind spot. In my opinion, loud pipes are mostly a crutch for bad riders, and they’re also an excuse for attention-seeking behavior. Funnily enough, while loud pipes might cause others to hear that a rider is nearby, they also reduce the ability of riders to hear surrounding traffic noises such as horns, screeching tires, impacts, etc.

  • @KarelSeeuwen
    @KarelSeeuwen 4 месяца назад +2

    At 60 years old I am planning to get back into riding now now children are getting older. Your explanations are precise and to the point; this most useful tips I have found on RUclips so far.

  • @danboyd6180
    @danboyd6180 8 месяцев назад +16

    Your reaction is so much better than that fireman dude

    • @andrechagas4549
      @andrechagas4549 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, but at the same time, might get him in trouble if the riders decide to sue him about being mocked publicly.
      That happened several times to ddfm and I think that's what made him give up on his channel.

    • @JeanRoi
      @JeanRoi 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@andrechagas4549 Fellas suing for being mocked publicly now? Dave Chapelle was right about the whole country turning into

    • @andrechagas4549
      @andrechagas4549 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@JeanRoiwell, if you're making money by mocking people, it might come back at you

    • @kurrie3280
      @kurrie3280 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@andrechagas4549 I wouldn't call it mocking because they are only being used for instructional purposes. Also, those riders initially submitted the videos to whatever channel first showed them so I'm guessing they gave up a lot of their sueing ability because of the voluntary submission aspect.

    • @kurrie3280
      @kurrie3280 8 месяцев назад

      @@andrechagas4549 I wouldn't call it mocking because they are only being used for instructional purposes. Also, those riders initially submitted the videos to whatever channel first showed them so I'm guessing they gave up a lot of their sueing ability because of the voluntary submission aspect.

  • @twsparda
    @twsparda 8 месяцев назад +10

    Keep it up man. Bought 2 of your courses and its been helping me a lot with the mt03!!!

  • @goldie6579
    @goldie6579 8 месяцев назад +24

    We’re like vampires. Good one!

    • @d4v1dv38
      @d4v1dv38 28 дней назад +1

      Wampires😉

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 25 дней назад

      @@d4v1dv38
      Lol, I was about to write the same thing. 😂

  • @katrinc5859
    @katrinc5859 8 месяцев назад +3

    I'm new to moto riding (one month!) Watching these videos I kept saying out loud (like anyone could hear me 😂) "Dude is way too fast" or "Um, this looks like a bad idea." I've learned so much from you, thank you thank you thank you.

  • @peted2770
    @peted2770 Месяц назад +1

    That battery gave me chills. I have seen so much debris on the road, including an entire sofa.

    • @h2xhypocriet
      @h2xhypocriet 24 минуты назад

      Although most debris finally ends up in a section of the road which is not regulary used (otherwise someone would again bump into it, which does not happen in an unused part of the road). So avoiding a highway gore or uninterrupted lines is a good idea to reduce this risk.

  • @motoringwithmouseball1219
    @motoringwithmouseball1219 8 месяцев назад +7

    I love motocontrol … the best rider videos ever!!!!

  • @SJ-oxy
    @SJ-oxy 26 дней назад

    Best commentary on youtube. Other channels make a 9 minute segment out of 30s of video. Funny, smart, doesn't waste time. Subscribed.

  • @NoFrictionZone
    @NoFrictionZone 8 месяцев назад +9

    Bro, you are so much better at these than DDFM. Keep at it! Love your sense of humor 😂.

    • @englishsteve1465
      @englishsteve1465 8 месяцев назад +4

      Agreed 100% Between here and Ryan F9 it's all you need.

  • @motoringwithmouseball1219
    @motoringwithmouseball1219 8 месяцев назад +2

    Andre has the best reactions!!! When you practice motocontrol!!! You can’t become incompetent rider!!! For the best rider will always practice motocontrol

  • @manuelballing6374
    @manuelballing6374 4 месяца назад +1

    Very instructive reaction video! Much better than most other reaction videos!
    Thank you, please more.

  • @BH-FZ6
    @BH-FZ6 8 месяцев назад +3

    One thing you didn't mention in the video starting at 11.00... it's a bit her fault as well. She keeps hanging around in the blind spot of the driver.

    • @christianbarnay2499
      @christianbarnay2499 15 дней назад

      Agreed. We can see the biker lets the gap with the car ahead increase. I'm partially thinking this was made on purpose to create hate content.

  • @nikolaevsuch
    @nikolaevsuch 8 месяцев назад +3

    очень важный и интересный формат.
    смотрю много мотостарс, мотоюниверс, дёртбайклунатик, мотокраштв - расшифровка таких видео отлично дополняет тему твоего канала.

  • @JeffJeno1000
    @JeffJeno1000 8 месяцев назад +5

    Very logical explanations Andre. I remember these vids thinking same. 👍

  • @depechemoto
    @depechemoto 7 месяцев назад

    "His bike was simply pointed the wrong way" ahahahahahah I'm sorry not laughing at the fall, but the logic...haha

  • @travisruss9790
    @travisruss9790 8 месяцев назад +8

    Awesome video. I love your humor showing how we all can be better riders. Vampires... lmfao. 😅

  • @askagaydad
    @askagaydad 2 месяца назад

    Super helpful as a new rider, learning from the mistakes of others. My 86 y/o mothers says, “Some people can learn from the mistakes of others and some people must feel”. Feel the crash!

  • @jesusacovarrubias1390
    @jesusacovarrubias1390 Месяц назад

    Very well done on pointing out these mistakes and unfortunate occurrences.

  • @gujo4351
    @gujo4351 Месяц назад

    "ofc he's on a sportbike.... our hero doesnt know whats going on" had me dying 💀💀

  • @drinopon1933
    @drinopon1933 3 месяца назад +1

    On 3:00 I don't know about other country but in France and most of european country, you're not supposed to go faster than your left lane or else it's an illegal overtake from the right, so the bike was wrong from the start since he wasn't supposed to got that fast.

  • @jay.ostojic
    @jay.ostojic 3 месяца назад +1

    great video. i love your educational comments as well as your jokes/banter.

  • @nateellenberger6043
    @nateellenberger6043 Месяц назад

    @2:40 ("What ARE YOU DOING")😅😅😅, you need to make a meme of you saying that (make a meme of the lil small video box of you saying "What are you doing"). The guy falling in that video (dodging the 18-wheeler) is Funny as hell ..."what the F@#! are you doing🤦🏽‍♂️" 😅😅😂!

  • @Craigravon
    @Craigravon 8 месяцев назад +3

    I said it b4 alas ill say it again! This channel is awesome 🔥🔥

  • @missadelainesmith
    @missadelainesmith 3 месяца назад

    gotta love the props for no drama riders that manuever through moving obstacles 👏🏼 whining only takes up RAM

  • @squall1892
    @squall1892 8 месяцев назад +3

    Pls do more video like this

  • @mircea5013
    @mircea5013 5 месяцев назад

    Good job pointing out those bad riders and mistakes.
    I am fed up with seeing moto channels showing off "bad drivers", and seeing angry motorcyclists flip off, swear etc. others, when they themselves have 50% of the blame. Aggressive riding and lane splitting do not cope well with the lack of visibility riders need to face. I mean, you can do so, but at your own risk. At least don't make a big deal out of it.
    And yes, I am currently learning to ride a motorcycle as well. I hope I'll never make such bad decisions.

  • @AdoreYouInAshXI
    @AdoreYouInAshXI Месяц назад

    Love this video! Your humor is great, you clearly have a good grasp not only on biking but also driving skills in general. So many bikers (especially new and inexperienced riders which almost all tend to be sport bike riders) so often don't realize that so many of the mistakes on the road that result in crashes are a result of their own mistakes, and they try to blame others for them. Nice to see someone calling them out.

  • @PMitchell106
    @PMitchell106 3 месяца назад

    Glad to see someone properly dissecting the mistakes made in these examples. There was another channel that used to do this kind of thing, but now it's just devolved into clickbait nonsense.

  • @-Eternal-Damnation-
    @-Eternal-Damnation- 7 месяцев назад

    I love how ruthless this guy is, he just rips into everybody 🤣

  • @michagolonko9633
    @michagolonko9633 8 месяцев назад +1

    Overtaking on right side if you have right-hand traffic and less than three lanes on same direction is forbidden in many countries. I would say that overtaking by right lane is improper most of times.

  • @jutjub22
    @jutjub22 Месяц назад

    Amazing understanding of all situations and traffic in general. Not sure how I did not see this channel before.

  • @hallmountfilms
    @hallmountfilms 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love your down to earth and logical approach. So many riders arte the cause of their own accidents. It's unbelievable. The one where they try and stand "their" ground against a merging car always has me laughing. Good luck with that ;)

  • @igormacielalves5187
    @igormacielalves5187 21 день назад

    11:21 For this reason, I developed the habit of, in addition to looking at the side and center mirrors, taking a quick look at the side window before changing lanes. Several times there was a motorcyclist in the blind spot of the mirrors.

  • @vitaliipopov9204
    @vitaliipopov9204 8 месяцев назад +2

    В первом видео не добавил, что изначально траектория была выбрана неверно. Привет солнечной Аргентине!

  • @carryonpompei
    @carryonpompei Месяц назад

    Another great vid. Surprised there was no mention of car drivers ignoring the blind spots in their mirrors - which I'm sure is the reason why cars so often merge into a lane when a bike is already there. I try to stay out of their blind spots - and remember that my bike mirrors also have blind spots.

  • @JUSTIFIED-R.W.M.J.
    @JUSTIFIED-R.W.M.J. 2 месяца назад

    “Awoidible accident”… I love hearing you talk brudda! 😁

  • @Kluneberg
    @Kluneberg 8 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of riders have this assumption that car drivers should be looking out for them at all times. Yeah, no. As a long time car driver and a recent motorcycle rider, thank you for calling out on this attitude. Unless you live somewhere in Asia/Africa/South America, cars make like 99.9% of the traffic on the roads. No car driver is ever looking out for you because they simply don't encounter you on the road most of the time. Not to mention that until I got my motorcycle training I had no clue how different riding is to driving - controls, braking, cornering, behavior on the road.. it was a very humbling experience for me who though "if I can drive a car and operate a plethora of different kind of machinery, a puny motorcycle should be child play" boy, was I wrong. I can assure you most drivers don't have a clue either. In addition, cars keep getting bigger and with bigger blind spots. As a result any sort of ridding style that is not defensive and not with the assumption that you're invisible to most of the traffic is going to result with you eventually being involved in a crash even if you weren't technically at fault. Personally I'd rather be the guy at 5:00 who goes about his day after a near miss, than to stand my ground risking getting involved in a crash just to prove someone else wasn't paying enough attention.

    • @goon_eg1089
      @goon_eg1089 8 месяцев назад +1

      Never appreciated my car till I did my cbt, only rode offroad at the time..

  • @neonfoxgamer-9738
    @neonfoxgamer-9738 2 месяца назад

    I love the witty commentary,
    especially in tandem with the accent!

  • @veiledallegory
    @veiledallegory 8 месяцев назад +1

    I’m glad you reviewed this video. I find myself watching these videos yelling at the screen because these idiots don’t know how to ride. It’s ok to be a new rider but ride accordingly. These IDIOTS give all bikers a bad name and are the reason people talk about how
    “Dangerous” motorcycles are.

  • @whiskybbq
    @whiskybbq 3 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for this video. Appreciate you sharing your knowledge.

  • @mdeyab
    @mdeyab 8 месяцев назад +1

    The first guy gave up on trail braking too early. You can see his light come off. The front unloaded, followed by a premature abrupt acceleration. You are asking too much of the rear wheel. Body position could've helped a lot, even your head weight alone could make a difference. Kiss the left mirror, this will remove a couple of crucial degrees of your lean angle.

  • @iggymach
    @iggymach 3 месяца назад +1

    man, you just made a new subscriber.
    I really like your videos.

  • @TeunSegers
    @TeunSegers 26 дней назад

    12:00 That bike was in the blind spot of that car for quite some time. This led to the subsequent merge conflict. How you position yourself in your lane is important, it can aid visibility and communicates intention to other road users.

  • @neonsamurai1348
    @neonsamurai1348 8 месяцев назад +2

    For the first one I don't think he initially scraped, he put on a lot of throttle (you can see the bike suspension jerk as he comes off the brakes and throttles) and the rear tire started to walk out increasing his lean, then scraped and wiped out. If he had been smoother on the throttle he probably would have made the turn (his friend did).
    Second one was going a lot faster than the rest of traffic, so even if the truck driver saw him (which he may have), the truck driver would have had enough space to make the merge assuming the motorcyclist was going similar speeds. Aside from being vampires, even if you are seen in a mirror, it is very tough to gauge how fast a motorcycle is going. Also what is it with sport bike riders and rev bombing. I cannot count how many riders fail to ride their bikes because they are too busy rev bombing.
    Forth one made an illegal change of lane over a double yellow from an HOV lane which did not help, he should have waited till the lane allowed for shifting lanes. Always pays to look for debris on the road.
    Fifth one definitely did not brake sufficiently and took the corner late
    Sixth one, I remember driving a car in California, and having to deal with motorcyclists lane splitting at much higher speeds than traffic was going. Traffic crawling and some idiot blasting by doing 50+mph.
    Seventh one, not sure why he drifted from the right blocking position to the left (and slowed down for some reason), but he definitely put himself in a blind spot by doing that. Still that other driver should definitely have shoulder checked. As a motorcyclist I would never ever hang around in a car's blind spot for more than a second or 2.
    Eight one, I doubt the civic even saw him, it looked like he was changing lanes. Also what that motorcyclist was doing is illegal in all of North America, he was riding on the shoulder/lane sharing, not lane splitting, as there is no second lane to the right of him.
    Don't think you missed anything, good comments :)

    • @MrBCRC
      @MrBCRC 8 месяцев назад

      Seventh one was getting a look far ahead at the traffic up ahead and while maintaining safe distance from car in front. Reaction was standard Australian response so no drama there ;-)
      Cannot look ahead and sideways at the same time.
      Civic was doing similar. Getting a good look ahead to assess how much traffic there was ahead.

  • @ben54322
    @ben54322 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you motocontrol. Great tips to keep riding on the road

  • @KorakiSquid
    @KorakiSquid 6 месяцев назад

    Love the straightforward explanation/review. No 🐂💩 and funny 😄.

  • @Eyalkamitchi1
    @Eyalkamitchi1 День назад

    You are one of the most valuable channels for me! I'm sure you are saving many lives ❤ thank you!

  • @FreeFlyFreak69
    @FreeFlyFreak69 6 месяцев назад

    Perfect analysis, I watch these type of videos a lot.
    90-95% ish of the time, the motorcycle rider is at fault, excessive speed, improper riding technique, improper reaction to a situation (horn honking, rev bombing, cussing) instead of braking and or swerving.
    The other 5-10% ish are unavoidable.
    I like to learn from other peoples mistakes before I make them myself.
    Really enjoy your channel, it's the best motorcycle instructional channel on RUclips in my opinion.

  • @Racha0900
    @Racha0900 8 месяцев назад +2

    Your comments are excellent. Drama queen motorcycle riders are so annoying, "you tried to kill me!" It's our job to save our own skin. So many accidents could be prevented by breaking, so many riders under-break. But never add lean angle while accelerating. In track schools they will give you a stern talking to for that. Here in California it's legal to lane split but you should only be going 10 mph over the speed of traffic, and only if traffic is moving slowly or stopped.

  • @Fedaalis
    @Fedaalis Месяц назад

    It's just fun to watch your videos. Always such a positive attitude

  • @tstar7777
    @tstar7777 Месяц назад

    "We are like vampires. We can't be seen in mirrors."🤣

  • @dgphi
    @dgphi 8 месяцев назад +1

    The second rider with the truck had a protest mentality. He was so busy protesting, he couldn't focus on what he was doing. Protesting makes you lose focus.

  • @Smickster01
    @Smickster01 Месяц назад +1

    love your videos as you seem to talk from common sense and not blame it everyone who 'hates bike riders'. i have been riding for 40 years and one accident at age 18 was my fault like some of these in the video. while sitting at home with a broken leg, it just became common sense on how to avoid crashes and cars doing what cars do. but as we say, common sense isnt all that common.

  • @teamchivers
    @teamchivers 8 месяцев назад +2

    11:09 The bike was in the car’s blind spot.

  • @AdilgazyToxangazin
    @AdilgazyToxangazin 2 месяца назад

    Very appropriate notices. God bless you, guys. Please add more new content about riding mistakes and considerable analysis for new bike riders. Hope to see again

  • @kungfupro
    @kungfupro 7 месяцев назад

    We need more videos like this, explaining how to behave in traffic! Motorcyclists may dare to do more than car drivers but we all have our limits! Thank you for the video and the analysis!

  • @avishaykletter
    @avishaykletter 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you, I think every rider/driver should see these kind of videos. Everyone will be much better😊

  • @markuss3984
    @markuss3984 8 месяцев назад +1

    Very good explanation that is hard to find👍👍👍👍👍

  • @Im.not.racist_but
    @Im.not.racist_but Месяц назад

    That guy asked questions first but didn't even break later 😂
    "What are you doing"... He should ask that to himself

  • @amosglitterz2649
    @amosglitterz2649 Месяц назад

    Following a truck at about 40mp, he passed over a large rock in the middle of the road. I hit it square on and went straight up in the air, both wheels off the ground. Luckily, stick the landing! But boy was i shaken!. Was able to get home on my slightly dented front rim.

  • @ThreenaddiesRexMegistus
    @ThreenaddiesRexMegistus 7 месяцев назад

    #2 was not riding defensively and the truck driver realised his mistake and was trying to let him pass. Last I looked, motorcycles have brakes.
    You also have to evaluate conditions and look further ahead than in a car, while maintaining awareness of close traffic. It becomes instinctive after a while.

  • @robbo8444
    @robbo8444 18 дней назад

    Great content mate. You explain things in an engaging way and is super helpful to us riders.

  • @kriskoppy2753
    @kriskoppy2753 7 месяцев назад

    I agreed with you 100%…. How refreshing to find someone calling it as it actually is.

  • @TheCryptKeeper8
    @TheCryptKeeper8 Месяц назад

    When in another lane, be just ahead or just behind in steady moving traffic if not filtering. Just ahead allows them to see you. Just behind allows both the rider and driver to see each other in the wing mirrors. By being at the side, you're in the drivers blind spot

  • @nikoskalyvas231
    @nikoskalyvas231 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great video! I'd love to see more of these. This is like the dan dan videos of old, before it was full of promotions.
    Btw, this is probably the best motorcycle techniques channel in youtube. keep up the good work.

  • @NPurvis7622
    @NPurvis7622 2 месяца назад

    Awesome video, I'm glad you took this route, haven't checked your recent videos as I subscribed a week or two ago, but very good analyses. Hope you are still doing them, and best of luck to your amazing channel!

  • @user-mt9cy6ts1k
    @user-mt9cy6ts1k 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for your accurate commentary & great sense of humor.

  • @russcole5685
    @russcole5685 8 месяцев назад +1

    Nice content, loved the format. Need more of these educational breakdowns

  • @mattingray5651
    @mattingray5651 8 месяцев назад +1

    Never ever ride same speed on the side of cars. You either stay back or speed up front (to ensure the driver sees you)

  • @richardpowell1425
    @richardpowell1425 2 месяца назад

    I had a situation like the battery. It was on a highway at 110kmph. I couldn’t avoid the obstacle and had about 1 second to react after I saw it. I threw my weight back and pulled on the bars to lighten the front wheel. The bike rode over the top! It slowed down 20kmph instantly. I was thrown with my chest forward of the bars, but was able to keep riding without an injury.

  • @RaduDavidescu_Bucharest
    @RaduDavidescu_Bucharest 7 месяцев назад

    min 11, another good suggestion there, don't move with the same speed as cars especially on multi lanes as you can be constantly on blind spot for some cars. Understand when you are in blind spot and get out either by throttle or break

  • @mikgold
    @mikgold Месяц назад

    Don't ever change that accent please ! "we are like vampires,we can't be seen in mirrors" took me right back to Bela Lugosi.😅

  • @crustyzimmerman3324
    @crustyzimmerman3324 Месяц назад

    “Straight to brake”
    A police instructor told me, “If you’ve got time to start using horns, the situation can’t be that serious “