A helmet is a helmet is a helmet

The Bear - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
A helmet is a helmet is a helmet – as long as it’s approved?

No, not really.

Here is a fascinating story from the New York Times, sent in by regular reader Lars. It’s worth reading and considering.

Sorting Out Differences in Helmet Standards
By DEXTER FORD
Published: September 25, 2009

THE surest way for motorcycle riders to avoid joining the rapidly growing ranks of fatality statistics — up 144 percent since 1997, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration — is to wear proper head protection. A helmet increases the chances of survival in an accident by 37 percent, the safety agency says.

Picking the helmet that provides ideal protection is not easy, however. While all helmets sold for road use in the United States are required to carry the stamp of a federal safety standard established by the Transportation Department, riders may also find an independent certification label, from the Snell Memorial Foundation, on many helmets they are considering.

The certification by Snell, a nonprofit research and testing organization financed by helmet makers, is not mandatory for road use but it is for some racing series, which can lead consumers to assume that a Snell-compliant helmet is safer — an assumption that is not agreed upon by researchers.

Even knowing the differences between the standards is not enough: on Oct. 1, helmets meeting a new Snell test, M2010, with revised force limits, can go on sale, probably adding to the confusion among helmet shoppers.

The debate in the helmet industry and the scientific community about just what constitute the best design criteria for a motorcycle helmet — especially for riders with smaller heads — has been going on for years.

The conflict is between scientists and helmet designers who prefer the government-mandated helmet standards of the United States and Europe, up against the current Snell standard, called M2005, which Snell says provides “premium levels of protective performance.”

Many head-injury scientists, motorcycle-accident researchers and helmet makers say they are concerned that the “premium protection" proffered by current Snell-certified helmets may not be better after all. They argue that current Snell-rated helmets are too rigid and unyielding to properly absorb impact energy in the great majority of motorcycle crashes, subjecting riders to preventable brain injuries.

Why is this a concern, considering that the new M2010 standard — a major revision that addresses some of the objections scientists and helmet makers have raised for decades — is coming next week? It stems from the fact that the Snell Foundation will continue to certify helmets made under the Snell M2005 standard until March 31, 2012. There are now hundreds of thousands of pre-M2010 Snell helmets on rider’s heads, in garages and on retailer’s shelves, and hundreds of thousands more that will be made in coming years — which means that riders, especially those with smaller heads, will have to pay close attention when buying a helmet.

In one test the Snell M2005 standard requires each helmet to withstand two successive impacts against an orange-sized steel hemisphere without subjecting the aluminum “headform” inside to more than 300 times the force of gravity, or 300 g’s.

Hugh H. Hurt, a researcher who developed the Head Protection Research Laboratory at the University of Southern California, and author of the Hurt Report, a seminal study of motorcycle crashes, calls the current Snell M2005 standard “a little bit excessive.”

“What should the limit on helmets be?” Mr. Hurt asks, referring the g-force levels. “They should be softer, softer, softer. Because people are wearing these so-called high performance helmets and are getting diffuse brain injuries — well, they’re screwed up for life. Taking 300 g’s is not a safe thing.”

James A. Newman, a former director of the Snell Memorial Foundation, considers the Snell tests obsolete. “If you want to create a realistic helmet standard, you don’t go bashing helmets onto hemispherical steel balls. And you certainly don’t do it twice,” he said.

Mr. Newman has estimated an impact of 200 to 250 g’s to the head corresponds to a severe brain injury, that a 250 to 300g impact corresponds to a critical injury, and that a hit over 300 g’s is often not survivable.

“Over the last 30 years,” Mr. Newman said, “we’ve come to the realization that people falling off motorcycles hardly ever, ever hit their head in the same place twice. So we have helmets that are designed to withstand two hits at the same site. But in doing so, we have severely, severely compromised their ability to take one hit and absorb energy properly.”

Scientists and helmet makers have also objected to the Snell M2005 standard’s requirement for impact-testing all helmets with a headform of the same weight, regardless of the helmet’s size. Even Ed Becker, executive director of the Snell Foundation and its most outspoken defender, agrees that the weight of a wearer’s head is of great significance in helmet design. “These headform issues of mass and geometry are crucial. The mass determines the total momentum that must be exchanged in an impact.” The mandatory Transportation Department, or D.O.T., standard has dictated graduated-weight headforms since 1988, forcing makers to tailor the impact-absorption qualities of a smaller helmet to the lower levels of inertia produced by a smaller head. The European standard, mandatory in Europe, Britain and a total of over 50 countries, has required graduated-weight headforms since 1983.

David R. Thom, a respected helmet-testing scientist who operates Collision and Injury Dynamics in El Segundo, Calif., said of Snell’s one-weight-fits-all approach: “They are not in touch with reality.”

The standards disagreement has prompted some riders and racers to choose helmets that do not carry the Snell certification label — even though the most expensive and respected helmet brands available in the United States are predominantly Snell-certified. It has also inspired some helmet manufacturers, especially European makers, to forgo Snell, preferring to build their helmets to what they consider the more-appropriate American and United Nations ECE 22-05 standards.

In one comprehensive study of real-world impact performance based on research done for Motorcyclist Magazine, presented by Mr. Thom to the Motorcycle Safety Foundation, a $79.95 helmet certified to Transportation Department standards performed the best of the 32 tested, withstanding the most violent hits while transmitting as much as 67 g’s less impact force to the headform than a $400 Snell-certified helmet.

The M2010 Snell standard will drop its maximum allowable g’s from 300 to 275. It will also adopt graduated-weight headforms.

According to Mr. Becker, the M2010 standard was designed in consultation with helmet manufacturers, to allow a single helmet design to pass all the world’s major standards. As it stands now, a Snell M2005-certified helmet may also pass the D.O.T. standard, but is unlikely to pass the ECE 22-05 standard used in European countries. Manufacturers must re-engineer their Snell M2005-rated helmets, making them “softer” in order to sell them in Europe.

So Snell M2010 helmets will, according to Snell, fall in line with both the D.O.T. and ECE 22-05 standards. As of now, no manufacturer has announced to market helmets that meet both Snell M2010 and the European standard.

It’s difficult to tell a Snell M2010 helmet from the outside; the label on the back of most helmets simply says Snell. But deep inside, stuck somewhere on the inner foam liner, should be a detailed Snell sticker that will reveal the specific Snell rating.

Of course, a rider can also do what some outspoken scientists have recommended for years: simply choose a non-Snell-rated helmet.

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

We can’t fix the problem...

The Bear - Friday, September 25, 2009
...so let’s fix a problem that doesn’t exist, instead.

Sometimes I really do think I need to give up reading, especially stuff on the web. Here’s the beginning of an item that recently arrived in a motorcycle site newsletter:

Reducing the national blood alcohol limit for drivers to .02 could substantially cut the number of road fatalities, according to Victorian Assistant Police Commissioner Stephen Fontana.

Speaking at a binge-drinking forum in Melbourne, Mr Fontana said a third of Victorian road crashes involved excessive alcohol.

"We are still getting a lot of drivers who are well over the limit, so we might need to rethink that (.05 limit)" Mr Fontana was quoted as saying in The Age newspaper.

"We still have a lot of problems with alcohol on our roads.’”

Okay, Steve, let me see if I have this right. A lot of people are breaking the law, so let’s change the law to make sure that even more people break it. Has it occurred to you that the people you’re concerned about are already breaking the law? What makes you think that introducing a tougher law will suddenly not only make them drink less, but much less?

And a lot of people who can drive perfectly well with .03 or .04 or .05 of alcohol in their blood will suddenly be lawbreakers as well. To no benefit, by your own admission: these people are not the problem. I suppose the police will be able to say that drink driving has gone up even further, and insist on the limit being lowered even more!
This is rubbish. If you’re going to change the law, change it to something that will actually address the problem. Or maybe you could just work out a way of policing it properly in the first place. That’s your job, isn’t it?

Fail!

This makes almost as little sense as dropping the speed limit on the Old Pacific Highway out of Sydney. There is a problem here with speeding bikers running out of talent, but like the drinkers they’re already breaking the law, and they’ll continue to do it no matter what a sign says.

Lowering the speed limit just increases the speed differential between them and legal traffic – and that’s one of the biggest causes of crashes. A reasonable speed limit and proper policing is the answer.

Fail!

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

Poetic justice?

The Bear - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Having a garden stake driven through your body is not something we’d wish on anybody, but…

Sometimes it can be hard to know how to react to a news item. Take this one, from the Illawarra Mercury. If you’ve ever had a bike stolen from you, you will know how infuriating that can be. Here’s a bloke who didn’t get away with it…

A Nowra man who was impaled by a garden stake in a motorcycle accident is believed to have been robbed and assaulted while suffering his life-threatening injuries.

The 39-year-old allegedly stole a bike and was riding it along Adelaide St, Greenwell Point, when he lost control and slid into a garden bed at 1.45pm yesterday.

A timber metre-long garden stake was driven through his right armpit and out his back. A puncture wound was also found on his leg.

NSW Ambulance officers said they responded to reports of a man who had a garden stake in his torso and required surgical intervention.

Paramedics arrived to find the man conscious and the stake already pulled from his body.

Nowra police confirmed there was no motorcycle at the scene when authorities arrived.

A source said the owner of the bike had caught up with the rider, pulled out the stake and punched him on the nose before taking his wallet and reclaiming the motorcycle.

The injured man was airlifted to St George Hospital suffering internal injuries and a suspected broken nose.

It’s the broken nose that really gets me…

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

Big Brother, watch out!

The Bear - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Finally someone’s doing something, but not here – yet!

I don’t normally pinch stuff from the web but I couldn’t resist this one. It’s from the Sunday Times in England, and my only comment is: we need something like Big Brother Watch here! Who’s going to put up their hand to get it going? I’ll support it in any way I can.

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

Think tank: Be warned, Big Brother, I’ve got my eye on you
Matthew Elliott begins a campaign against our surveillance state

Matthew Elliott
In June, Stewart Smith, who suffers from arthritis, was handed a £50 fixed penalty notice after dropping a £10 note in the street. Last year Gareth Corkhill, a father of four, had to pay £225 and got a criminal record when magistrates found him guilty of leaving the lid of his wheelie bin open by a mere four inches. Last month Stephen White’s sister Helen was rung several times and visited at her house by police officers wanting to know the whereabouts of her trainspotter brother, who had been using her car while taking pictures of trains in Pembrokeshire.

What is going on? Over the past 10 years our government has become increasingly overbearing, creating a nation of criminals out of good British citizens. We are subject to ever more officious laws and intrusive means of surveillance. Britain has 1% of the world’s population but about 20% of its CCTV cameras; it has one camera for every 14 people in the country. Last year local authorities, the police and the intelligence services made 504,073 requests to access private e-mail and telephone data — that is nearly 10,000 requests every week.

Documents leaked earlier this year revealed that GCHQ, the government’s spy centre, had already awarded £200m to suppliers as part of Mastering the Internet, a mass surveillance project designed to enable the monitoring of all internet use and phone calls in Britain.

An Englishman’s home is no longer his castle: some 266 laws now grant the state the right to enter private homes. And if they can’t get you on tape, online or in your home, in recent months a slew of websites has appeared encouraging citizens to shop people dropping litter or acting suspiciously. Just as in Orwell’s dystopia, Britain is being turned into a nation of narks.

It is time to fight back. The TaxPayers’ Alliance (TPA) has already led the field in exposing the outrageous waste of taxpayers’ money and malpractice throughout all levels of government. Our campaigns on MPs’ expenses, the growth of the quango state and the rise of public sector fat cats have helped to shape public opinion and the policies of both the government and opposition. Now we are launching Big Brother Watch as a check on the surveillance state.

The campaign will be headed by Alex Deane, a barrister and David Cameron’s first chief of staff, supported by Dylan Sharpe, Boris Johnson’s press officer for his London mayoral campaign.

Big Brother Watch plans to produce regular investigative research papers on the erosion of civil liberties in the UK, beginning with a detailed investigation of the ways in which individual local authorities have encroached upon the lives of the ordinary British citizen, whether it be placing microchips in rubbish bins or snooping on your private telephone records. We will name and shame the local authorities most prone to authoritarian abuses.

We will also champion individual cases. We want to use the legal system to help the man in the street fight injustice and regain his personal freedom. We are building up a legal fund to back cases in which we feel a key principle is at stake.

Not many people realise they can use the Freedom of Information Act to demand to see data held about themselves by the authorities. The Human Rights Act, which came into force in 2000, makes it unlawful for any public body to act in a way that is incompatible with the European convention on human rights. The convention includes the right of access to documents and we want to help people to use this and other provisions to extend our right to government information.
In the same way that the TPA has pioneered the use of the Freedom of Information Act to bring transparency to government spending and expose the full horrors of the wastage, wages and expenses of our public representatives, we intend to unearth the reality of the Big Brother state.

Last year the TPA produced a report that put the total cost of Big Brother government at about £20 billion — or almost £800 per household. We want Big Brother Watch to become the central hub for the latest on personal freedom and civil liberty — a forum for information and discussion on something that directly affects British citizens in their everyday lives.

Big Brother Watch also aims to expose the extent to which the web has become the first line in state surveillance. Recent examples of web companies being leant on to release personal data have opened the floodgates for the co-opting of internet activity into the state’s control. Safeguards are needed before it’s too late.

We hope Big Brother Watch will become the gadfly of the ruling class, a champion for civil liberties and personal freedom — and a force to help a future government roll back a decade of state interference in our lives.

Matthew Elliott is chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance and founder of Big Brother Watch (www.bigbrotherwatch.org.uk)

MRA Vic

The Bear - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Never let it be said that I don’t give credit where it’s due. UIt seems that things in Victoria are getting so bad that even the normally supine MRA Vic is developing some backbone. Here’s a press release they’ve put together, and a good one it is.

Contributory Negligence?

Disturbing reports have emerged that the Transport Accident Commission (TAC) is penalising some seriously injured riders with serious injury payouts automatically reduced by up to 50% for "contributory negligence" – even though they have not committed any offences. The concept of "no fault" appears to be inappropriate, with riders presumed by the TAC to be negligent simply for riding a motorcycle or scooter.

MRA President John Karmouche today called on the TAC to tell the truth about its treatment of seriously injured motorcycle and scooter riders.

Mr Karmouche stated, "we recently became aware of an allegation that the TAC was attempting to reduce compensation to riders where they determine the clothing being worn is not meeting TAC standards. We are aware of incidents where the protective clothing was highly unlikely to reduce injuries. The TAC representative on the Victorian Motorcycle Advisory Council (VMAC) stated that she was not aware of this."

"Since that time, information has emerged to confirm that although the individual concerned may not have been aware of this, the TAC is indeed regarding a lack of “protective clothing” as contributory negligence – despite the absence of any standard stating exactly what protective clothing is. The incidents uncovered appear to be merely the tip of the iceberg. Using the same principle we must now ask whether drivers of older cars that lack modern safety features and bicycle riders wearing Lycra and bicycle shoes will also be penalised?

Mr Karmouche went on to say it appears that riders are seeing a pattern of secrecy and misinformation again emerging from the TAC.

“Riders have engaged in consultation with the TAC in good faith. It appears that the TAC have chosen to withhold information and misdirect questions”, said Karmouche.

There is a reasonable provision for the TAC to deny loss of income claims where a serious offence has been proven. However, reducing compensation to injured riders when no offence has been alleged is reprehensible.

Well, it’s a pity they couldn’t have picked this up earlier – this story was actually broken in the Ulysses club magazine “Riding On” – but I quite agree. Now, what are you going to do about it, MRA Vic?

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

FarRider #1, “Davo” Jones

The Bear - Friday, September 11, 2009

As you’ll know if you follow this site, we lost our very good friend “Davo” in the US recently after a collision with a deer. He was on the Iron Butt ride. Here is a message from his family:

We have made arrangements for Davo's funeral to be held at the Outreach Centre on Saturday 19th at 11 am. The venue is located at the roundabout of Eumundi road & Beckmans road at Noosaville.

During the ceremony that Russel (Rusjel) will be kindly taking for us, there is a small window of time that is available for a select few (probably around 5-6 people I estimate) to hop up and give their experiences of Davo. After the ceremony is over, we have asked Paul (Ghostrider) to organize everyone immediately afterward, to form a final guard of honour and ride along as we follow FarRider #1 on his final journey which will be around a 5 minute ride from the original venue. From the funeral home, we would like the celebration of Davo's life to continue at the Victory Hotel in Cooroy (38 Maple St, Cooroy) which is next to Davo's office, and we were quite a few family meals and also the FarNat lunch at recently.

Hope to see some of you there.

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

Freebies this month

The Bear - Wednesday, September 09, 2009
Another month as passed which means another new lot of prizes

Congratulations to Bruce and Peter who won last months giveaways

Remember anyone who leaves a comment on any blog post within the month goes into the draw.

This months freebies:
1. Charlie Borman's edition of "By Any Means"
2. A Raven Hood Motocycle Cover - Waterproof, Breathable, Full Synthetic

Go for it! And remember, check here every month to see what we’ve found to give away – it could well be a one-off that you’ll never find anywhere else.

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

Davo’s gone

The Bear - Monday, September 07, 2009
This is one of the toughest things I’ve ever had to write. David “Davo” Jones, he of the transcontinental rides, the FarRiders, the GTR forum and so much else, has died as the result of a bike crash.

Davo was in the United States living his dream – he was taking part in the Iron Butt ride, one of the few Australians ever to get the nod for this invitation-only event. It seems he was only about 65 miles from the end of the ride when he collided with a deer. He suffered a broken hand, and head injuries from which he died in hospital in Coeur D’Alene.

This is where the story becomes bizarre. The State Trooper who attended the crash reported that Davo had not been wearing his helmet.
While I certainly don’t want to question the Trooper’s report – after all, he was there – I simply cannot understand this. Davo was one of the most safety-conscious riders I have ever known. When we planned his ride across Australia and back for ARR to assess whether the Kawasaki 1400 GTR really was a “transcontinental” motorcycle, both his and my priority at all times was safety. He could have done the ride much faster, but at a risk – and we decided that that risk was simply not worth it. Davo was a father figure for many riders, and one subject on which he knew no compromise was safety.

I just can’t believe that this was the same man who was supposedly out there with his helmet strapped to the back of his bike. My first reaction was – maybe he’d swapped bikes with someone else, for some weird reason, and it was the other person who crashed. Silly, I know, but you reach for the strangest explanations when reality doesn’t make sense.

To bring the whole thing into absolute relief, it seems that one of the doctors treating Davo said that if he’d been wearing his helmet, his worst injury would have been the broken hand.

But enough of that. All of our thoughts now are with Davo’s wife Wil and the rest of his family. The wider motorcycling family, including the Ulysses Club and Davo’s own beloved FarRiders, has been inundating his son-in-law Jim with offers of help. We’ll help, too, in any way we can – and eventually, with the agreement of the family, we hope to organise some kind of memorial for Davo. Probably something relating to road safety.

In the meantime, all I can really do is write “goodbye, mate… I’ll miss you”.

Peter “The Bear” Thoeming

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