Several have suggested **** on the road. I was out of it at the time and had not much interest.
However, I have had a look on Ggl and there is a farm exit in exactly that place.
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Several have suggested **** on the road. I was out of it at the time and had not much interest.
However, I have had a look on Ggl and there is a farm exit in exactly that place.
Attachment 1351
Be honest Larry, was you trying to get your knee down? ;)
On paper yes but I doubt you would have any luck proven it in court or even getting your insurance company to make a claim. I know two blokes that had offs that were directly caused by mud left on the road(one was a by farm and the other a building site), one was even on camera, nether of their insurance company's were even slightly interested in taking action on their behalf.
Never known anything like it, despite writing off two other bikes.
I had NO CHANCE WHATSOEVER. All perfectly normal - then - split second - wrecked.
I thought the whole front end had separated from the frame or the front wheel had fallen off.
As the days go by, I am considering not getting back on the horse.
As the days go by, I am considering not getting back on the horse.[/QUOTE]
You will miss it too much. Don't get on a horse in case thats what left the mess on the road. At least try it before making any decision.
Yeah Daz. I will miss it. Been on and off a bike since 1964.
Been 'worried' b4 but this was SCARY
Tiger Cub, 350 Norton, 750 Connie and an 88 Dommie
This incident has put me on the back foot. The yellow peril has become like a faithful dog.
Small consolation sat on the road in the shape of a 1137 Bird. Need sleep.
...and wine
Bike now recovered to my house. Managed to get it onto the centre stand (with a little help) and removed battery.
Seems to be stuck in gear. L foot peg and gear lever ripped off. Pillion pod cracked. Somehow brake pedal jammed on the other side, bit weird that.
That's enough exercise for today.
Oooo ! Pics. Never thought of that.
Luckily, I have another on stripped and in the cellar. Can sort the bent cockpit frame, water pump and most of fairing. Need to get it out of gear, fill it up with coolant
and run it for a while.
Trouble is I'm still quite uncomfortable around the ribs and right wrist. Will need to do little bits at a time. No rush, I couldn't possibly ride for a while anyway.
Pics taken - have coffee - now to work out how to get them out of camera and onto computer.
Reading your thread reminded me of mine. Rounded a perfect corner a few weeks ago and the MTS front washed out. No warning. Massive amounts of grit in road. This was in France. Gave insurer pictures of the gravel road but they wouldn’t declare it as a no fault accident.
Written off. I won’t buy another adventure bike as CO Gravity is too high and front to light with panniers full. Only bike in 26 years that would snap the front end out.
Gone back to a lower sports type bike, having always managed to save, slide on ice and mud in the years of riding.
Hi Larry, It was good to see you out on the rideout today, still can believe how much the panels were to repair your bike. Someone is making a good profit on those panels, have to say it looked good would not have thought anything had happened to it.
Sorry to see you leave us yesterday, but your health comes first. good to see the old girl again tho