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#1 |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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Motostats 2018
In a hurry? Jump to the tl;dr thread summary post.
I'm going to use this thread to post information that may have gotten lost in the shuffle of current events. Such as: In spite of slowing bike sales, motorcycling is still at its highest popularity ever. Also: while we have to deal with new and metastasizing hazards such as cell phones, Prii, and SUVs, we're crashing less. And, daily commute experience notwithstanding, the Bay Area is the safest urban area in California for motorcyclists. First up... Motorcycling is more popular than ever While the sport has stopped growing--at least for now--and bike sales have cratered, motorcycling itself remains popular in America, in California, and in the Bay Area. I'm omitted crap VMT estimates from FHWA 2000-2006 (which they acknowledge). No VMT estimates by state available. This requires mc registrations by county, which haven't been published since 2015. A note on sources I won't be citing sources in each post, but everything that will appear is from a federal or California government publication. Wanna know where something came from? Send me PM and I'll reply with a link or document. .
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How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt Last edited by DataDan; 06-12-2020 at 07:02 AM.. |
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#2 |
General Menace
AMA Life Member #203453
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Founding Member
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Palo Alto, Ca.
Motorcycles: Keep me rocking life
Name: Budman
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In. As always.
2018 is because that is what is available for those wondering.
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BARF Terms of Service Be a BARF Contributor! Support those that support Barf! BARF Sponsors 1Rider introduction on KFOG Bone heads and bikers podcasts Racism and RIP threads on Barf - FYI Barf is more than a dub dub dub dealio Godspeed Mom ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() AMA #203453 ![]() |
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#3 |
Live Long
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: San RiffRaph
Motorcycles: n. (pl), a two-wheeled device used for transportation as well as racing and other fun stuff.
Name: Tom
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Vehicles are vehicles. Why single out Prii?? (FWIW I’m not a fan of them either, but I’d call out Apple Car Play regardless of the vehicle before singling out Prii- or SUVs for that matter).
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-Tom ThinkFast Racing ex-AFM #280 |
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#4 | |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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Quote:
SUVs, OTOH, are the real deal. Maybe not in frequency of crashes (no data to support or contradict), but definitely in lethality. A two-vehicle crash between a motorcyclist and a light truck (SUV, pickup, van, etc.) is at least 50% more likely to kill the motorcyclist than a crash with a car. Pedestrians are at a similar disadvantage. I don't expect to cover that in this thread.
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How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt |
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#5 |
Newbie
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Cavite
Motorcycles: Mountain bike
Name:
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Motorcycles continue to trend and become even more popular, they more convenient and handy to use.
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#6 |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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The Declining Motorcycle Crash Rate
As motorcycling grew from the mid-1990s until the recession in 2008, crashes inevitably increased, too. As shown by the gray shaded area in the graph below, US crashes of all severities more than doubled from 55,000 in 1998 to 123,000 in 2007. Crash rate also rose, whether measured per 10 milllion motorcycle miles traveled--from 54 to 58 (black line)--or per 1000 registered motorcycles--from 14 to 17 (red line).
Since 2007, however, annual crashes have been below the 2007 peak (except in 2016, a questionable result from the first year of a new NHTSA surveying system), and the crash rate has been mostly flat, averaging 55 crashes per million VMT and 13 per 1000 registrations 2008-2018. Motorcycling in the US is now safer than it has ever been. In spite of phenomenal growth over the past 20 years, we are now less likely to crash than we were in the depth of the 1990s US motorcycle depression, and much less likely than in the 1980s boom. While many factors have likely contributed, two stand out in my mind: the aging riding population and the decline of drinking-and-riding crashes. Those will be subjects in later posts. California motorcycle crashes and the crash rate have generally followed the US pattern, with a noteworthy difference. The drop in crashes from the 1980s to the 1990s was much greater here. With the 1986 launch of the California Motorcyclist Safety Program came the training requirement--riders under age 18 in 1987, under 21 in 1991. By upping the investment of time and effort needed to start out this kept out less serious potential riders, and it better prepared others. In addition, enactment of the all-rider helmet law in 1992 took some off the street. Crash rate per 1000 registered motorcycles is higher in California than for the US, due undoubtedly in part to our year-round riding weather. I have not shown VMT crash rate because motorcycle VMT by state is not generally available. However, it has been estimated for some recent years and shows that Californians ride, on average, 4400 miles per registered bike per year compared to the national average of 2400. Base on that, California's VMT crash rate is 15% lower than the US average. I have crashes by county only since 2001, so I cannot break out the Bay Area earlier than that, and I have registrations by county only through 2015, so I cannot calculate later crash rates. However, for 2001-2015, the Bay Area crash rate per 1000 registered motorcycles is slightly lower than the statewide rate. . . .
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How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt |
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#7 | |
Live Long
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: San RiffRaph
Motorcycles: n. (pl), a two-wheeled device used for transportation as well as racing and other fun stuff.
Name: Tom
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Quote:
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-Tom ThinkFast Racing ex-AFM #280 |
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#8 | |
KNGKAW
AMA #: 542337
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Hayward
Motorcycles: ZX14,GS750E, KTM 450/540
Name: Steve
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Quote:
Mad
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If your nose runs and your feet smell, you're built upside down. ![]() |
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#9 |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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Rider age, part 1
One reason the motorcycle crash rate has declined over the past 30 years, in my opinion, is the aging rider population. Old folks tend to be more risk averse in physical activities (though possibly not in poker and commodity futures trading). The graphs below compare the motorcycle owner age distribution from Motorcycle Industry Council data to the crash-involved rider age distribution from NHTSA data:
When US motorcycling collapsed between the mid-1980s and mid-1990s, it was riders under age 30 who left in the greatest numbers. From 1985 to 1998, that group dropped from 3 million motorcycle owners to 1 millon. At the same time, the 50+ group grew by 50%, from less than 500,000 to 750,000, while those in between, 30 to 49, were approximately unchanged. Because the <30 group is more likely to crash than the 50+, this demographic change helped drive down the crash rate. Statistically, a higher risk group was being replaced by a lower risk group. But there's more to the story. Meanwhile, the high-risk young riders improved, their crash rate falling 35% from nearly 40 crashes per 1000 registrations in 1990 to 25 in 1998. Risk fell in other age groups, too, but the drop in the <30s had the biggest impact on overall crash rate. A downside of the older riding population has been increased crash lethality--the chance of death in the event of a crash. Older riders are more likely to die when they crash than younger riders, and, as a result, the decline in fatality rate has been less than the decline in crash rate. That will be the subject of a later post. Next I will compare the age distribution of crash-involved riders in the US, California, and the Bay Area. My US crash data goes from 1988 to 2018, owner age distribution from 1985 to 2016. For consistency in the graphs, I've plotted only the overlapping years, and I have smoothed the sometimes jumpy NHTSA crash estimates with a 3-year moving average. Age groups were dictated by available ownership data. .
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How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt Last edited by DataDan; 03-30-2020 at 04:48 PM.. |
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#10 |
General Menace
AMA Life Member #203453
Highway Aviator
Founding Member
Top Percent Poster
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Moto Junkie
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Palo Alto, Ca.
Motorcycles: Keep me rocking life
Name: Budman
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That is an interesting theory Dan.
Rings true to me. Well thought out ![]()
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BARF Terms of Service Be a BARF Contributor! Support those that support Barf! BARF Sponsors 1Rider introduction on KFOG Bone heads and bikers podcasts Racism and RIP threads on Barf - FYI Barf is more than a dub dub dub dealio Godspeed Mom ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() AMA #203453 ![]() |
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#11 |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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Rider age, part 2
The following graphs compare age distributions for crash-involved riders in the US, California, and the Bay Area 2001-2018 (the extent of my California age data). All police-reported crashes are included (estimated by NHTSA for the US, counted for California). About 4% are fatal, 21% major injury, the rest non-injury or minor injury.
One slight difference is that fewer older riders--55+--and more younger riders--under 35--appear in California and the Bay Area crashes. This most likely reflects the proportions of riders in those age groups. Another way to look at the same data is by rider generation. The Millennials have evidently taken up motorcycling in greater numbers here in California than in other states. Note that the Millennial numbers in 2018 are greater than Generation X in 2002, when they were the same age. I have used what seems to be a common definition of generations: Baby Boom: birth year 1946-1964 Generation X: 1965-1980 Millennial: 1981-1996 Generation Z: 1997- Birth year estimated as crash year - rider age, so not perfectly accurate .
__________________
How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt |
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#12 |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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Drinking and riding and crashing
To recap, the US motorcycle crash rate--both per mile traveled and annually per registered bike--has fallen substantially over the past 30 years. Riding is now as safe as it has ever been in the US. In part, this is due to a demographic shift from higher-risk young riders to lower-risk old folks. But declining crash rate within age groups has also contributed--particularly among young riders. Why is that?
A big contributor is a reduction in drinking-and-riding crashes. The graph below shows drinking rider crashes from NHTSA's sampling system since 1988. Over the past 30 years, they have dropped by more than 30%. This is an accomplishment the motorcycling community can be proud of. The next three graphs show how the US, California, and the Bay Area compare since 2001. In the past five years, alcohol involvement has been around 6% for all, down from 8% in the early 2000s. Fatal crashes A few years ago some mistaken information was circulating about alcohol involvement in fatal motorcycle crashes, and I would like to correct that. You may have heard that in California it was over 50%. In fact, it has been unchanged at around 30% for the past 10 years. Before that, though, it had fallen from nearly 50% in the early 1990s. The next set of graphs compares alcohol use in fatal motorcycle crashes in the US, California, and the Bay Area over 30 years. Data is from NHTSA's fatal crash database for all. . . .
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How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt Last edited by DataDan; 04-01-2020 at 03:06 PM.. |
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#13 |
Mama says he's bona fide
BARF Mod Alumni
BARFie winner 2010 & 2014
Contributor ++++
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Luis Obispo
Motorcycles: Yamaha FJR1300
Name: Dan
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Fatalities
As we've seen in previous posts, motorcycling in the US grew tremendously over the past 20 years. At the same time, motorcycle crashes increased as well. Inevitably, deaths followed:
However, increasing fatalities generally followed the growth of the sport, as seen in the fatality rate per registered motorcycle (gray shaded area). The exception is the disproportional rise during the period of high growth from the late 1990s until the recession. This may be due to the decrease in average experience as new riders took up the sport. When growth stopped in 2008, the fatality rate fell back to the low pre-boom level and flattened, and is now near the all-time low. California has been similar, with a notable exception. After a sharp drop in deaths and fatality rate at the onset of the recession, the pre-recession increase resumed. Fatality count has exceeded the pre-recession high, the fatality rate nearly so. The recent history of Bay Area fatalities is similar to the statewide record, though my lack of registration data results in an incomplete picture of fatality rate. Note that the Bay Area graph, unlike those for the US and California, is not a 3-year moving average. I didn't want to smooth out the sharp peak of 2007 and 2008. This was real and had a devastating effect on BARF--sometimes two or three RIP threads a week. Coming up next, I'll take a closer look at fatality rate by breaking it down into crash rate and crash lethality.
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How can I help seeing what is in front of my eyes? Two and two are four. --Winston Smith I see four lights! --Jean Luc Picard A is A. --John Galt |
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#14 |
TC/MSF/CMSP/ Instructor
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Merced, CA
Motorcycles: BMW R1200R, FZ09, FZR400, CR250R
Name: George
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Dan, does your alcohol involvement data mean .08 BAC (legally drunk) and higher or just measurable BAC (impaired and drunk rather than just legally drunk)?
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If you are not having fun riding a motorcycle, you are doing it wrong. The best performance upgrade is upgrading the operating system of the operator. It is cheap, easy, fast, safe and works on every bike you will ever ride. I am also a Patent Attorney so if I can help you with any IP matters, please just ask. Last edited by motomania2007; 06-09-2020 at 10:41 AM.. |
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#15 |
General Menace
AMA Life Member #203453
Highway Aviator
Founding Member
Top Percent Poster
Community Contributor + BB
Moto Junkie
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Palo Alto, Ca.
Motorcycles: Keep me rocking life
Name: Budman
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Thanks DD.
The flattening mentioned is good.. more training? More.. ![]() Just good to see. I remember 07-08 well. Got the start up of 1Rider in my link. First radio appearance as we launched. Enchanter smoked me on the MIC. ![]() Really appreciate your effort then and now. ![]()
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BARF Terms of Service Be a BARF Contributor! Support those that support Barf! BARF Sponsors 1Rider introduction on KFOG Bone heads and bikers podcasts Racism and RIP threads on Barf - FYI Barf is more than a dub dub dub dealio Godspeed Mom ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() AMA #203453 ![]() |
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