User said:And all of the previous posters are feckless idiots with no road sense who are a danger to us all.
But I was on a bike, not in a car. In this purely hypothetical, 100% made-up scenario.Yes, you failed to leave adequate room to stop your car in time.
In this hypothetical scenario, Its still your fault, hypotheticallyMaz said:But I was on a bike, not in a car. In this purely hypothetical, 100% made-up scenario.
Just be thankful it was not a bus. As the power that one can created and then come to a stop can make you pull an unexpected endo and headbutt the back of the bus.
But I was on a bike, not in a car. In this purely hypothetical, 100% made-up scenario.
But suppose that the car was rolling backwards, and you were rolling backwards too but at a lesser speed so inevitably the car would make contact with your bike and the bumper sort of pinched the wheel and then the wheel popped back out from under the bumper and the bike flipped right over the car and landed in front but facing the wrong way with a snakebite *uncture. It's happened to me a couple of times and I'm still not sure how I can avoid this in the future but I always carry 2 patches now.Depends.
Were you stationary at the time and on a hill?
Are you sure the driver did not apply the handbrake in time and roll back into you?
On another note - are you suffering from any whiplash at all? Fear of driving or getting into a car ever again?
If you have answered yes to the above then you are entitled to thousands in compo, thousands I say!