Smacking into the back of a car...

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goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
Ooops. On the way home tonight along Ferry Road, at the traffic lights at the Craighall Road junction, I had a close encounter with the back window of a car... :sad:

I was slowing down as I could see that the cars going through the lights were stopping on green to let people out of Craighall Road. The car ahead of me was braking, as was I. He then accelerated and I lessened my braking. Unfortunately, he then slammed on the anchors a second later when someone tried to cut out in front of him, and I wasn't able to stop in time.

I went over the bars and hit his back window with my right side, then slid off and ended up lying along the left side of his car. Fortunately, I reckon I can't have been doing any more than 10mph at a push, and the noise my 15.5 stone hitting his car made was probably more frightening than the actual crash was.

I got up, slowly, to make sure I was OK - and thankfully I was. No ripped clothes. The bike - amazingly, no damage other than the bars having been turned down a bit (no surprise with my weight on them). Not even the slightest sign of the wheel being out of true, and not a scrape or a scuff anywhere (because my legs cushioned its fall). The guy in the car didn't move, and neither did anyone behind. After about 2 or 3 seconds of me peering in his passenger-side window, he turned (looking a bit shocked), wound down the window and asked me if I was OK. I said I was, and that the back of his car looked undamaged. At that point, the cars behind him started honking their horns as the lights were green - some concern for their fellow man, I must say !

He set off, pulling into a bus stop further down the road to inspect the car for damage and I wandered back to pick up my bottle which had fallen out. By the time I got the bottle and got back on the road, he'd decided his car was fine and had gone before I could get to him. Luckily the bike was fine to ride, and I felt surprisingly undamaged and got back into my flow for the rest of the journey.

The only evidence now is a small scrape on my left elbow, and a slight ache where I walloped my upper arm off the car. Then again, I used to get hit that hard every Saturday when I played rugby as a teen and not feel too sore afterwards until Sunday morning !

I think we were both at fault (as well as the idiot who cut out on him and forced him to emergency-stop), but there's a big lesson in there for me. Even if I am in the main traffic flow and matching speeds, I've got to start leaving a much bigger gap between me and the car in front as I obviously didn't do it tonight and I paid for it with a bang. Even Koolstop Salmons can't stop me as quickly in the dry as car brakes can stop a car...
 

BentMikey

Rider of Seolferwulf
Location
South London
Ooooh bummer dude, glad you're OK!

goo_mason said:
I think we were both at fault

*cough* Care to revise that?
 
OP
OP
goo_mason

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
OK then. It was my fault pure and simple.

I should have left enough space to allow me to stop safely, regardless of what happened. I should always anticipate and think ahead.
 
OP
OP
goo_mason

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
postman said:
Glad you is ok.But if you leave a nice gap for safety someone will fill it for you.So back to square one.

Sadly, that's usually true, Postman. Drivers hate to see a free car-length space going begging in front of a cyclist and are only too keen to get into it, given half a chance !

Still doesn't excuse my avoidable error tonight though :sad:
 

HF2300

Insanity Prawn Boy
postman said:
Glad you is ok.But if you leave a nice gap for safety someone will fill it for you.So back to square one.

It isn't a cyclist thing, they'll do the same to a car, a truck, or a bus. Count to 10, drop back, and keep a safe distance.
 

Wolf04

New Member
Location
Wallsend on Tyne
Glad you are OK Goo, I have a friend who had an almost identical accident a few years back he actually went through the rear windscreen of the car he hit. He still walked away with just cuts and bruises. Glad it wasn't more serious and that the drivers behind at least waited till you got up.
 
OP
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goo_mason

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
User3143 said:
You live and learn glad you are o.k, you will ache tomorrow though!

Quite likely, but fortunately I'm on a day off tomorrow so I can pamper myself with a long, hot soak in the bath to ease the aches :laugh:
 

swee'pea99

Squire
Like others have said, coulda been worse - glad you're ok. But as you've conceded, it is up to us to leave a sufficient gap...even at the risk of others moving in to fill it.

I get this when driving on the motorway, because I tend to leave a much greater gap than some other drivers consider necessary - they undertake and pull in front of me. I just fall back and re-establish my 'excessive' gap.
 
Goo, glad your ok! But I cannot believe the reaction (or lack of) of the surrounding drivers. You came off your bike. If I had seen that, I would have been out of my car in a flash to check the cyclist was ok.

Grrrrrr:angry:

Anyway I wonder if it might still be worth getting the bike checked. You don't want to find out you have a crack in the frame.
 

arallsopp

Post of The Year 2009 winner
Location
Bromley, Kent
magnatom said:
Anyway I wonder if it might still be worth getting the bike checked. You don't want to find out you have a crack in the frame.

On the contrary, that's exactly the kind of thing you'd want to find out. :laugh:

Hitting back windows of cars (most recently, a Suzuki rollover with a nice comfy cloth tarp) is how I learnt to change gear by feel. Nothing quite like peering at the rear cassette from between your legs, only to look up and find out that everyone else has stopped.

Am glad you're ok.
 
OP
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goo_mason

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
magnatom said:
Goo, glad your ok! But I cannot believe the reaction (or lack of) of the surrounding drivers. You came off your bike. If I had seen that, I would have been out of my car in a flash to check the cyclist was ok.

Grrrrrr:angry:

Anyway I wonder if it might still be worth getting the bike checked. You don't want to find out you have a crack in the frame.

Cheers my good man !

That did annoy me - they were more bothered about the lights being green than about someone who may have needed help. I'd hate to think how long I'd have been lying there before anyone stopped to help had it been serious.

I'll get the bike up on the workstand tomorrow and give it a thorough going-over to check for any damage I may have missed. I think it was pretty well-cushioned against the impact because I hit the back of the car first :laugh:
 
Yes glad you're OK and like Magnatom a bit puzzled at peoples reaction.

I've done the same in traffic, everyone stopped as I was still piling on the power. I went into the back of a builders truck in a very undignified slide along the top bar and planted my face against the tailgate. As I straightened myself out I could see them all in the cab through the side mirrors, all, to a man, pissing themselves laughing. I did the only thing possible and scootled off down a side road before my face went redder than the traffic lights.
 

jassy-x

Well-Known Member
[quote name='swee'pea99']I get this when driving on the motorway, because I tend to leave a much greater gap than some other drivers consider necessary - they undertake and pull in front of me. I just fall back and re-establish my 'excessive' gap.[/quote]
....isn't that because you're hoggin' the middle lane.?????:laugh:....

.....good to see your OK Goo....enjoy yer day aff.!!!!!!!!
 
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