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ericmo | 9 years ago
One common argument is that drivers have more respect for cyclists without helmets, i.e. they're more afraid of hitting a cyclist without a helmet.
The discussion goes back a long time, this article for instance is 9.5 years old: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/strange-but-true-...
I guess, most cyclists think it's more likely that they'll be hit by a car, not a pedestrian.
It could also be that some cyclists don't have the money to buy a helmet - or other types of safety gear.
drizze|9 years ago
analog31|9 years ago
Yet this study is cited in every discussion of bike helmet use.
I've been interested in this topic for some time, as a year round bike commuter with my entire family on bikes. It's become a prickly topic because of the intensity of advocacy from both sides of the debate.
Fricken|9 years ago
Good maintenance, situational awareness, and defensive/evasive riding skills are all under emphasized.
A critical one is knowing how to wipe out correctly, a martial art unto itself.
As much as a boxer will instinctively react to a fist flying at his face, a cyclist should know how to respond to a sudden altercation with the pavement. Many of them don't.
I mean, if you step into the ring against a professional Boxer having no training but think a shiny new bike helmet will keep you safe, well, good luck with that.
We're slaves to measurable outcomes, and it's easy measure and gather statistics on helmets. It's harder to measure how effective a rough and tumble childhood is for avoiding concussions and other accident related injuries later in life.
CalRobert|9 years ago
Retric|9 years ago
Seat headrests and side impact air bags provide this function much more effectively than loose helmets. Which are not safe for use in passenger cars due to neck trauma. Further, your skull hitting the pavement is more rapid acceleration than a survivable car crash.
That said, NASCAR drivers do use helmets and a five point harness instead of air bags. But, very importantly they strap the helmet to the head rest, but that only works because of the five point harness and several other safety systems missing from consumer cars. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HANS_device
TLDR: The issue is neck trauma. Which NASCAR avoids, by strapping both the driver and their helmet down.
_ea1k|9 years ago
Well, other than it being tremendously inconvenient and messing up people's hair. We have active prioritized those two things over safety.