MY BIKE FALL DOWN - Lifting Gizmo

DrGMIA

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2011
Location
Pit stop after 6th ride around the world, in USA,
Bikes
Oldest 1931, newest 2016, numerous makes and models in between on several continents
Part of the "adventure" niche seems for some owners and riders to include dreaming or worrying about the risk factor of being pinned under their downed motorcycle, or picking up a behemoth "ADV" marketed motorcycle, and extrapolating to the purchase of gizmos to aid in solving the problem.



A moto-journalist was visiting my studio with what was called the ultimate or maximo adventure motorcycle buildup by the Overland Expo group, a Honda Africa Twin. "What's that?" I asked, pointing to an object attached to the crash bar hanging over the front wheel.
AT 1.jpg



He answered, "An electronic winch."

"Whoa Momma!" I exclaimed, as a relative self-proclaimed newbie to The Electric Adventure Motorcycle Gizmo World, and questioned, "All that weight over the front wheel, and what for?

"Ahhh, in case you fall over or crash and your leg is pinned under the motorcycle or you can't upright it yourself."
AT 2.jpg



"Make's perfect sense to me," I said, but was thinking "How much does it cost, how do you attach it to a tree or the top of a fence if your are out in the rice paddies and the tallest thing around might be a fence post, what if your leg is pinned under the beast, and as a former roadracer concerned with weight over the front end, where's the unsprung weight factor in this adventure formula?"

The adventurer left the security of my base camp, then a day later sent me this photo:
AT 3.jpg



The front wheel had washed out when he was adventuring at speed, going up a small hill...coming to rest pointed uphill and off the track. He unrolled the cable, attached it to a tree and electronically winched the front end to point downhill and make uprighting the ultimate adventure motorcycle easier and ultimately possible. If looking closely at the photo one can see the front wheel and foot print marks in the dirt uphill from the front wheel, the motorcycle's former resting place.

I have still not figured out how one can attach the winch to anything if the beast has your leg pinned (been there, wrote the story). I've also not conjured the way to use an electronic signaling device to your family can spot (p) where you are down when the device was in a tank bag ending up 100 feet away from you, pinned or with a broken leg (wrote that story also.)

Lessons learned:
1) Don't crash when you're planning to manage potential risks as a solo motorcyclist
2) Don't laugh at someone's electronic gizmo - it could be useful
3) ....ahhh, there's more, but enough for this small story/clip about the Overland X's ultimate adventure motorcycle build-up.

Dr. G
Professor of Motorcycle Adventure, SOUND RIDER magazine, and Adventure Motorcycle University
Moto-Journalist, author, script consultant, and motorcycle wastrel
Sole sexual survivor: www.greataroundtheworldmotorcycleadventurerally.com
 
Thailand Dec 08- Jeez, not down ,again!.jpg


The quote for this get-off in a small Thai village was, "Ahhhh, Jeez, not again."

No electronic winch or digital sending device was going to solve my problem. No villagers ran out to assist me as often happened in other get-offs while adventuring on or off-pavement in SE Asia. In this remote village most peered out windows and doors. Maybe it was the colorful Montana Americaneze language I was using - very bad form but it had been a long, hot and humid day. Or maybe it was the "spaceman suit I was wearing," the helmet, gloves, boots and body armour jacket and pants.

Cause of the fall down was a dog nipping and yapping at my front wheel that I foolishly front braked to avoid while coming down a slight incline of cement covered in sand and pee sized gravel. I stepped off as the overloaded motorcycle's front wheel washed out.

Solution to the problem: Being solo I had to persevere for making that decision, to solo travel and explore. I not only unloaded the luggage from atop the motorcycle, but also removed the left side aluminum pannier. The right side pannier allowed me to rock the downed beast a few degrees upwards (not recommended for BMW "aluminum looking" panniers). then muscled the beast upright.

NOTE: For the nit pickers, the bags on the ground are one tank pannier (left side, right side pannier was still on the downed motorcycle, protecting the gas tank), a tank bag, and the larger black bag was filled with a small tent, big pillow and my sleeping bag.

I believe my show of dropping, unloading, photographing, uprighting and re-packing the 600cc motorcycle was the Thai village entertainment for the next week. As I was leaving I waved to the window and door watchers (mostly women and children plus one old man) and was paid back with smiles.

Lessons learned:
1) Save the brakes, hit the dog - it'll be stew meat in a village cook pot for dinner that night.
2) Leave a few hundred baht for the owner of the dog (or chicken) - they paid to grow it.
3) Keep your man-card at hand to remind yourself when going solo that you'll not be "in Kansas, Toto."

Dr. G
Professor of Motorcycle Adventure, SOUND RIDER magazine, and Adventure Motorcycle University
Moto-Journalist, author, script consultant, and motorcycle wastrel
Sole sexual survivor: www.greataroundtheworldmotorcycleadventurerally.com
 
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