I have been concern about the wire barriers for some time. Two years ago I saw some show on Discovery that quoted some report from the NHTSA that indicated over 40% of the wire barriers were incorrectly installed. This is going to be hard to explain, but I will try. Imagine a road way where the center medium was lower then the road way to allow rain to drain off the road. If, the wire barrier was installed at a lower height then the roadway the effectiveness of the wire barrier was reduced, and could cause a higher number of deaths.
If the vehicle leaves the road way, gravity grabs hold, and the front end of the car dips below the cables this would often result in the cables sliding up the hood with two outcomes. One, the
cable enters the passenger compartment, two, the vehicle goes under the cables into oncoming traffic. In addition, If, after gravity played a part and the vehicle's suspension rebounded the vehicle's bumper could clear the top of the cables and continue into oncoming traffic. I am sad to say, after looking many times I have been unable to find this information on the NHTSA website.
Paragraph two of this link give an example of a SUV clearing the cables and going into oncoming traffic.
https://www.wsdot.wa.gov/NR/rdonlyres/DFF20...eMedian_Ch3.pdf
An example of a motorcyclist hitting a wire barrier:
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article....jectid=10471320
More to read:
https://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pdf/nrd-01/es...9/05-0095-O.pdf
This may be the best one to read. It compares many types of barriers.
https://www.monash.edu.au/muarc/reports/atsb201.pdf
https://www.network.mag-uk.org/barriers/WRB-reportV9.pdf
https://www.fema.ridersrights.org/crashbarrier/index.html
I like this line" Indeed, posts supporting the guardrails have edges that act as razors when hit at speeds above 30 km/h. A motorcyclist falling off his bike in a bend will slide inexorably towards the side of the road, resulting in an impact on the barrier post. Biomechanical constraints acceptable by a human body are often exceeded. Limbs can be cut off; and victims might bleed to death."
https://www.fema.ridersrights.org/crashbarr...barrier2005.PDF
https://epubl.ltu.se/1402-1617/2005/233/LTU-EX-05233-SE.pdf
I have tried to find information/testing results on the injuries a rider would sustain if he was not on the bike, a slide or tumble, with no luck.
If, I am in a crash, let me hit nothing. If, am going to hit a barrier of some sort, I prefer the modified steel guard rail system or concrete.
John T.