OrangevaleFJR
R.I.P. Our FJR Riding Friend
Starting with the gear, the dirt ground into the gear indicates to me an initial impact on his front side based on that being the only sign of any abrasion, but a slide on his back, head first came next. There is a lot of dirt on the back and on the pants under where the coat would have been. There is ground in dirt on the front pocket and a tiny rip in seam for the elastic material toward the inside of the leg. This did not get past the kevlar underneath and looking in close up, I could not find anywhere on the garments that showed the mesh was scratched at all. My guess is this is tough material. Really tough.
I do not have Mike's helmet, but I have his visor. Obviously, the right side of the head slid along the ground a bit.
Back of his coat
Front
Cuts are from paramedics, notice top right pocket flap (as you wear it). This is the only part of the jacket that hints at abrasion.
Pants front
seam snag (yellow paint on this)
rear of pants
Jacket Pads showed some dirt, and were ruffled a tiny bit by the hits.
Back pad
Chest pads
arms
Pant pads...nothing much here
Now the bike:
Left side case
Topcase base, notice scratches from upside down slide on rack
Bent handlebars went into tank, broken clutch lever, missing hand guard, broken choke lever
Broken windshield, good shot of handlebar bend
Crash bar weld broken, plate to frame bent, engine fine
Front fairing bracket bent - scratches top of instruments, top of indicator...this bike was clearly upsidedown
scratches top of fender, top of fairing
Rearset bent in with sidecase rack, chain guard bent out of way
IMO and I am no crash expert - I crashed my DRZ 400 and had no where near the damage although my bike slid upside down too. I crashed at 25 mph. I know the KLR is heavier than the DRZ, so while I would expect more damage for the same speed of crash on the KLR, I think the speed was North of 25. This is important to know the force that the gear took. The only discernable damage to the gear looks more like a snag that anything and didn't get completely past the seam. Clearly, the Cycleport gear did it's job and did it well. There wasn't a scratch on Mike.
How did the armor work? Well, Mike hit his head hard enough to put a hole through the helmet. He slid into a guard rail pretty darn fast and the Doctors seemed split on whether there were ribs broken or not. They finally decided there were some hairline fractures of ribs. Not bad considering the aparent speed that Mike took into a guard rail. There were no cuts, or breaks to his elbows, back, anywhere. The scapula was fractured, but not badly and again, it seems like it could have been, or even should have been worse. IMO Cycleport has proven its value. Mike, after two days was looking so much better. I'm glad to see him recovering so fast. I want to thank Wayne and Cycleport for making a product that IMO saved Mike from much worse injury.
I will be buying Cycleport gear.
Customer service note, I called Wayne and he called back the next day and worked with me to let me know how to get the gear back to him for evaluation and possible repair.Thanks for your help Wayne!
Shoei helmets? I am also glad Mike was wearing a good full face helmet. All around, we have an ATGATT success story. Wearing shorts, a t-shirt and birkenstocks in this accident could have proven fatal (yes, I saw a rider wearing this gear this summer).
I do not have Mike's helmet, but I have his visor. Obviously, the right side of the head slid along the ground a bit.
Back of his coat
Front
Cuts are from paramedics, notice top right pocket flap (as you wear it). This is the only part of the jacket that hints at abrasion.
Pants front
seam snag (yellow paint on this)
rear of pants
Jacket Pads showed some dirt, and were ruffled a tiny bit by the hits.
Back pad
Chest pads
arms
Pant pads...nothing much here
Now the bike:
Left side case
Topcase base, notice scratches from upside down slide on rack
Bent handlebars went into tank, broken clutch lever, missing hand guard, broken choke lever
Broken windshield, good shot of handlebar bend
Crash bar weld broken, plate to frame bent, engine fine
Front fairing bracket bent - scratches top of instruments, top of indicator...this bike was clearly upsidedown
scratches top of fender, top of fairing
Rearset bent in with sidecase rack, chain guard bent out of way
IMO and I am no crash expert - I crashed my DRZ 400 and had no where near the damage although my bike slid upside down too. I crashed at 25 mph. I know the KLR is heavier than the DRZ, so while I would expect more damage for the same speed of crash on the KLR, I think the speed was North of 25. This is important to know the force that the gear took. The only discernable damage to the gear looks more like a snag that anything and didn't get completely past the seam. Clearly, the Cycleport gear did it's job and did it well. There wasn't a scratch on Mike.
How did the armor work? Well, Mike hit his head hard enough to put a hole through the helmet. He slid into a guard rail pretty darn fast and the Doctors seemed split on whether there were ribs broken or not. They finally decided there were some hairline fractures of ribs. Not bad considering the aparent speed that Mike took into a guard rail. There were no cuts, or breaks to his elbows, back, anywhere. The scapula was fractured, but not badly and again, it seems like it could have been, or even should have been worse. IMO Cycleport has proven its value. Mike, after two days was looking so much better. I'm glad to see him recovering so fast. I want to thank Wayne and Cycleport for making a product that IMO saved Mike from much worse injury.
I will be buying Cycleport gear.
Customer service note, I called Wayne and he called back the next day and worked with me to let me know how to get the gear back to him for evaluation and possible repair.Thanks for your help Wayne!
Shoei helmets? I am also glad Mike was wearing a good full face helmet. All around, we have an ATGATT success story. Wearing shorts, a t-shirt and birkenstocks in this accident could have proven fatal (yes, I saw a rider wearing this gear this summer).
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