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| Jonescasual92 |
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 Jonescasual92 L Plate Warrior
Joined: 03 Apr 2014 Karma : 
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 Posted: 01:15 - 03 Apr 2014 Post subject: Whats the next step when 21 and got a Cbt? What tests etc. |
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Hi all, I'm a bit confused from things I've been reading all over the internet and from what people are telling me about the rules and regulations about what cc you can have at certain ages with certain tests/modules .etc but I can't find an answer to what order I take them in. I know you start with a Cbt which is valid for 2 years but what happens when that expires? Does that mean you can then have any cc without taking any further tests or do you have to renew it? And what's the differences to if you are 21 and over to 21 and under and you want a bike.
I Would appreciate if somebody could give me a step by step guide to what I would need to do exactly to get a full uk bike licence. Thanks!  ____________________ Dan Jones |
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| pinkyfloyd |
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 pinkyfloyd Super Spammer

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| Jonescasual92 |
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 Jonescasual92 L Plate Warrior
Joined: 03 Apr 2014 Karma : 
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 Posted: 01:32 - 03 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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So Can I take an a1 or a2 while I have my Cbt in that 2 years or do I have to wait for the 2 years to be up til I take either of them? Also am I right saying I'd need to pass my a2 in order to upgrade to a 450, 600, 1000 etc. in the future? Sorry for thousands of questions I'm just trying to grasp it haha!  ____________________ Dan Jones |
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| NooBish-AbbZ |
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 NooBish-AbbZ Nova Slayer
Joined: 03 Jan 2014 Karma :     
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 Posted: 04:41 - 03 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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| Jonescasual92 wrote: | So Can I take an a1 or a2 while I have my Cbt in that 2 years or do I have to wait for the 2 years to be up til I take either of them? Also am I right saying I'd need to pass my a2 in order to upgrade to a 450, 600, 1000 etc. in the future? Sorry for thousands of questions I'm just trying to grasp it haha!  |
Any tests need to be completed within the 2 years that the CBT is valid.
The A1 or A2 is needed to ride any bikes bigger than a 125, and yes you will need the A2 license to ride 450/600's etc. (heres the confusing part)
These bikes will need to be no more than 35kW power output and 47bhp output. They CAN be restricted to comply with these rules, however, before restricting, the bike cannot produce more than twice these figures. E.G 69.5kW and 93 bhp. Fine, 70.5kW, and 95 BHp, not fine.
Finally, if you do want to ride a bike with more than 94bhp (most 600cc sportbikes and anything bigger) you will have to complete your A license. This can only be completed as a direct access, unavailable until you turn 24, OR, 2 years to the day after you pass your A2 test.
Remember you will need a theory test for any license more than CBT.
Any more questions, please PM me Hope this helps ____________________ SV650S - Feb '14-March '19
XJ6N- Apr '19 -Present |
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| Teflon-Mike |
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 Teflon-Mike tl;dr

Joined: 01 Jun 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 08:07 - 03 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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You start with applying for UK Driving Licence. You dont need to take any tests to get one; but your first licence will be a 'Provisional' and all that lets you do is lessons. You can drive or ride any vehicle you meet age eligibility for; BUT only under supervision of an Instructor.
When you have passed a Driving Test, for any vehicle category; you get a Full UK Driving Licence. Entitlement lets you drive or ride the category of vehicle you have passed tests for, unsupervised. Entitlement on all other categories remains 'provisional' and only lets you take lessons.
That's the basic precept. Car, Motorbike, Lorry, Bus, whatever. Until you pass tests for vehicle you want to use; provisional JUST lets you take lessons.
For cars, the qualifying criteria for an 'instructor' I think is merely having held car entitlement on your own licence more than two years, and being over the age of 21; so most car licence holders can be an 'instructor', as far as giving lessons to provisional licence holders.
For just about any other category of licence though, certainly for motorcycles, supervision may only be offered by Driving Standards Agency (DSA) approved Instructors.
NOW; there are a bunch of 'Restrictions' for 'Learners' on a provisional licence; like none are allowed on a motorway. But one specific to motorcyclists is they cant carry a passenger.
In a car, or lorry, if you were having a lesson, you would get into the drivers seat, and your qualified instructor/supervisor would clamber into the passenger seat next to you, and tell you what to do, possibly hover their hand over the hand brake between you, or their feet over 'duel controls' in case you did something daft.
So; supervising instructor cant get onto the motorbike you are riding; this makes them supervising you a bit difficult; they have to do it from another motorbike following you; and put a radio in your helmet so they can tell you if you do something daft.
Worth noting that's all they can do... if you don't listen, all they can do after, is watch you crash; they have no way, like a car instructor to take over the controls!
OK Then; so you do lessons. Under supervision; take tests, get full licence, then can ride/drive whatever you have qualified for.
Motorbikes: Three sub catagories.
A1 - a motorcycle under 125cc and less than 11Kw with power to weight ratio no greater than 0.1Kw per Kg. Minimum age Eligibility (to take tests) 17 years old.
A2 - a motorcycle of any capacity, but less than 35Kw, with power to weight ratio no greater than 0.2Kw per Kg. Minumum age eligibility (to take tests)19 years old.
A3 - Any Motorcycle, of any capacity, any weight. 'Unrestricted' Ride what you like entitlement. Minimum age Eligibility (to take tests) 24 years old, OR if holder of A2 entitlement, age upon having held A2 for two years.
Ie; if you gain A2 entitlement, and hold it two years, you get early eligibility to do the A3 tests. JUST eligibility to TAKE A3 tests early. You want that entitlement, you still have to take the tests, even if you have taken test before to get A2.
They are now, essentially three almost independent catagories; like a car licence, bus licence and lorry licence. Car licence never 'matures' to become a lorry licence; so neither does an A1 bike licence ever become anything but an A1. You want that entitlement group; only way to get it is take the tests for it. end of story.
Until beginning of last year; the system was different. We Still had the A1 licence; but we didn't have A2 or A3. Instead we just had 'A',. the unrestricted ride what you like entitlement, and the restricted 'A>25Kw until dd/mm/20yy'.
The Age eligibility for the ride what you like A catagory was 21 years old; but has gone up, now you have to be 24.
The A>25Kw, you could do at 17, and was a the Full A entitlement, but with a 25Kw power restriction, that lasted till date they printed on the licence; two years from date of passing tests. At which point that restriction 'expired'.
But, old news, and irrelevent to you, as that system is history. And I mention it only as it probably explains some of the conflicting stories you have been getting.
Ie once opon a time, you could take the motorbike tests at 17 (or any other age above that, for that matter), and get a 'restricted' licence, and magically, two years later, that became the ride what you like licence, without having to do anything else.
Now; 17 years old you can do A1, and little else. 19, you can go for A2; 24 you can go for A3, essentially different classes of licence, like car, bus and lorry.
Oh Kay. Tests.
CBT? Compulsary Basic Training. T- Training, NOT test. Compulsary, you have to do it. Basic? It is. Essentially its your first 'Lesson' on a motorbike; and you get a certificate for completing it 'satisfactorily'. Thats the DL196, or CBT Cert. And its NOT a 'Licence'. But you have to have one, to 'validate' the provisional entitlement of your licence. DL196 has a validity period of two years; if you dont pasa a motorcycle test in that time... well, what you playing at REALLY, ought to be ample time to Learn... but, if you dont, and you want to carry on having lessons... you have to re-do the CBT to keep your provisional entitlement valid.
NOW... you are screaming "Yeah But" and trying to tell me that some-one, every-one even has told you that CBT is a 125 licence?
No, it ISN'T. Its a not even particularly pretty little piece of paper, with orange DSA logo in the corner, that says you done your first lesson. Your licence is your licence; thing with your mug shot on it, and the bit of paper that DVLA send you with that that has lots of boxes and codes no one can understand on it.
THAT is what lets you ride or drive ANYTHING... and the code on ther that lets you ride a 125 is the afore mentioned A1 entitlement, gained form passing the tests to get that catagory.
Provisional entitlement, gained by filling out form on line or in the post office and sending cheque to DVLA, validated by CBT cert MERELY lets you 'LEARN' take lessons.
But we have a loop-hole... rather daft one if you think about it, but still there.
Because you cant carry a passenger on provisional entitlement on a motorbike, and because you can only be supervised by DSA approved instructor on another bike; and because it can be quite traumatic for instructors watching newbies who dont do as they are told, crash infront of thier eyes; (means a high rate of instructor resignations; costs on the NHS for trauma councelling; difficulty in finding more riders to train as instructors; it's not good, really!)...
They Let Learner Motorcyclists.... out on thier own.... Before Tests!
Scary. VERY scary. Most dangerouse form of motorised transport; AND only one they let completely unqualified numpties take to the roads on.
Idea, is basically so you can 'Practice' for tests. With small benefit when you crash... instructors don't get splattered with your blood, or even have to witness the carnage, and dont end up in casualty shaking, waiting for a diazipan fix.
(Actually, its a 'legacy'; up until about twenty years ago, it wasn't deemed 'practical' to supervise a Learner-Motorcyclist via radio. Sets were too big and too expensive and too unreliable; so they just let em out on thier own to learn by trial and a lot of error, usually! So we still have that facility. Bit daft, but can, IF you use it prudently and recognise that L-Plating is just that, so you can learn, and practice for tests, and NOT a licence, be quite useful.)
To limit the amount of carnage some-what, they DO put some restrictions on what you might ride unsupervised, on provisional entitlement, and that's basically same machine restrictions as for the A1 licence; 125cc, 11Kw, 0.1Kw/Kg, plus no passengers, plus usual learner restrictions, like no motorways.
Rather makes a mockery of having an A1 licence catagory, if they will let you ride same damn thing without taking tests on L's, and most people will say they don't see the point in it, BUT... it can be useful, and main use is that the tests to get it are cheaper than re-doing a CBT, to carry on riding around an unqualified numpty on L's, and you can do the practical tests on the 125cc bike you have been riding around to practice on; so you dont HAVE to take formal lessons, or very many of them.
A2, and A3... same tests, but you have to take them on a bike meeting test requrements; deemed 'representative' of the entitlement by the DSA. Which I am not going to try and quote from memory as I have a feeling that they slipped in some deferred changes' to them this January... but BASICALLY you have to take the tests for the A2 or A3 on a 'big-bike', which you CANNOT ride before passing tests, unless under supervision of a DSA instructor; which pretty much means you have to do a 'course' to get the licence.
Route to a licence.
1/ CBT - First lesson then whatever practice/training you want after
2/ Theory/Hazard test for MOTORCYCLE - its different test for different groups. Car thoery dont count for anythig but car licence, motorcycle theory anything but motorcycle licence. Only one test for all Motorcycle groups, use it towards A1, A2 or A3. costs £32 from memory, pass cert valid for two years.
3/ Module 1 - 'Off-Road' practical. Off-Road doesn't mean going Moto-Crossing or dirt riding with the examiner... dont laugh we HAVE had newbs that thought that! Its a tennis court for want of a better description; and you have to show the examiner you can wheel the bike around, between white lines, pretending to be a garage, and not forget to put the stand down and stuff; then go weave through some cones, show you can do a 30mph 'swerve' and an e-stop, and thats pretty much it. costs £15. YOU provide the bike, meeting test requirements for licence you want. So your own L-Plate 125 for an A1, school bike, if you are doing an A2 or A3.
4/ Mod 2 - 'On-Road' practical. Round the houses, followed by examiner, just like a car test. turn left, turn right, take the third exit, kind of thing, in real traffic, for about half an hour; try not to break any road laws, knock anyone over or fall off, remember to turn your head so examiner sees you make proper 'observations'... job done. Again, on bike meeting test requirements for licence you want, you provide, your own or a schools. Test costs £75, I think.
Mod 1 & Mod 2 HAVE to be taken under the same test scheme; so if youwant an A2 licence, you have to take A2 Mod 1 and Mod 2. You cant do Mod 1 on a 125 under A1 rules, then turn up and try doing Mod 2 on an A3 bike for an A3 licence.
A LOT to take in, but its not that complex. and here and now is, you are 21.
If you start with CBT, you may ride a 125 unsupervised on L's, for as long as CBT cert is valid, but its not a licence, and its supposed to only be so you can practice for tests. and they aren't particularly demanding tests at that. I mean car drivers can pass the damn things, so any-one ought to be able to really!
You are eligible to test for either an A1 or A2 licence. But not an A3.
If you want to get a 125, and they ARE useful little machines and propper motorbikes, often as fast as anything else is legally allowed to go in this country; well, you could ride it about pretty much indefinitely, never taking tests, just repeating CBT every two years, and many do do just that.
Daft; most dangerouse form of motorised transport, and no qualification; but that aside; if you buy a 125 you can take A1 tests on it, and they total, I think £121.50, pretty much price of one repeat CBT course. If you planned to ride on L's until you could get the A3 licence straight off, at 24, you would have to repeat CBT, as its more than two years away; so doing A1, may be worth the doing of. And what the heck, if you cant pass the damn tests on your own 125, for cost of DSA test fees only, then take the hint, you need to improve your riding! And, while dissapointing to fail, Hey! loosing £15 of test fee on a 125 test, is damn site less gauling than loosing £15 worth of test fee, plus £150 worth of bike hire and instructor to get to test center on A2 or A3 eligible bike!
A2. If you dived in the deep end and went for A2 licence straight off; Schools prices vary, and quite widely; but ball-park, reckon on about £200 a day, for training and bike hire. Courses are ball-park about £1000, but depends how many days training you may need and how much they include in the fees. Some copurses will be inclusive, and include price of CBT and all test fees and bike hire in them, others may only be for so many days training and bike hire; so make sure when you compare prices, you compare like with like.
Starting from cold; chances are you are going to need more training than some-one who's got a bit of experience; so probably one of the more expensive courses, that would probably include CBT in the package.
£1000 or so then, might get a you an A2 licence. That licence would let you then go ride a 45bhp bike. Almost no 600 or bigger sports bikes are or may be made A2 eligible; you would be looking more at middleweight, 500/600cc tourers or commuters. And THAT is all that licence would ever let you ride.
Early eligibility for A3? Well, at 21, you'd be 23 and however many months past 21 you are now, plus however many months took you to get A2 in the bag... probably NOT going to let you get an A3 licence entitlement many days before you could simply waiting for your 24th birthday.
AND, would mean another course to take A3 tests. If you had got your A2, probably a cheaper course; and if you have already gained a full motorcycle licence, either A1 or A2, having passed CBT and Theory, you wouldn't have to re-do them; so it would just be the two Mod tests over on more powerful bike. Maybe, two days of training, and tests? £400-£500 or so 'extra' over first course.
So choices.
1/ Do CBT prtetend to be a learner for ever, or at least until old enough to do A3 licence straight off, repeating CBT every two years, until you pass a test.
2/ Get a bit smart; Do CBT, get 125, take tests to get A1 licence. Ditch the L's and not have to re-do CBT ever, or waste the money paying for them, and be able to do courses for higher licences without having to worry about getting Theory in first, and with confidence you have passed tests once, you are a qualified rider, just got to re-do on larger bike.
3/ Find big money; do A2 course here and now. Get middleweight commuter/tourer. Could be as much as you ever really need from a bike; no need to do another tests if you dont want. But is expensive. And only half way to ride what you like licence.
A3, here and now is not on the menu; but of a goal; well, you will have to do a course to get it, when you are older. CBT & L's but no more, wont help you much towards it. Doing A1 or A2 might give you a bit ore of a boost. But A2, wont give you much more of a leg up than doing A1, just let you have slightly more inspiring machinary to ride in the mean time.
Advice? Well, If you have the idea of getting a bike, plan on getting a licence.
If you have the idea of 'just' doing the 125 thing on L-Plates until old enough to get the full fat unrestricted licence... dont. Get a licence.
Choice then between getting a 125 and going for an A1 licence; which has merit of being reasonably cheap, and getting you on the road, soonest. Or going for an A2 course; that will take a chunk of money to put licence in your pocket before you can buy a bike; so wont get you on the road as soon, or as cheaply. But you get a bit more inspiring bit of tackle to tuck between your legs.
What's more important? Time? Money? Performance?
And can you afford ANY of it? that's probably the bottom line! Whatever you may want, end of the day you have to pay for it.
My wallet makes a lot of decisions like this for me, very easy!
Remember; bike prices are only very small part of what it will cost you. You'll need a helmet, some riding gear, and if you want to hang on to your bike, locks and security to chain it down; as well as tax, insurance, MOT, and often the biggest cost on most vehicles, fuel. ____________________ My Webby'Tef's-tQ, loads of stuff about my bikes, my Land-Rovers, and the stuff I do with them!
Current Bikes:'Honda VF1000F' ;'CB750F2N' ;'CB125TD ( 6 3 of em!)'; 'Montesa Cota 248'. Learner FAQ's:= 'U want to Ride a Motorbike! Where Do U start?' |
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| Rogue_Shadow |
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 Rogue_Shadow World Chat Champion
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 Posted: 11:14 - 03 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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| expat200 |
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 expat200 Borekit Bruiser

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| sabian92 |
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 sabian92 World Chat Champion
Joined: 21 Oct 2012 Karma :    
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 Posted: 23:31 - 04 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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It fucking staggers me than the government are all "BIKES ARE DANGEROUS HURR DURR" then immediately forget you're legally allowed to ride one at 70mph with precisely fuck all training apart from "here's the brake, here's the twisty thing that makes you go, now sign here". Not even a theory test!
To OP:
Yes, you NEED a CBT or you can't ride anything legally, even under instruction (unless you're sitting a CBT, anyway). You get caught with no CBT, you gon get raped by the police. Not only that your insurance won't be valid (as a term is you need a CBT) so you'll get fucked on that as well.
At 16, you can ride a 50cc hairdryer on wheels on a CBT. No motorways, no passengers and you must have L(oser) plates. You can also sit an AM licence, which from what I gather lets you lose the L plates and that's it. Not sure, so few bother anyway.
At 17 your CBT automatically upgrades so you can ride a 125. Again, no motorways (even on a full car licence as you have a provisional bike licence - I'm 21, full car licence since I was 17, can drive on motorways but the Government deem it too dangerous to ride a motorcycle on them instead ), no passengers and you must have L plates. You can sit your A1 motorcycle entitlement at 17 which allows you to ride a 125 (no more) but on motorways, with a pillion and you lose the L plates. I recommend doing exactly none of those as they couldn't pull the skin off a rotted corpse even with 1 person on them. 2-up on a motorway? Fuck that.
At 19 you can do your A2 entitlement. 46.6hp maximum for 2 years. No bigger than that or again, the po-po will rape you and you'll lose your licence (potentially, depends how naughty you were and how many kittens you killed while doing so).
At 24 (or 2 years on an A2 licence, which ever comes first) you can do your unrestricted A entitlement. Do your mod 1/2, you can ride whatever you can afford to insure.
There. A short and easy guide. At the moment, being you're 21 you can go straight for your A2 as you don't need any previous experience (barring a CBT, you don't need to sit your A1 if you don't want to, and I recommend not bothering as you can't do anything extra useful with it over just a CBT). I reckon if you've got a CBT and been riding regularly for 3 months +, a week of intensive lessons to prepare you for Mod 1/2 and you'll probably pass. Depends how quickly you learn. |
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| TheSmiler |
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 TheSmiler World Chat Champion

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 pinkyfloyd Super Spammer

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 sabian92 World Chat Champion
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 Tamsin World Chat Champion

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| sidewinder |
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 sidewinder World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 14:10 - 05 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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I think the reason your can ride a bike will l's and be unsupervised is a size thing.a car hitting say another car at speed will cause a lot more damage than a bike. Maybe  |
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| Teflon-Mike |
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 Teflon-Mike tl;dr

Joined: 01 Jun 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 14:18 - 05 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
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First; ANY bike even a bludy push-bike is 'fast enough to kill you', if you are daft or unlucky enough. Shit, you can get killed tripping over a loose paving slab and falling against a kerb-stone!
Speed dont kill... stupidity kills... clumsiness kills... bad damn luck kills.
An engine may just help the stupid, clumsy or damn unlucky kill themselves more easily!
| sabian92 wrote: | I just can't fathom why the government think it's fine for bikes to be operated alone without much training but a car isn't when a car is less dangerous. |
You have offered opinion on unsupervised L-Plating, which on the whole, I have to agree with; it does seem rather ironic, that motorcycles, statistically the most likely motorised form of transport to result in death or injury, mile for mile, is the only form of transport, completely unqualified road-users are allowed to take to the roads on with absolutely no qualification.
But you have to differentiate between what the government may 'think' is sensible, and what they permit.
In fact, there is a very significant 'anti-bike' lobby within government... note government, this is not the same as 'parliament'. Without going into big debate on the workings of our legislative & administrative organisation; 'Government' is the entirity of the organisation, the 'Business'; 'Parliament' is merely the board of directors, elected by us the voting public, in same way share-holders elect the board to keep tabs on the non-elected, 'management' who in turn over see the chaps that do the work.
Within the halls of power, there is a significant lobby of un-elected administrators, who really just don't see the point in motorcycles, and could quite happily see them banned, outright, and its these people that draft proposed legislation for MP's to debate and potentially vote into law.
They have a point.
Less than 5% of taxed, road legal private vehicles are bikes; and annually they account for less than 1% of annual road miles. Over half of those miles, significantly purely leisure use; not actual essential or even useful, personal travel.
So we make up a very small % or road users, account for an even smaller % of road miles, and most of what we do, is just for fun, YET our little bit of fun accounts for something like 20% of motor accidents.
Ban the lot of us! Would effect less than 1 in 20 motorists; about, 10 million people, nationally. About a third of them are non enthusiast commuters on learner-legals, without a licence anyway. Of the remainder, about half are mainly leisure riders who don't use the bike for anything but pleasure.
Ban the lot? 3 million disgruntled non enthusiast commuters, who shrug, and buy an Oyster card. 3million annoyed leisure riders who, shrug, and say "Well I didn't use the bike THAT much anyway" or who say, "Effit--- I'll buy a trailer and just do track days"; and a bout 4 million more ardent riders, who, would probably be rather bludy militant; BUT? 4 million? Spread over the entire nation, a couple of dozen in each electoral constituency; MP's ent going to loose much sleep over loosing votes from it!
One fell swoop, road accidents and death rates cut by a fifth, with very negligible political back-lash. Seriousely? In the greater scheme of things, they worry more about a penny on petrol prices than they do about motorbike death rates! THAT is a political hot potatoe. Bikes ent.
Reason for unsupervised L-Plating? Well, its a legacy.
How do you teach a kid to ride a push bike? You don't get a five year old on a Tandum with duel controls, do you? No, you stick them in the saddle of something with stabilisers, give them a push and let them get on with it. when they are speeding aling with teh stabilisers skimming the pavement, you lift them up, or tale them off, and let them ride solo. You expect them to fall of a few times, so you stand there with the elastoplast ready, and tell them 'There There, I told you not to go so fast!" stick'em back together, stick'em back in the saddle, and let them try again.
And until about twenty years ago, that was pretty much the only way you could teach some-one to ride a motorcycle.
Wasn't until the 90's that modern electronics made radio supervision, practical, with smaller more portable, more reliable and more affordable radio sets. Think that the radio supervised DSA 'Persuit Test' was introduced in 1991; along with CBT; then DAS coming in around '96?
CBT when it was introduced, did a fantastic job of reducing accident rates amongst learner riders; setting a minimum 'standard' of competance, and was deemed a huge success.
Still not ideal, and still lobby in Gov't shaking thier heads, sceptically; but, maintaining a status quo... let it slide, give it some spin, hail it as a success.
Last year; 2013, 3rd Directive Licence Changes. According to the EU ruling, NO road user should be allowed on the road unsupervised, before passing recognised driving exam.
It is actually a contradiction of EU directive we have retained unsupervised L-Plating, and it was a bit of political appeasement, to get us to accept the stepped licence; and CYNICALLY, to appease the large proportion of car-driving, L-Plate commuters, or potential commuters, more likely to 'protest' outside parliament, the largest density of them being daily commuters into the London Emission Zone!
'Government' DONT think that unsupervised L-Plating is a 'good idea', they don't really think that motorcycles at ALL are a good idea... BUT, they tolerate them, for 'political expediency'.
Laws do NOT reflect Government opinion... they merely reflect what Politicians think people want, or will tolerate!
Meanwhile; while accident rate amongst 125 L-Platers is pretty high, death rate actually isn't. The Learner Restrictions are 'reasonable' to limit how fast the stupid, clumsy and unlucky can hurt themselves, and if they stick at it, they DO tend to learn pretty fast, maybe not what to do to survive, but at least what NOT to do to hurt themselves in a hurry.
Riding for ecconomics; on less inspiring machinary; they often ride regularly, and more sensibly, gaining experience reasonably well along the way. Unlike DAS newbies, who are often not riding for ecconomy, they are impatient thrill seekers looking for the fast track to get a new 'toy' to engage in new high adrenaline pass time, they engage in relatively infrequently; gaining little experience, other than going faster is more fun. THOSE are the riders most likely to get killed.
Unsupervised L-Plating, is an irony. But in greater scheme of things, its not such a bad thing. And personally? Given the 3rd Directive ruling, I think that they ought to have simply beefed up CBT a little, and 'deligated' A1 testing to CBT instructors, the way they did 'Part 1' Testing in the 80's; and hand out A1 pass certs instead of DL196 forms. Stick the tiddlers out there a little better trained without the Loonie Plates.
A2 & DAS? Well? Different kettle of fish, and looking a a persuit dogged by impatient thrill seeking leisure riders? Age is NO measure of 'maturity'! Far more 40+ adolescents out there riding like teenage loons on the latest hot snot sports-bikes they can afford now the mortyage is paid off, than there are real teen-age loons, on clapped out old kit thats thier only way to work, whose high adrenaline antics tend to be slightly more curtailed by high insurance premiums and expensive tyre costs!
Stepped licence system? Recognise the huge difference between a CG125 and a Hysabusa? Yup; good idea. But of you can prove your competance? What difference does your age make?
I'd be far more comfortable sticking a 19 year old on an XJ900, he wants as comfy every day transport, and a bit of recreational touring come the Uni holidays, than I would sticking a 40 something Sales Manager with a company Mondeo on an R6, straight after test.
So, set the minimum age; hand out A1s for a better CBT course, then have a stages training scheme without any fast-tracks or short cuts. Say, 24hours of Supervised road-training covering set sylabus, to get Cert to make rider eligible for A2, another 48 hours Supervised training to a sylabus, to get eligibility cert to do A3. Any age; prove your competance, work for your licence. No short cuts; no fast track, no 'crash courses'; you want the top tier licence, you work your way up to it, like any-one else; fast or slow as you want or can go; but same scheme for every-one.
BUT... Beurocracy, by implication, has to lack reason; "The Law is an Ass... (as in a mongrel) but it is still the law" We work with what we got.
And what we got? Ent brilliant, but could be a damn site worse, and could be NOTHING at all, if that 'opinion' in whitehall lost its patience! ____________________ My Webby'Tef's-tQ, loads of stuff about my bikes, my Land-Rovers, and the stuff I do with them!
Current Bikes:'Honda VF1000F' ;'CB750F2N' ;'CB125TD ( 6 3 of em!)'; 'Montesa Cota 248'. Learner FAQ's:= 'U want to Ride a Motorbike! Where Do U start?' |
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 Tamsin World Chat Champion

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