J
John Forrest Tomlinson
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On Tue, 30 May 2006 07:28:19 -0700, "GaryG" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>"John Forrest Tomlinson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 30 May 2006 03:27:43 GMT, foots <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >Well, slamming my head against asphalt at 15 mph with a helmut on and
>> >not having one scratch (on the head) vs slamming my leg and butt and
>> >shoulder against the same asphalt at the same velocity at the same
>> >time resulting in scrapes and burns, at every contact point, that went
>> >thru both layers of skin and one layer of expensive bib shorts is
>> >enough evidence for me.
>>
>> It's pretty clear that wearing a helmet can prevent scrapes and such.
>
>They why wouldn't you wear a helmet for that reason alone?
The helmet is another thing to carry around, keep clean, mess up hair,
etc. And can be hot. Scrape and bruises are rare and not necessarily
worth preventing.
I think you could wear soft-padding like skiers and BMX riders do on
the road bike -- that'd help prevent scrapes and bruises too. Do you?
I can send you some links to places to get them if you don't already.
>
>> That's quite different than the claims of helmets frequently
>> preventing serious injury and death.
>
>Most of us who wear them assume that they mitigate risk...at least to a
>certain extent. This is similar to other risk mitigation devices in our
>lives (e.g., seat belts). Given that they do mitigate risk, why not wear
>one?
Because the risk is remote. Wearing a strong helmet in a car will
also mitigate risk -- even with seatbelts. Given that, why not wear
one?
JT
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wrote:
>"John Forrest Tomlinson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 30 May 2006 03:27:43 GMT, foots <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >Well, slamming my head against asphalt at 15 mph with a helmut on and
>> >not having one scratch (on the head) vs slamming my leg and butt and
>> >shoulder against the same asphalt at the same velocity at the same
>> >time resulting in scrapes and burns, at every contact point, that went
>> >thru both layers of skin and one layer of expensive bib shorts is
>> >enough evidence for me.
>>
>> It's pretty clear that wearing a helmet can prevent scrapes and such.
>
>They why wouldn't you wear a helmet for that reason alone?
The helmet is another thing to carry around, keep clean, mess up hair,
etc. And can be hot. Scrape and bruises are rare and not necessarily
worth preventing.
I think you could wear soft-padding like skiers and BMX riders do on
the road bike -- that'd help prevent scrapes and bruises too. Do you?
I can send you some links to places to get them if you don't already.
>
>> That's quite different than the claims of helmets frequently
>> preventing serious injury and death.
>
>Most of us who wear them assume that they mitigate risk...at least to a
>certain extent. This is similar to other risk mitigation devices in our
>lives (e.g., seat belts). Given that they do mitigate risk, why not wear
>one?
Because the risk is remote. Wearing a strong helmet in a car will
also mitigate risk -- even with seatbelts. Given that, why not wear
one?
JT
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