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An observer posted:Your best bet is probably Canada. Anywhere else worth moving to has insane levels of restrictions on immigration. You can tell I've spent a good amount of time researching this I dunno what you were looking at but Canada is pretty tough for most people. Australia's much more open; do a two-year masters' in something on the Skilled Occupations Shortage list, collect a two-year bridging visa to find work, get a job in your field, permanent residence will soon follow. I looked into Canada because although there's the weather (I'm from Florida) it's a lot closer to home, but I'd need either a PhD or a wife to make that happen in my field (education). Been my plan for several years now (spent a year studying in Perth when I was in college), currently working in Japan and socking away money for the move. I just started driving a car here and have had lots of near-misses, it's like I'm invisible to Japanese drivers (driving a hulking silver Mark II around). Can't wait to get my motorcycle in a few weeks...
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 12:28 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:55 |
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Man, I don't know, I really wouldn't say a masters' is something you can easily get. Especially considering you'd go into some mondo debt for it. It was 50k for one year for my bf. It seems most of the things on the shortage list are engineers, and let me tell you, that's really really loving hard. It's not for everybody. But anyway, that's a whole bunch of D&D that doesn't belong here.
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 16:27 |
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Clevermuldoon posted:Was riding in the rain the other day. Tried to pull into a parking lot but turned way too suddenly. The bike started wobbling and I did the rational thing and panic grabbed the front brake and the bike tipped over. With little wobbles the gas is your friend. Not a lot, mind, but a bit of throttle will usually help you out.
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 19:08 |
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nsaP posted:With little wobbles the gas is your friend. Not a lot, mind, but a bit of throttle will usually help you out. Thanks, I'll try to keep that in mind next time.
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 22:25 |
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Put a bit of pressure on the clutch and slip slip slip. Keeps things smooth.
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 22:27 |
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nsaP posted:With little wobbles the gas is your friend. Not a lot, mind, but a bit of throttle will usually help you out. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvHtChodNk0
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 23:11 |
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Going into the dirt sorts it out too when the tires no longer have enough traction to highside you!
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# ? Oct 22, 2012 23:46 |
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I still don't understand that video. Or how everything wasn't upside down at the end.
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# ? Oct 23, 2012 00:05 |
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Ziploc posted:how everything wasn't upside down at the end. Luck, I suspect. I would have been thinking "I should get to the soft stuff before it bucks me" and then would have been surprised at not coming off.
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# ? Oct 23, 2012 00:13 |
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Psh, that's how I premix the gas in my scooter.
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# ? Oct 23, 2012 06:22 |
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Rugoberta Munchu posted:Psh, that's how I premix the gas in my scooter. That's called postmix
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# ? Oct 23, 2012 13:48 |
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That's after I dump it.
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# ? Oct 23, 2012 20:26 |
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clutchpuck posted:Luck, I suspect. Clearly he watched "Wobble and Weave with Murray Walker": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvsDIq3WwVA I loving love Murray and his communication style.
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# ? Oct 23, 2012 20:38 |
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Was just looking through some of the salvaged parts (small trinkets, effectively), and I found the tacho, which kind of proves I wasn't actually doing anything stupid: In fourth, that would be like 63km/h. I think my left knee collected it on the way over, de-gloving it in the process. Not being on a bike has been killing me lately, I had an evil friend that offered me to borrow his Busa and go to Phillip Island with him and some friends for the MotoGP at Phillip Island. Unfortunately (and luckily, he hit a bird at 160 en route and one of the other guys wrecked his GSXR on the Great Ocean Road) I declined, I'm not in any shape to do a long trip..
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# ? Nov 14, 2012 09:56 |
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MotoMind posted:Clearly he watched "Wobble and Weave with Murray Walker": Is that even a thing any more on motorcycles? I love how the solution is to tuck in.
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# ? Nov 14, 2012 17:02 |
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The Uly likes to do it especially when I have luggage on. If I lean forward and put more weight on the front wheeel, it stops. I've mostly tuned it out by upping rear preload by a couple clicks over what the manual recommends.
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# ? Nov 14, 2012 18:56 |
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Keep in mind that the bikes of the period generally had much less stiff frames than modern bikes. It's not nearly as much of an issue these days, wobble in particular, unless your bike has a very twitchy setup.
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# ? Nov 14, 2012 20:50 |
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KozmoNaut posted:Keep in mind that the bikes of the period generally had much less stiff frames than modern bikes. It's not nearly as much of an issue these days, wobble in particular, unless your bike has a very twitchy setup. With goons, wobble is always an issue.
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# ? Nov 14, 2012 23:35 |
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I was in my 'big' accident back in april of 2010. Maybe a little old to be posting about but toward the end of the post it'll make a little more sense. I was out on a sunday afternoon and for whatever reason I decided to put on actual safety gear. Around here (Chicago USA) it's typical to ride around in jeans and a tshirt with no helmet but that day I decided to put on a helmet, leather jacket, pants and gloves and boots. About a 2 miles from my house a child--a 10 year old child on an ATV drove out from a cornfield into traffic and broad sided me. He hit the left side of my bike where my foot was, tearing the control loose and wrapping it around my ankle effectively attaching me to the bike via the shifter rod from the peg to the transmission. My bike went down on the left side pinning my leg under the bike. Injuries: I ended up with a left foot that was broken in six places and quite a bit of road rash, bumps and bruises. Equipment: The doctors all commented that my protective gear all worked--especially the boots. I was wearing "engineer" style biker boots with the small chrome ring on the side. That little ring kept my ankle from being grated away on the pavement. The jacket and pants were loose fitting Harley leather stuff that may have worked, but the jacket slid up under my arms and my belly was rashed up pretty bad. Lesson learned: Loose fitting safety gear probably sucks. The armored parts of the pants and jacket hit the roadway then immediately rotated away so they couldn't do their job. Bike: Approx 9000 in damage and they repaired it against my wishes. It turns out the dealer I had it repaired at was desperate for money and was pushing to repair the bike. Had the insurance company totalled the bike the shop wouldn't have gotten any money for doing the repair work. A month after the bike repair was finished the shop closed their doors for good. Lesson Learned: No one plans on getting in an accident and it happened to me when I least expected it. The Coincidence That Still Bug Me To This Day: I hardly ever wore protective gear and it was luck I had a helmet on that day (I always wear one now--lesson learned). They did 5 CT scans trying to figure out if they could pull my helmet off. Those CT scans uncovered some suspicious spots that ended up being the very early stages of cancer. I never hit my head in the accident because of the way I 'slid' down so I don't think those CT scans would have been done had I not been wearing a helmet that day. I'm cancer free now, or at least all the scans and chemical markers are coming back negative after the surgery.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 07:03 |
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How'd the kid turn out? Also that's the ultimate in mixed blessings.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 07:07 |
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Rugoberta Munchu posted:How'd the kid turn out? Also that's the ultimate in mixed blessings. Not a scratch. He didn't even leave the seat of the ATV.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 07:22 |
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Glad to hear you're cancer free and everyone ended up ok.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 16:23 |
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Well, guess I'm a real biker now. I just had my very first off going round a roundabout. Map with comedy points of interest. I was coming down from the single carriageway bit of the A65 and turning right onto the A660. Leant over into the corner and the back end felt a bit squirrely (around point A) but nothing I'd not felt before and then the bike just slid out from underneath me coming to a rest about point B. Damage to the bike is a scraped exhaust, snapped off rear brake pedal, scraped up plastic radiator cover fairing thing*, completely destroyed bar end and finally the larger upper radiator has sheared two of the three pieces of metal holding it onto the frame. I'm completely fine, all my gear is undamaged, even the bloody sandwich I had in my Kriega is fine. I'm still not entirely sure how it happened, I'd only been riding about five minutes and wasn't exactly attacking the corner (probably about 15 / 20 mph), the road was pretty wet as it'd just rained recently and it does get a lot of trucks across it. I'm thinking a combination of cold tires, the wet or maybe some spilt fuel that the rain had lifted that I missed? I rode the bike about 10 miles home afterwards, it seems to be okay apart from the obvious damage mentioned above. *Seriously what the gently caress are these things called? I've been googling them for about an hour and not found them!
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 17:05 |
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ReformedNiceGuy posted:the road was pretty wet as it'd just rained recently and it does get a lot of trucks across it. I'm thinking a combination of Almost certainly spilled diesel fuel lifted by the rain. Roads are slipperiest when its been raining for about 30 minutes.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 17:08 |
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Now I want a bloody sandwich.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 19:17 |
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Rugoberta Munchu posted:Now I want a bloody sandwich. But he didn't get any blood on his sandwich.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 19:55 |
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Bummer, but at least it was a slow one. My biggest crash was pretty similar I think.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 20:01 |
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ReformedNiceGuy posted:Well, guess I'm a real biker now. I just had my very first off going round a roundabout. Diesel. You don't usually smell it unless it's a slick of the size produced by a leaky tractor and there's no other traffic around. High pressure fuel systems in diesel cars plus the old school, brimmed-tank-on-an-HGV means more and more spills these days.
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# ? Nov 21, 2012 21:07 |
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Cheers for the replies, is there anything I could have done when I felt the rear start to break loose? Would grabbing some front brake have stood the bike back up or just turned the lowside into a high?
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 08:34 |
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Saga posted:Diesel... Bet it's this, especially on the roundabout. Our local sewage lorries always fill the tanks completely before they set out in the morning. Such that when they go round corners too fast* diesel pours out of the tank breather onto the road. Two days ago I nearly lost it on a junction near home, some kind of commercial vehicle had obviously sprung a fairly hefty oil leak and sprayed a mist of oil over 2+ miles of the coast road. Bad enough that I reported it to the rozzers. *Which they do constantly, because they get to gently caress off home when they've done their quota (and still get paid the same) ReformedNiceGuy posted:Cheers for the replies, is there anything I could have done when I felt the rear start to break loose? Would grabbing some front brake have stood the bike back up or just turned the lowside into a high? Grabbing any brake is almost always the worst idea, so is closing the throttle at all it suddenly shifts weight forward, which may end up low-siding you. The answer to almost any brown-trousers moment on a motorcycle is keep calm, keep the throttle steady (or maybe even increase it) and pray. ReelBigLizard fucked around with this message at 09:13 on Nov 22, 2012 |
# ? Nov 22, 2012 09:06 |
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e: ReelBigLizard said it more eloquently.
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 09:14 |
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ReelBigLizard posted:... keep the throttle steady (or maybe even increase it) and pray. Cheers ReelBigLizard, this is exactly what I did. I've had the back end break loose on me before and the above has always cured it. Guess I was just unlucky / didn't react quick enough / prayed to the wrong diety this time. I'll definitely be treating wet roads with a bit more respect in the future though! In other news I'd forgotten how crap driving the car in rush hour is.
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 09:57 |
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When in doubt, throttle out!
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 10:33 |
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Old chap.
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 13:00 |
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KozmoNaut posted:
We need a "keep calm and throttle on".
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 19:38 |
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 19:57 |
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Z3n posted:We need a "keep calm and throttle on". It's been done already: (Although I'm not quite sure about the last two)
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 19:57 |
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 20:14 |
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Those are all excellent.
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# ? Nov 22, 2012 20:37 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:55 |
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Apologies for the very long post. Same thing caused my first mildly scary crash, mixed with wet leaves and full beams. I was approaching a roundabout, didn't know that because there was poor visibility and the person who'd taken the roundabout (at a slight bend in the road) had gone straight over it at high speed with full beams. Turns out the fellow behind me in his car was a biker, and said something along the lines of "Obviously a novice (will get to this later), full beams in your face, at that roundabout, I knew you were gonna go off". Biker paramedic that came (I felt woozy and had a sore neck, both mostly repaired with a cigarette but the fellow still insisted I ring NHS 24 who insisted on sending him) also said it was notorious, apparently First and whatever other local bus company is there use all their old crap buses on that route, not to mention it's near a big container place. You'd think if they have a rough idea who the culprits are the polis would be able to do something. I was applying some back brake at the time because I got completely disorientated by the fella with (aftermarket, I think from a World War 2 flak gun) full beams blasting through the mini-roundabout, and it locked up on the diesel and leaves, what should I have done? Let off the brake completely and applied mild power with some clutch control into the turn? Got advised by the biker behind me that I should have tried to stay in tyre trails, as opposed to the centre in conditions like that, have applied that lesson and have found I've had more grip in poo poo conditions, anything else I should be doing? The thing I was also gonna ask is in relation to that guys comment. He'd been behind me earlier, and I'd got completely spatially disorientated. I was on a dual carriageway and couldn't keep track of the cats eyes or really see what lane I was in, the red and green cats eyes seemingly appeared out of nowhere, looking back I must have been weaving quite badly, and after I'd got off the carriageway, I was still having to slow down quite a bit when people came by with full beams because I'd get completely disorientated. Other than taking a break (which I would have, but the road I was on didn't have any safe places to stop until, funnily enough, after the roundabout I went off at.) is there anything else I can do to avoid it? I'm also going to buy new contacts, as having to have the visor cracked open lest my glasses fog up probably didn't help. Wootcannon fucked around with this message at 05:00 on Nov 23, 2012 |
# ? Nov 23, 2012 04:53 |