URGHDo articles such as these really turn folks off of cycling??
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...-30417,00.html
AARGGHHHHH
URGHDo articles such as these really turn folks off of cycling??
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...-30417,00.html
AARGGHHHHH
Well, one silly little study does not change the fact that I feel safer in my helmet, especially since I've actually had some accidents with some hard blows to the head and felt perfectly fine without causing any excessive "rotation."
Di..yep.
I'm realllyyyyy glad i had my helmet on back in Oct!!!!!Hey, although noone likes having an "oops, oh dear", you get a nice new helmet
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They cause more harm than do good? WHAT??? That's the most ridiculous thing I've heard. I don't think my helmet caused me more harm than good when I went down hard doing 18mph on the road last year. In fact, had I not been wearing it, the crack of my skull on the pavement would surely have left someone a nice mess to clean up. As it was, I just had a headache.
Stupid article!![]()
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Cervelo P2C (tri bike)
Bianchi Eros (commuter/touring road bike)
1983 Motobecane mixte (commuter/errand bike)
Cannondale F5 mountain bike
I don't think it's the "media" per se, it's the idiotic organizations that promote this kind of stuff. Never heard of it in bicycling before, but they're all over the motorcycling world.
Just yesterday, our local paper made a point of emphasizing that a helmet had saved a rider from serious head injuries in a hit/skip.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Was the Australian study looking at the helmets with the pointed "aero" back sides?
I've read things about how those can cause your head to rotate in a crash, but that's one of those very rare occaisions. Certainly flukey enough that no-one would damm all helmets because of it!
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
I had heard something similar to this before, but I don't buy the statement that helmets do more harm than good. I think the issue is with some of the "aerodynamic" shaped helmets that have parts that can "catch" on the pavement in a crash as opposed to a more round helmet that wouldn't do that. If the helmet catches on the ground I can see where it would cause extra rotation. I think it was somewhere on www.helmets.org that recommended looking for a helmet with a very rounded shape to avoid this issue. As for helmets discouraging people from riding, I don't buy that either. Especially with as lightweight as helmets are now (my first helmet as a kid was one of those hard-shell Jammer ones that weren't all that well ventilated either, and things have improved a lot since then!). I think I'd be nervous riding without mine.
2011 Surly LHT
1995 Trek 830