2020 Honda CRF450L Review

Along the familiar curves of Angeles Crest Highway, the CRF manages competence, but not necessarily breakneck speeds, extreme lean angles, or neck-bending acceleration. This is, after all, a dirt-focused motorcycle that happens to be street legal, not the other way around. But veering off the beaten path and exploring a fire trail opens up a whole new world, especially in the vastness of some 700,000 acres of wilderness. Suddenly the suspension, which seemed a bit soft on the road, is plush enough to soak up giant ruts and cracks in the earth. The engine, which felt somewhat anemic on pavement, now shreds the trail and shoots you forward as fast as you feel comfortable going—and sometimes, even faster. It’s dramatic, this shift from tarmac to trail, and exactly the kind of escape that shows you the transformative power motorcycling can hold.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Driver charged over fatal bike crash

A 70-year-old male driver will face court in March charged over a fatal motorcycle crash in Dubbo on New year’s Eve 2019.

NSW Police say the driver’s ute collided with a motorcycle about 9pm on the Mitchell Highway in Maryvale, just north of Wellington.

A male rider in his 20s died at the scene.

NSW Police say that due to the circumstances of the crash, he has still not been formally identified.

The utility caught fire and was extinguished by NSW Rural Fire Service.

The driver and his female passenger suffered injuries and were airlifted to Orange Base Hospital.

Orana Mid-Western Police District officers and the Crash Investigation Unit began investigating the crash.

Police say that, “following inquiries”, a 70-year-old man attended Orange Police Station yesterday (26 January 2020) and was arrested.

He was charged with:

He was granted conditional bail to appear at Wellington Local Court on 19 March 2020.

Our sincere condolences to the rider’s family and friends. We will follow this matter through the courts.

Meanwhile, NSW Police advise that no charges have yet been laid over the fatality involving a Kia Rio and six motorcycles in Kyogle on 20 October 2019.

The killed rider and five injured riders and pillions were members of the Sons Of The Southern Cross motorcycle club.

Car ploughed into riders monthKyogle crash aftermath (Image: Seven News)

Mobility scooter rider dies

An 80-year-old man has died in hospital today (27 January 2020) after his mobility scooter collided with a utility in Sydney’s last Wednesday.

Police say the scooter drove out of a driveway on Milton Street, Granville, on to the road where it was hit by a VW Amarok.

The rider was treated at the scene by NSW Ambulance paramedics before being taken to Westmead Hospital in a critical condition.

The 39-year-old male driver of the utility was breath tested at the scene and returned a negative result.

We trust this will not be recorded in the statistics as a fatal motorcycle or moped crash.

Our sincere condolences to the scooter rider’s family and friends.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Blow by blow reports from Glendale SX Triple Crown bouts


450 Main 1

James Stewart was the first rider into turn one as the opening 450 Main got underway but Zach Osborne emerged out the other side as the early race leader. Eli Tomac then moved up to second place and Ken Roczen into third. 

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Osborne Roczen Starts SX PHX Kardy

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Osborne Roczen Starts SX PHX Kardy

Ken Roczen piling the pressure on Zach Osborne

Roczen then pushed his way past Tomac and was all over Osborne.

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Osborne Roczen Multiple SX PHX Kardy

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Osborne Roczen Multiple SX PHX Kardy

Osborne goes down

Osborne then went down, his pursuers only narrowly avoiding running him over.

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Osborne Crash Multiple SX PHX Kardy

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Osborne Crash Multiple SX PHX Kardy

Riders scramble to avoid the downed Osborne

Up front it was now game on with a Roczen versus Tomac battle. Adam Cianciarulo had kept his nose clean over the opening couple of laps and started closing in on Tomac but Eli responded and pulled away from Cianciarulo as the race progressed, staying close enough behind Roczen to maintain pressure on the German.

By half-race distance Tomac was all over Roczen and started to put his Kawasaki alongside the Honda.

In the final laps though Roczen proved to have Tomac’s measure and pulled clear to take victory by two-seconds.

Adam Cianciarulo rounded out the podium ahead of Malcolm Stewart and Jason Anderson.  Chad Reed finished 18th.

450 Main 2

Cooper Webb had the inside line to turn one in the second bout but Adam Cianciarulo came in hard and skittled him out of the way, a punted Webb then took out Justin Bogle who then barged into Zach Osborne as the last link in that chain reaction that had been started by Cianciarulo.

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Starts SX PHX Kardy

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Starts SX PHX Kardy

AMA Supercross Round Four

Eli Tomac had emerged with the lead from Cianciarulo out of turn one but Roczen then wasted no time moving up to second place.  Justin Bogle was down hurt which caused officials to stop the race so medical attention could be provided before the field came around to start lap two, a stricken Bogle still in the middle of the track.

From the re-start it was Ken Roczen with the early advantage over Webb, Plessinger, Cianciarulo and Tomac.

By the end of the second lap Roczen had a two-second advantage over Webb as Kawasaki team-mates Tomac and Cianciarulo pushed Plessinger back to fifth place, ahead of Jason Anderson and Blake Baggett. 

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Cianciarulo WebbMultiple SX PHX Kardy

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Cianciarulo WebbMultiple SX PHX Kardy

Adam Cianciarulo

Cianciarulo and Tomac then worked their way past Webb to make it a Kawasaki 2-3 but by half-race distance Ken Roczen had a five-second lead.  Cianciarulo then went down and had slipped to eighth by the time he was back up and running.

Jason Anderson got the better of Webb through the whoops to take third place before then coming under pressure from fellow KTM rider Blake Baggett.

Roczen the victor by seven-seconds over Tomac while Anderson rounded out the podium. Baggett got the better of Webb for fourth. Cianciarulo recovered to salvage a sixth place finish ahead of Brayton and Barcia.  Chad Reed came home in 19th position.

450 Main 3

Martin Davalos took the early lead after what was a messy start for most of the front runners in the final 450 Moto.

Jason Anderson made short work of Davalos early on lap two, Cooper Webb was in third ahead of Blake Baggett.  Ken Roczen, Eli Tomac and Adam Cianciarulo had been tripped up at turn one on the opening lap but were running in seventh and eighth while Chad Reed had been left on the deck in the melee.  The red flag then came out after Chris Blose went down hard in the whoops, riders were sent back to the gates for a full re-start.

Ken Roczen scored the holeshot off the re-start ahead of Cooper Webb and Jason Anderson. Eli Tomac almost jumped onto the back of Zach Osborne’s Husqvarna on the opening lap and dropped the Kawasaki, rejoining the action down in 13th position.

It only Tomac a few minutes to work his way back up to sixth place and his next target was now Kawasaki team-mate Adam Cianciarulo.

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Cianciarulo SX PHX Kardy

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Cianciarulo SX PHX Kardy

Adam Cianciarulo

Ken Roczen had a five-second lead by half-race distance ahead of Jason Anderson, who had moved past Cooper Webb and up into second position.

Both Kawasaki riders worked their way past Davalos, Cianciarulo then caught Webb and started challenging the #1 KTM for third. Cianciarulo took that third place with two-minutes left on the race clock. 60-seconds later though Cianciarulo went down real hard over the bars in the whoops, and from then could only watch from the sidelines as riders filed by.  Cooper Webb had got caught up a little on Cianciarulo’s bike which allowed Tomac to slip past and steal third place from the defending champion.

Ken Roczen the clear victor, untroubled all the way and cruised home on the final lap to a six-second victory over Anderson with Tomac rounding out the race podium.

Roczen thus goes 1-1-1 for the overall victory ahead of Tomac and Anderson and the German extending his championship lead to eight points over Tomac.

450 Results/Standings

Source: MCNews.com.au

Malaysian MotoGP like you’ve never seen

Workers at a Kuala Lumpur scooter shop XF XeroxTune certainly have a great sense of humour judging by this mock Malaysian GP video.

Since the video was posted on their Facebook page about a week ago, it has had more than 1.8 million views.

And why not? It’s hilarious!

Right from the start it pokes some fun at the anachronistic MotoGP grid girls by substituting boys with banana leaves!

We also love the inserted tacho and speedo showing about 220km/h and the action cam shots of the rider’s face.Malaysian MotoGP satirical video

And instead of a pitstop, the riders stop at a roadside icecream seller for some refreshments.

The audio track comes from a Malaysian GP and they use some MotoGP logos, so it’s a wonder DORNA hasn’t forced them to take it down for copyright infringement.

This satirical video shows Andrea Iannone winning on his Ducati, but he never has won at Sepang, although he does have the 2015 lap record!

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

International Challenge win goes to Australia at Island Classic

News 27 Jan 2020

International Challenge win goes to Australia at Island Classic

Phillis earns top individual honours with Ken Wootton Trophy.

Image: Russell Colvin.

Australia has successfully defended the International Challenge winning the three-nation battle at he Island Classic, with the locals’ 704 point haul securing victory over rivals America with 691 points and the UK third with 423 points.

Albury’s Alex Phillis was the star performer – claiming two wins, a second and a third across the four six-lap races – to lead the Australian effort and be awarded the best individual performer on the grid aboard his Suzuki 1260. He won the Ken Wootton trophy with his 157 point haul.

Just behind was Melbourne polesitter Jed Metcher who produced four podium places on his Yamaha FJ to amass 155 points, racing at the front of the pack throughout the meet to make a major contribution to the Australian victory.

But it was far from an easy Australia Day victory, with the Americans taking it to the Aussies in every race. Their major nemesis was Californian ace Josh Hayes – a multi AMA champ – who at 43, still possesses the speed and competitive grit that has seen him amass 83 career wins across many classes over a brilliant motorcycling career.

Hayes had his work cut out from him for the literal start – thanks to engine issues in qualifying relegating him to grid position seven for each race and a testing third row start.

Saturday’s front-runners continued to dominate with Australia’s Alex Phillis winning race three on his Suzuki ahead of Jed Metcher, with America’s Josh Hayes in third.

Polesitter Metcher won the start and while struggling somewhat with the front end of his Yamaha, led for the first four laps, while the melee settled behind him.

Phillis on the other hand, had a lousy start off the front-row and was pushed back to sixth by the end of the first lap. In front of him lay Metcher, former enduro champ Steve Martin and the formidable American trio of Larry Pegram, Josh Hayes and Michael Gilbert on their Mojo Yamahas.

Despite gearbox problems and some light rain mid-race Phillis slowly ticked them off, and by the end of lap three it was a Metcher/Phillis battle at the front with Hayes in pursuit.

Phillis took the lead going into turn three, with Metcher biting back to once again take control. Phillis though had the top speed advantage, and took the lead on Gardner Straight to head the final laps to the flag and cross 0.077s in front of Metcher and seize 40 points for the Australians .

With no sign of rain, race four was an epic final battle in the sun. Metcher won the start and led at the end of lap one. Rather than Phillis who was struggling with gearbox issues, it was Metcher and Hayes that set the pace.

Hayes took the lead on lap two, and despite the badgering of Metcher and Phillis, added the race four victory to his race one win and to finish the weekend with two victories, a third and a fifth.

Phillis, son of multiple Australian champ Robbie Phillis, claimed the individual Ken Wootton win, as well as the national victory for the Rex Wolfenden led team.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Scott Redding dominates opening day of testing in Portugal

WSBK Portimao Test Day One

After a rain-affected WorldSBK test at Jerez, WorldSBK headed west to Portimao for testing overnight and got to enjoy some Portuguese sunshine.

It was a Yamaha 1-2-3 at lunch time but Scott Redding got down to business in the afternoon to best the Yamaha men by more than half-a-second.

Scott Redding set quick lap times on both of his bikes and had only been to Portimao once before. With long corners coupled with tight hairpins, the track provides the perfect opportunity for this testing.

Team-mate Chaz Davies confessed that he didn’t really learn much at Jerez and started from square one on Sunday in Portugal. Davies steadily improved throughout the day before eventually finishing seventh on the time-sheets.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Chaz Davies

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Chaz Davies

Chaz Davies

Loris Baz was eager to demonstrate his prowess on the Yamaha, as he and his Dutch Ten Kate Racing Yamaha squad prepare for their first full season together. Testing different parts on both the 2019 and 2020 Yamahas, Baz made plenty of strides forward and ended the opening day second only to Redding.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Loris Baz

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Loris Baz

Loris Baz

Other Independent riders accompanying Baz inside the top ten were Sandro Cortese (Barni Racing Team) in eighth and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) in tenth. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team Goeleven) was one place further behind.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Garrett Gerloff

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Garrett Gerloff

Garrett Gerloff

Michael van der Mark had tyre degradation work on his mind, the Dutchman’s aims are to get the bike smoother on tyres, he was fourth at the chequered flag.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Michael VanDerMark

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Michael VanDerMark

Michael van der Mark

Pata Yamaha Team-mate Toprak Razgatlioglu was one place ahead of van der Mark and also worked on chassis balance, whilst valuing every lap he got aboard the Yamaha YZF R1. The Turkish rider came into Portimao having been second in Spain and was third after day one in Portugal.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Toprak Razgatlioglu

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Toprak Razgatlioglu

Toprak Razgatlioglu

Flying the BMW flag on day one at Portimao was Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team), with the Irishman going well at the circuit he took his most recent pole position at. Laverty had plenty to test and was looking at how well the engine was working, given the length of the straight at Portimao. However, the 2013 WorldSBK runner-up suffered an engine failure at Turn 3 in the afternoon, bringing out the red flag.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Tom Sykes

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Tom Sykes

Tom Sykes

Team-mate Tom Sykes was working on electronics and also his chassis, aiming to improve his race set-up. At the end of the day, Laverty completed the top five whilst Tom Sykes was sixth.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Leon Haslam

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day Leon Haslam

Leon Haslam

Featuring at the top of the time-sheets at Jerez and once again a prominent force in Portugal, the HRC Team continued looking for their base set-up for the CBR1000RR-R. Leon Haslam was fifth at lunch time before continuing his day acquiring laps and data, whilst Alvaro Bautista got to grips with the Portimao circuit aboard the all-new Honda. Come the close of business on Sunday, Haslam was eighth and Bautista 15th, with plenty more to come on day two for the Honda duo.

In 13th place after turning his first wheel of 2020, Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) enjoyed his Portimao experience aboard the ZX-10RR. Experimenting with a new swingarm and chassis, Fores will aim to consolidate his findings on day two. He was one place ahead of Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) whilst Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance) was in 16th.

WorldSBK Portimão Test Day One Unofficial Times
  1. Scott Redding – Ducati 1m41.179s
  2. Loris Baz – Yamaha 1m41.752s
  3. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Yamaha 1m41.881s
  4. Michael Van der Mark – Yamaha 1m42.057s
  5. Eugene laverty – BMW1m42.661s
  6. Tom Sykes – BMW 1m42.740s
  7. Chaz Davies – Ducati 1m42.749s
  8. Sandro Cortese – Ducati 1m42.936s
  9. Leon Haslam – Honda 1m42.967s
  10. Garrett Gerloff – Yamaha 1m43.031s
  11. Michael Rinaldi – Ducati 1m43.218s
  12. Leandro Mercado – Ducati 1m43.343s
  13. Xavi Fores – Kawasaki 1m43.490s
  14. Federico Caricasulo – Yamaha 1m43.533s
  15. Alvaro Bautista – Honda 1m43.662s
  16. Sylvain Barrier – Ducati 1m44.016s
  17. Christophe Ponsson – Aprilia 1m44.035s

WorldSSP

After an intriguing test at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, it was Portimao’s turn to play host to the FIM Supersport World Championship teams and riders, as they take part in two more days of frantic testing.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Cluzel

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Cluzel

Jules Cluzel

The rollercoaster circuit in the Algarve saw three-time WorldSSP runner-up Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) on top of the pile, heading fellow countryman Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing), whilst South African Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) completed the top three.

Cluzel continued his pre-season with good pace in Portugal, with the Portimao circuit proving to be to his liking. Fellow countryman Lucas Mahias was also finding the Portimao track enjoyable, having taken a phenomenal victory in the World Supersport class back in 2018. Working on suspension settings and refining small details, Mahias was busy on day one.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Lucas Mahias

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Lucas Mahias

Lucas Mahias

Steven Odendaal was also right in contention, with the rookie taking his Dutch squad into the leading positions, whilst explaining that there was little difference between slick and road tyres.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Steven Odendaal

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Steven Odendaal

Steven Odendaa

Italian star Andrea Locatelli (Bardahl Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) was fresh off the back of testing at Almeria and was eager to join the other teams on circuit. He continued his adaption to the World Supersport class and placed fourth come the end of day one.

Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha) was up in fifth, also looking to refine small details of his package. Hikari Okubo (Dynavolt Honda) enjoyed his first testing action of 2020 and was sixth, with three manufacturers inside the top six.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Corentin Perolari

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Corentin Perolari

Corentin Perolari

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) was back in action after extensive testing at the Ricardo Tormo Circuit in Valencia, taking to Portimao for the first time. The German rider was fractionally ahead of Jaimie van Sikkelerus (MPM Routz Racing Team), who set as many laps as possible ahead of his first full season on Yamaha machinery.

Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) was ninth on his WorldSSP debut, whilst Turkish rookie Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team) was tenth and the last of the WorldSSP runners and riders.

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Can Oncu

WorldSBK Test Portimao Day WSS Can Oncu

Can Öncü

WorldSSP Portimão Test Day One Unofficial Times
  1. Jules Cluzel – Yamaha 1m44.933s
  2. Lucas Mahias – Kawasaki 1m45.059s
  3. Steven Odendaal – Yamaha 1m45.428s
  4. Andrea Locatelli – Yamaha 1m45.554s
  5. Corentin Perolari – Yamaha 1m45.570s
  6. Hikaro Okubo – Honda 1m46.846s
  7. Phillip Ottl – Kawasaki 1m47.111s
  8. Jaimie Van Sikkelrus – Yamaha 1m47.168s
  9. Danny Webb – Yamaha 1m47.261s
  10. Can Oncu – Kawasaki 1m47.419s

Source: MCNews.com.au

Europe’s Biggest Café Racer And Sprint Race—Glemseck 101

The MO Classic Racer Sprint featured bikes from done-up old Hondas to Suzuki’s GT750 “Kettles” competing, including Isle of Man TT rider Conor Cummins, the latter which also competed in the Honda Sprint on a CB1000R against rival Alex Polita. The Sultans of Sprint—Freak and Factory Class, also featuring Randy Mamola, was probably the most colourful sprint event of the day, where riders didn’t take themselves too seriously, all entering the arena dressed up in fancy costumes, that is until they got to the starting grid. Finally, by about 6 p.m., the Starr Wars Sprint, which established itself at Glemseck 101 over the past five years, was the last event of the day, held on motorcycles whose rigid frame construction can be traced directly back to the early days of motorcycle development.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Crashed riders risk negligent charge

More and more riders are being charged with negligent driving (riding) after a single-vehicle crash, says NSW traffic and criminal law specialist Chris Kalpage.

Our contributing lawyer has previously written articles about defending various charges and last time he addressed the issues arising out of dangerous driving and negligent driving causing death or grievous bodily harm.

He now tackles this increasing risk of a negligent driving charge for which penalties can be quite severe:

Chris Kalpage defencesChris Kalpage sets up for a track session

Negligent driving

The concept of negligence is whether the person charged was not riding in the manner of a reasonably prudent motorist, considering all the circumstances.

Often if police are called to a single-vehicle accident where the bike has come down there is a risk the rider will be charged with negligent driving.

Two cases I defended come to mind.

Case 1

Old Pac gets more ‘safety barriers’Riders on the Old Pac (Photo courtesy of Valley Images)

One morning my client was riding his Aprilia RSV on the Old Pacific Highway, tipped into a corner at below the speed limit and lost his front end on slippery leaf mulch. You could substitute that for moss, oil, gravel from filling in potholes, or anything on the road surface.

He dragged himself to the Armco and sat down, his leg was broken. To his surprise, a tow truck and ambulance stopped to assist. As he was traveling to Gosford Hospital he heard over the radio that they had picked up the wrong accident victim, so they stopped at the next accident scene some kilometres from where he had crashed.

While the paramedics were assisting the other rider, a highway patrol officer at the second scene spoke to my client while he was in the back of the ambulance. He asked what had happened and my client explained about the leaf mulch. The officer further interviewed my client in hospital.

My client subsequently received an infringement for negligent driving which we defended.

The police officer’s evidence was that my client had told him he had lost his front wheel on leaf mulch. However, the officer said he attended the site and there was no leaf mulch, inferring that my client was riding with negligence.

In calling for the officer’s notebook in cross examination of him, it was clear the officer had noted my client indicated he had lost his front wheel suddenly on hitting the mulch. In cross-examination of the officer it was established that the notebook was the totality of the content of the discussion with my client.  It was further conceded by the officer that my client had said nothing more.

It was conceded that there were many corners between where the officer saw my client in the ambulance and where the accident had occurred.

The obvious conclusion was that the officer could not correctly identify the exact corner of the crash and by inference had not attended the site as was stated. The officer’s questionable evidence was rejected, my client’s evidence favourably received and he was found not guilty.

Case 2

Oxley Highway businesses eventRiders on the Oxley Highway

Another client was riding his Ducati 748 down the Oxley Highway when he hit a wedge of tarmac, possibly caused by heat forming a lip in the soft asphalt. His bike was knocked into gravel on the opposite side of the road.

Again my client had a broken leg and the ambulance was called. A regional highway patrol officer turned up at the site about 20 minutes later. Again, he had not seen how the accident occurred and had no evidence from witnesses, but formed the view that as an accident had occurred my client must have been traveling too fast.

At the hearing, the prosecutor agreed with me that the highway patrol officer could not provide expert post accident crash analysis. That is the remit of the specially trained police crash investigation unit. The case was adjourned so representations could be made.

However, the officer chose to press on with the case. Even though the magistrate allowed the evidence — which I believe should not have been — he took into account the officer’s lack of expertise and was prepared to accept my client’s evidence. He dismissed the prosecution.

Conclusion

A mere accident does not automatically mean that the rider was negligent. The prosecution needs to establish that you were driving or riding without the standard of care and attention reasonably expected of the ordinary prudent driver.

Even if you run into the back of a vehicle that suddenly stops, it does not mean your manner of driving was negligent.

I defended a retired motorcycle highway patrol officer with significant riding experience who ran into the back of a car because he had to apply emergency braking right where there was a sudden change in the road condition. He was acquitted at hearing.

So, if you have to brake suddenly and do it on a patch of diesel causing you to run into the car in front that may not constitute negligence. The court has to take into account all the circumstances of the case as embodied in the legislation, a part of which is printed below:

NSW ROAD TRANSPORT ACT 2013 – SECT 117

Negligent, furious or reckless driving

117 Negligent, furious or reckless driving

(cf STM Act, s 42)

(1) A person must not drive a motor vehicle on a road negligently.

(3) In considering whether an offence has been committed under this section, the court is to have regard to all the circumstances of the case, including the following:

(a) the nature, condition and use of the road on which the offence is alleged to have been committed,

(b) the amount of traffic that actually is at the time, or which might reasonably be expected to be, on the road,

(c) any obstructions or hazards on the road (including, for example, broken down or crashed vehicles, fallen loads and accident or emergency scenes).

(Editor’s note: This is a NSW law, but there are similar rules in most jurisdictions.)

This relates to the specific circumstances of the particular incident and this is one situation where every case is different. No two situations are alike so they require careful analysis. Don’t assess your case based on someone you know who had a similar situation and got a certain result, as you could be very wrong.

Disclaimer

This article is for reader information and interest only and is based on New South Wales law. It is not intended to be comprehensive, and does not constitute and must not be relied on as legal advice.

Please be aware that every case is different and the matters raised may not be of specific relevance to your situation but may have a general application. You must seek specific advice tailored to your circumstances. Chris is happy to talk to anyone needing clarification. He can be contacted on 0418 211074.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Roczen dominates Triple Crown at Glendale Supercross

Consistent Forkner earns 250SX West win at the fourth round.

Image: Octopi Media.

450SX red-plate holder Ken Roczen (Team Honda HRC) dominated the Triple Crown at Glendale’s fourth round of Monster Energy Supercross by securing the overall win with a trio of race victories.

Zach Osborne (Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing) stormed to the hole-shot in main event one, leading Eli Tomac (Monster Energy Kawasaki) and Malcolm Stewart (Smartop Bullfrog Spas Motoconcepts Honda) in the early stages.

Points leader Ken Roczen (Team Honda HRC) made an incredible pass around the outside of Tomac in the sand section, going onto then pass Osborne – who crashed in the path of the German ace.

Roczen got through unscathed to secure the lead, fending off a bid from Tomac to secure victory. Tomac was second ahead of rookie teammate Adam Cianciarulo (Monster Energy Kawasaki), followed by Stewart and Jason Anderson (Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing).

Sixth through to 10th was completed by Justin Barcia (Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing), Justin Brayton (Team Honda HRC), Cooper Webb (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), Justin Hill (Smartop Bullfrog Spas Motoconcepts Honda) and Martin Davalos (Team Tedder Monster Energy).

Main event two was forced to be red-flagged after a nasty first crash involving Osborne and Justin Bogle (Rocky Mountain ATV/MC KTM), the latter being assisted off the circuit with the Alpinestars Medical Unit.

On the restart it was Roczen who shot out to the lead with reigning champion Webb in tow, but that was the last they saw of Roczen as he charged to a commanding win.

Webb struggled to maintain his position at the front, first being passed by Cianciarulo, who went down a lap later, then losing spots to Tomac, Anderson and Baggett – the trio finishing in that order with Webb in fifth.

Cianciarulo rebounded to cross the line sixth, followed by Brayton, Barcia, Plessinger and Dean Wilson (Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing).

Another red-flag was thrown in the opening stages of main event three, which came due to nasty crash for Chris Blose (Chaparral FXR Racing Honda) in the whoop section.

Roczen benefited from the restart for the second time, securing the hole-shot and storming away from the field to a dominant victory.

Tomac went down on the early lap, but able to rebound, while his teammate Cianciarulo crashed heavily in the whoops during the final moments.

At the chequered flag, Anderson was second over Tomac, Webb and Davalos. The top 10 was made up of Stewart, Barcia, Plessinger, Brayton and Hill. Roczen boosted his points by taking the overall, joined on the podium by Tomac and Anderson. Australia’s Chad Reed (Mountain Motorsports Honda) was 20th overall.

Image: Octopi Media.

Monster Energy Pro Circuit Kawasaki’s Austin Forkner has claimed the 250SX West victory in the Triple Crown format at Glendale’s fourth round of Monster Energy Supercross.

Main event one saw Geico Honda’s Christian Craig pushed off the start, while it was Forkner and JGRMX Yoshimura Suzuki Racing’s Alex Martin who led the field.

Points leader Justin Cooper suffered a pair of crashes in the opening stages as Dylan Ferrandis (Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing) made moves on Martin and Michael Mosiman (Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing) to finish second behind eventual winner Forkner.

Craig worked his way back to third ahead of Mosiman and Brandon Hartranft (Troy Lee Designs Red Bull KTM), while the top 10 was completed by Jacob Hayes (Gas Monkey AJE Motorsports), Mitchell Oldenburg (Penrite Honda Racing), Martin, Aaron Tanti (Yamaha) and Derek Drake (Troy Lee Designs Red Bull KTM).

It was a dramatic start to main event two as Cooper surged to an amazing hole-shot, leading the field for the opening stages before suffering an untimely crash.

It allowed Drake to take control of the field, while at the same time Craig was ruled out of the race. Drake led for a number of laps, but was ultimately passed by Forkner, who went onto secure victory.

Reigning champion Ferrandis moved to second as he crossed the line ahead of Drake, while it was Mosiman and Hayes who completed the top five. Hartranft was sixth ahead of Oldenburg, Martin, Cooper and Jay Wilson (Yamaha).

Martin Castelo (JMC Motorsports Racing) snatched a surprise hole-shot in the final encounter before being quickly overcome by Cooper, who put his earlier mistakes behind him to claim victory.

The race was mainly uneventful as Ferrandis and Forkner locked out the top three, finishing ahead of Hartranft and Hayes. Mosiman was sixth followed by Oldenburg, Clout, Martin and Killian Auberson (Gas Monkey AJE Motorsports).

Overall it was Forkner from Ferrandis and Mosiman, who landed on the podium for the first time this year. Australians Luke Clout (Penrite Honda Racing), Jay Wilson (Yamaha) and Aaron Tanti (Yamaha) finished in positions 10, 15 and 16. Cooper still leads the standings as the series heads to Oakland in California next weekend.

Detailed results

Source: MotoOnline.com.au

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