Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Video: Ninja skills cyclist lands on feet in miracle escape after being hit by car that cuts across him

Rider suffers nothing worse than bruises after spectacular crash sends him and bike flying

A cyclist who decided to swap the train for his bike for his commute into London to get fit escaped with nothing more than bruises after a spectacular crash caused by a motorist turning across him, with the episode filmed by his helmet camera.

The incident happened on London Road in Romford, on only the second occasion the rider, who posted the video to YouTube under the user name Cyclejack, decided to ride to work.

The impact sent both the rider and his bike flying – if you’re at work, you may wish to turn the volume down before watching the video with the rider swearing as he realises he can’t avoid hitting the car.

 

In the video’s description on YouTube, he says: “I was travelling around 22mph through Romford. Drizzly conditions so I was being cautious around bends and roundabouts. I didn't expect this!

“I just about got my hands to the brakes (it can just be seen on the frame before impact) but I had no chance of stopping.

“I'm not quite sure how I wasn't seen. I'm over 6ft and was wearing a bright blue jacket. If I was seen then it's a very bad judgement in my speed.

“After a very uncomfortable trip to the hospital in a neck brace and spinal board and various x-rays I escaped with just bruising. So I consider myself lucky.

“At the time the driver was apologetic and was informed by the police that I was recording my ride and seemed to admit fault. But when it came to my insurance claim against her she disputed it. Safe to say the video has saved me a lot of hassle and 3 weeks later the cheque has already arrived from the insurance company.

“My 4 week old Giant bike was written off but thanks to the guys at Cycle Store they put me one of the two they had left aside and I'm looking forward to getting back out there.”

He adds: “I will say the condition of the cycle lanes are a disgrace along that road, along with many I come across. With the usual obstacles of parked cars, drivers edging out of junctions, pot holes, glass, drains –  why would you cycle in a cycle lane?”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

Add new comment

76 comments

Avatar
nuzzle | 10 years ago
0 likes

Citroën is cyclist-friendly vehicle though.

Avatar
morseykayak | 10 years ago
0 likes

Did the Police prosecute the driver?

Avatar
tonemonkey | 10 years ago
0 likes

That just gave me chills, I had a very similar accident last year. I hit slightly further back on the car so came to a dead stop. I was off the bike for six months and am just getting back to it.

I didn't have such a quick experience claiming...

Avatar
downfader | 10 years ago
0 likes

Guys. OK so the videos are frightening. Do something about it. Badger your MP, your council, your local plod.

Avatar
CXR94Di2 | 10 years ago
0 likes

I am in Holland at the moment. What a revelation, the array of cycling of all ages. The segregated cycle paths all over the place. Cars have to stop for cyclist crossing junctions. My son and I have just cycled 20 miles on dedicated tracks from one town to another without hardly touching a road. Why why can't Britain adopt some of these fantastic ideas?

Avatar
Matt eaton replied to CXR94Di2 | 10 years ago
0 likes
CXR94Di2 wrote:

I am in Holland at the moment. What a revelation, the array of cycling of all ages. The segregated cycle paths all over the place. Cars have to stop for cyclist crossing junctions. My son and I have just cycled 20 miles on dedicated tracks from one town to another without hardly touching a road. Why why can't Britain adopt some of these fantastic ideas?

The big difference is that their seems to be a genuine desire in the Netherlands to make cycling the first choice for local travel. For this reason cycles are prioritised at junctions, thus rewarding those who make the positive choice to cycle. In the UK the opposite is true. There is no political will to change behaviors in the mainstream so cyclists continue to be de-prioritised. In other words, they want us to drive cars for travel and use bikes for sport/leisure. Even where we see cycle infrastucture it almost always serves motorists more than cyclists.

Avatar
kitsunegari replied to CXR94Di2 | 9 years ago
0 likes

CXR94Di2 wrote:

I am in Holland at the moment. What a revelation, the array of cycling of all ages. The segregated cycle paths all over the place. Cars have to stop for cyclist crossing junctions. My son and I have just cycled 20 miles on dedicated tracks from one town to another without hardly touching a road. Why why can't Britain adopt some of these fantastic ideas?

 

Because no one in this country, other than cyclists, actually give a shit.

Avatar
HoldTheWheel | 10 years ago
0 likes

To the people complaining about accident videos on road cc, they are trying to raise awareness of the issue, if enough people stamp their feet something more might be done to improve safety for cyclists. When councils put in proper cycling infrastructure, when drivers are better educated, when idiots realise they face more than a slap on the wrist for dangerous driving, these videos will be far less common.

I'm so glad I don't live in London, I have to deal with idiots but they're nowhere near as bad as this, creeping out of junctions into the road, cycle lanes disappearing under cars. Fair play to the rider for wanting to get back on the bike, that could easily have scared him off from ever riding to work again.

Avatar
bikebot replied to HoldTheWheel | 10 years ago
0 likes
IanRCarter wrote:

To the people complaining about accident videos on road cc, they are trying to raise awareness of the issue, if enough people stamp their feet something more might be done to improve safety for cyclists. When councils put in proper cycling infrastructure, when drivers are better educated, when idiots realise they face more than a slap on the wrist for dangerous driving, these videos will be far less common.

I'm so glad I don't live in London, I have to deal with idiots but they're nowhere near as bad as this, creeping out of junctions into the road, cycle lanes disappearing under cars. Fair play to the rider for wanting to get back on the bike, that could easily have scared him off from ever riding to work again.

Campaigners don't preach to the choir!

Avatar
dp24 | 10 years ago
0 likes

I presume the (lying) driver is facing a charge of driving without due care and attention, or is that wishful thinking?

Avatar
GrahamSt | 10 years ago
0 likes

For you're own sanity don't read the YouTube comments on the video. Several mouth-breathing trolls wittering on about him going too fast or suggesting he is in it for the compensation money  102

Avatar
bikebot replied to GrahamSt | 10 years ago
0 likes
GrahamSt wrote:

For you're own sanity don't read the YouTube comments on the video. Several mouth-breathing trolls wittering on about him going too fast or suggesting he is in it for the compensation money  102

A lot of the mouth breathers are accounts created by campaigners from the "Drivers Union", who regularly troll any cyclist video on Youtube. All the regular cyclist channels have blocked them, but when a video gets a bit of media coverage they dive in.

A lot of people believe that the "JollySelfRighteous" account is an alias created by Keith Peat, due to the similarities in prose and often bizarre arguments.

Avatar
Das | 10 years ago
0 likes

WOW!!!!!!!!! 6 numbers for Friday Night plz.

Avatar
2Loose | 10 years ago
0 likes

The admission of guilt on the Police statement should surely have made the video evidence secondary in the insurance claim?

Glad he made such a graceful landing and was relatively unhurt.

Avatar
Col Nago | 10 years ago
0 likes

Lucky boy to escape that without serious injury and what utterly s***e driving!

I must be very lucky (and I am tempting fate here horribly) - 20 years commuting and this sort of thing has never happened to me. If I see a driver ahead waiting to make a right turn I assume they will not see me and slow down just in case. Does make me think a helmet cam is worth getting though.

Is it the Netherlands where there is a presumption of car driver fault in any accident with a bike?

Avatar
userfriendly replied to Col Nago | 10 years ago
0 likes
Col Nago wrote:

Is it the Netherlands where there is a presumption of car driver fault in any accident with a bike?

It's every European country with the exception of UK, Ireland, Romania, Malta, and Cyprus.

Avatar
Leviathan replied to userfriendly | 10 years ago
0 likes
userfriendly wrote:
Col Nago wrote:

Is it the Netherlands where there is a presumption of car driver fault in any accident with a bike?

It's every European country with the exception of UK, Ireland, Romania, Malta, and Cyprus.

All parts of the old British Empire, and Romania. If its good enough for Hungary, its good enough for us.

Avatar
Joeinpoole replied to Col Nago | 10 years ago
0 likes
Col Nago wrote:

Lucky boy to escape that without serious injury and what utterly s***e driving!

I must be very lucky (and I am tempting fate here horribly) - 20 years commuting and this sort of thing has never happened to me. If I see a driver ahead waiting to make a right turn I assume they will not see me and slow down just in case. Does make me think a helmet cam is worth getting though.

Agreed. Every sympathy to Cyclejack but I've got to say he is braver (if that's the right word) than me cycling full-on at 22mph in those conditions. It was raining (so bike brakes less effective), he was approaching a junction with one car obviously turning right, across his path, and another car turning left out of the junction, and again across his path. Many car drivers simply do not expect bikes to be approaching at speeds of 20mph+. I know that they're at fault but it is the cyclist who is going to get hurt. Either of those drivers *might* have pulled out so you do what you need to do to protect yourself.

I would always have backed off pedalling and be covering the brakes whenever approaching a junction like that. I want to make eye-contact with the driver/drivers before I even begin to relax. I can't be alone in that surely?

If you watch the video there was exactly 2 seconds between the point where the driver clearly moved right ... and the time of impact. Not ideal but still enough time to take some evasive action. He didn't even begin to slow down or slam a left turn to minimise the collision. Mind you, maybe that's what saved him worse injuries in the end.

Avatar
7thGalaxy replied to Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
0 likes

If you watch the video there was exactly 2 seconds between the point where the driver clearly moved right ... and the time of impact. Not ideal but still enough time to take some evasive action. He didn't even begin to slow down or slam a left turn to minimise the collision. Mind you, maybe that's what saved him worse injuries in the end.

What a ridiculous load of waffle you've produced here. His speed is perfectly safe for that road, you can't really go everywhere assuming that people (over whom you have right of way) are going to direct their cars at you without warning. I don't slow down for junctions where I have right of way - it's just asking for people to try and squeeze past you. Also it reinforces the 'bicycle is second class on the road' mentality in both the rider and the driver's head.

The car that hits him barely indicates, and clearly isn't looking. There's much less than two seconds, and even in those two seconds, there's not really anywhere to go - turn left you'd still get hit, turn right you'd be in the oncoming traffic + more chance you'd slide and get run over, which would be a lot worse.

Avatar
Joeinpoole replied to 7thGalaxy | 10 years ago
0 likes
7thGalaxy wrote:

If you watch the video there was exactly 2 seconds between the point where the driver clearly moved right ... and the time of impact. Not ideal but still enough time to take some evasive action. He didn't even begin to slow down or slam a left turn to minimise the collision. Mind you, maybe that's what saved him worse injuries in the end.

What a ridiculous load of waffle you've produced here. His speed is perfectly safe for that road, you can't really go everywhere assuming that people (over whom you have right of way) are going to direct their cars at you without warning. I don't slow down for junctions where I have right of way - it's just asking for people to try and squeeze past you. Also it reinforces the 'bicycle is second class on the road' mentality in both the rider and the driver's head.

The car that hits him barely indicates, and clearly isn't looking. There's much less than two seconds, and even in those two seconds, there's not really anywhere to go - turn left you'd still get hit, turn right you'd be in the oncoming traffic + more chance you'd slide and get run over, which would be a lot worse.

You are *so* wrong and your view is so breathtakingly idiotic, if that's how you *really* conduct yourself on the road, that I'm fully expecting your good self to be a personal contributor to the KSI statistics within the next couple of years.

Rule 126 of the Highway Code provides the following advice;

"Drive at a speed that will allow you to stop well within the distance you can see to be clear."

That's excellent advice and, believe it or not, it applies to cyclists too. In the video Cyclejack bizarrely maintains his fast pace even though it was apparent that his way could quite predictably be blocked by either of TWO vehicles. At 22mph. On a wet road. Fucking madness in my view.

As a car driver I am legally 'entitled' to drive on a minor road at 60mph. After all, I have the 'right of way' and everything. Do I maintain my speed around a blind bend at that speed? Not a chance. There might be a tractor or a broken-down vehicle in the road. I'm even more cautious when riding my bike because I don't have the protection of a metal cage with air-bags. Truth is, Cyclejack did NOT have a clear road in front of him when 200 yards from the point of collision ... although in his view and yours, he did. Wrong judgement.

Writing my previous post on this subject last night made me slightly late to meet the boys in the pub. When I got there I explained this incident, and my view of it, to my mate Jim, a local taxi driver. His view immediately was that not only should a cyclist have backed off ... but he would have done the same in his taxi (a huge 9-seater Citroen Dispatch). That vehicle is his livelihood and there's no way he is going to risk it being off the road due to "the crap driving of some silly tart" if he can help it. He would very happily 'concede ground' to a smaller vehicle, without the right-of-way, if it enabled him to continue earning a living. It amazes me that you *are* prepared to risk life and limb protecting what you believe to be your 'right of way' ... especially when you know that the only real difference you are ever likely to make will be an addition to the KSI statistics.

If you watch the video there really *was* fully 2 seconds in which to react. Time it yourself. I have done several times. I know that if I had been riding that bike from say 10 seconds before the collision then I know I would have had a least 3-4 seconds to take avoiding action ... from a significantly lower speed. There's no way that car would have hit me because I'd have been able to avoid it. Easily. Yes, I'm 'conceding ground' if you like to the bigger vehicle, but at least I'm alive to report it.

I've never worn a 'cycling helmet' in my life ... because I'd already been cycling perfectly safely for 20 years before the bloody things were invented (worse thing that ever happened to cycling in the UK IMHO). I'll bet that *you* wear one all the time though ... whilst cycling like a reckless dickhead with absolutley no ability to judge the appropriate speed for the conditions. Heigh-ho.

Avatar
Matt eaton replied to Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
0 likes
Joeinpoole wrote:

You are *so* wrong and your view is so breathtakingly idiotic, if that's how you *really* conduct yourself on the road, that I'm fully expecting your good self to be a personal contributor to the KSI statistics within the next couple of years.

Rule 126 of the Highway Code provides the following advice;

"Drive at a speed that will allow you to stop well within the distance you can see to be clear."

That's excellent advice and, believe it or not, it applies to cyclists too. In the video Cyclejack bizarrely maintains his fast pace even though it was apparent that his way could quite predictably be blocked by either of TWO vehicles. At 22mph. On a wet road. Fucking madness in my view.

As a car driver I am legally 'entitled' to drive on a minor road at 60mph. After all, I have the 'right of way' and everything. Do I maintain my speed around a blind bend at that speed? Not a chance. There might be a tractor or a broken-down vehicle in the road. I'm even more cautious when riding my bike because I don't have the protection of a metal cage with air-bags. Truth is, Cyclejack did NOT have a clear road in front of him when 200 yards from the point of collision ... although in his view and yours, he did. Wrong judgement.

Writing my previous post on this subject last night made me slightly late to meet the boys in the pub. When I got there I explained this incident, and my view of it, to my mate Jim, a local taxi driver. His view immediately was that not only should a cyclist have backed off ... but he would have done the same in his taxi (a huge 9-seater Citroen Dispatch). That vehicle is his livelihood and there's no way he is going to risk it being off the road due to "the crap driving of some silly tart" if he can help it. He would very happily 'concede ground' to a smaller vehicle, without the right-of-way, if it enabled him to continue earning a living. It amazes me that you *are* prepared to risk life and limb protecting what you believe to be your 'right of way' ... especially when you know that the only real difference you are ever likely to make will be an addition to the KSI statistics.

If you watch the video there really *was* fully 2 seconds in which to react. Time it yourself. I have done several times. I know that if I had been riding that bike from say 10 seconds before the collision then I know I would have had a least 3-4 seconds to take avoiding action ... from a significantly lower speed. There's no way that car would have hit me because I'd have been able to avoid it. Easily. Yes, I'm 'conceding ground' if you like to the bigger vehicle, but at least I'm alive to report it.

I've never worn a 'cycling helmet' in my life ... because I'd already been cycling perfectly safely for 20 years before the bloody things were invented (worse thing that ever happened to cycling in the UK IMHO). I'll bet that *you* wear one all the time though ... whilst cycling like a reckless dickhead with absolutley no ability to judge the appropriate speed for the conditions. Heigh-ho.

I'm sorry but I think you are well off the mark here. While its true that the road wasn't clear (there were other vehicles on it), his route certainly was and that's my interpretation of the part of the highway code you have quoted. It's good advice to generaly take care at junctions like this, to cover the brakes and be ready to react if someone does something stupid but to slow down substantially should not be neccesary and in many cases would not be the safest approach. Your pub conversation with a group of friends who have not seen the video doesn't carry much weight but I wonder how fast your taxi driver friend would have been going in the first place and what 'backing off' would consist of. If he was driving at 30mph and took his foot off the gas on approach to the junction his speed might easily have been similar to the cyclist's. Would he really have braked down to sub-20mph just in case someone ignored the way that the roads operate and drove right into him? For a cyclist to slow down like this for no apparent reason would be even worse due to the risk of being rear-ended. A following driver might also assume that the cyclist was turning left and move to overtake (not a wise move but there are a lot of poor drivers on the roads) which could have resulted in a much more serious collision.

Sure, the guy could have been a bit more careful, he could have taken it a bit slower etc., he could have dawdled along on the pavement instead of using the road but it's clear that the cyclist is not really the problem here.

Avatar
levermonkey replied to Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
0 likes
Joeinpoole wrote:
7thGalaxy wrote:

If you watch the video there was exactly 2 seconds between the point where the driver clearly moved right ... and the time of impact. Not ideal but still enough time to take some evasive action. He didn't even begin to slow down or slam a left turn to minimise the collision. Mind you, maybe that's what saved him worse injuries in the end.

What a ridiculous load of waffle you've produced here. His speed is perfectly safe for that road, you can't really go everywhere assuming that people (over whom you have right of way) are going to direct their cars at you without warning. I don't slow down for junctions where I have right of way - it's just asking for people to try and squeeze past you. Also it reinforces the 'bicycle is second class on the road' mentality in both the rider and the driver's head.

The car that hits him barely indicates, and clearly isn't looking. There's much less than two seconds, and even in those two seconds, there's not really anywhere to go - turn left you'd still get hit, turn right you'd be in the oncoming traffic + more chance you'd slide and get run over, which would be a lot worse.

You are *so* wrong and your view is so breathtakingly idiotic, if that's how you *really* conduct yourself on the road, that I'm fully expecting your good self to be a personal contributor to the KSI statistics within the next couple of years.

Rule 126 of the Highway Code provides the following advice;

"Drive at a speed that will allow you to stop well within the distance you can see to be clear."

That's excellent advice and, believe it or not, it applies to cyclists too. In the video Cyclejack bizarrely maintains his fast pace even though it was apparent that his way could quite predictably be blocked by either of TWO vehicles. At 22mph. On a wet road. Fucking madness in my view.

As a car driver I am legally 'entitled' to drive on a minor road at 60mph. After all, I have the 'right of way' and everything. Do I maintain my speed around a blind bend at that speed? Not a chance. There might be a tractor or a broken-down vehicle in the road. I'm even more cautious when riding my bike because I don't have the protection of a metal cage with air-bags. Truth is, Cyclejack did NOT have a clear road in front of him when 200 yards from the point of collision ... although in his view and yours, he did. Wrong judgement.

Writing my previous post on this subject last night made me slightly late to meet the boys in the pub. When I got there I explained this incident, and my view of it, to my mate Jim, a local taxi driver. His view immediately was that not only should a cyclist have backed off ... but he would have done the same in his taxi (a huge 9-seater Citroen Dispatch). That vehicle is his livelihood and there's no way he is going to risk it being off the road due to "the crap driving of some silly tart" if he can help it. He would very happily 'concede ground' to a smaller vehicle, without the right-of-way, if it enabled him to continue earning a living. It amazes me that you *are* prepared to risk life and limb protecting what you believe to be your 'right of way' ... especially when you know that the only real difference you are ever likely to make will be an addition to the KSI statistics.

If you watch the video there really *was* fully 2 seconds in which to react. Time it yourself. I have done several times. I know that if I had been riding that bike from say 10 seconds before the collision then I know I would have had a least 3-4 seconds to take avoiding action ... from a significantly lower speed. There's no way that car would have hit me because I'd have been able to avoid it. Easily. Yes, I'm 'conceding ground' if you like to the bigger vehicle, but at least I'm alive to report it.

I've never worn a 'cycling helmet' in my life ... because I'd already been cycling perfectly safely for 20 years before the bloody things were invented (worse thing that ever happened to cycling in the UK IMHO). I'll bet that *you* wear one all the time though ... whilst cycling like a reckless dickhead with absolutley no ability to judge the appropriate speed for the conditions. Heigh-ho.

The cyclist's way ahead is clear, he is able to stop in the distance he can see to be clear. This is in no way altered by the fact that the car driver fails to yield at the junction.

As you point out the rider has two seconds (nearer 1.5seconds) from car turning to impact. If you take out the 'is she; isn't she' factor he probably has less than a second.
Overall stopping distance is based on thinking distance plus breaking distance.
So lets use your beloved Rule 126 (15th Edition 2007 - i.e. the current one).
On a dry road at 20mph the OSD is 40ft (20ft TD + 20ft BD).
On a dry road at 22mph the OSD is 44ft (22ft TD + 22ft BD).

On a wet road the TD will remain the same but the BD can be doubled so from 22mph the OSD is 66ft (22ft TD + 44ft BD).

Going back to Rule 126 the gap you are recommended to leave between yourself and the vehicle in front is 2 seconds in the dry and 4+ in adverse weather conditions.

From the moment the car driver failed to yield the collision was inevitable. The cyclist has no option but to break as hard as possible and hope that either
1) the car travels across his path quick enough to pass, or
2) that he has scrubbed enough speed off before collision to avoid serious injury.

I can find no fault in the cyclist's actions.

As a couple of side points.
1) Something to consider is that the cycle is fitted with rim-brakes and so there is the added complication of time taken for the brake-pads to cut through the water/dirt film before effective breaking. Even an MTB fitted with hydraulic disc-brakes and treaded tyres would probably not have been able to stop in time from 22mph.
2) Are you saying that on a cycle you would concede right of way at every junction you came to if there was a car waiting to turn or pull out? The vehicle behind is going to wipe you out!

Avatar
dazbert replied to Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
0 likes

"Drive at a speed that will allow you to stop well within the distance you can see to be clear."

It was clear, and should have remained so. End of story.

Avatar
Joeinpoole replied to dazbert | 10 years ago
0 likes
dazbert wrote:

"Drive at a speed that will allow you to stop well within the distance you can see to be clear."

It was clear, and should have remained so. End of story.

Unfortunately most of us don't ride in your perfect world in which drivers always see a cyclist approaching, correctly judge their speed and never make a mistake. That's why we need to anticipate such issues before they happen and adapt our riding according to the conditions.

Cyclejack was always going to come a cropper riding like that. If not that day then it would have happened another day. I just hope he learns from it and quickly. Had he landed slightly more awkwardly on that occasion he could have broken his neck and been paralysed. It's just not worth taking that sort of risk to save a couple of seconds or to 'assert your rights' as a road-user.

Avatar
dazbert replied to Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
0 likes

Joe, I agree that we need to be cautious. And I'm pretty cautious myself; people will always make mistakes.

But I don't see car drivers slowing down every time they see someone ahead who could potentially move in front of them. I don't see motorcyclists doing it. And I don't see them being pilloried as reckless whenever they're involved in an accident which was not their fault, despite the fact that they travel far faster than 22mph.

Avatar
jacknorell replied to Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
0 likes
Joeinpoole wrote:

It's just not worth taking that sort of risk to save a couple of seconds or to 'assert your rights' as a road-user.

Eh, what?

He was in the middle of a lane, going straight ahead at a moderate pace.

If that's "assert your rights" in your book, then we're all f-ed.

He was riding the way he's supposed to in that instance, and the driver is a complete moron, cutting across without looking.

Avatar
georgee | 10 years ago
0 likes

It will help scare some drivers into realising their driving has consequences other will now believe if they bat into a cyclists who's travelling at a reasonable speed they just swear a lot and walk off fine...

Avatar
Airzound | 10 years ago
0 likes

O M G ! I can only concur riding on the roads with any traffic around you is dangerous. Period. Thousands of cyclists are crashed into every year and they sustain minor to serious injuries sadly a small proportion are killed simply for riding their bikes. This needs to be addressed. Not showing footage such as this where it exists does cyclists and cycling a massive disservice as in many instances on the roads we are still seen as a nuisance or inconvenience to be pushed or shoved out the way.

In this instance although the woman appears to have admitted she was at fault to the police, it is not clear whether she has been prosecuted which she SHOULD BE for such awful driving, but the bitch then allegedly denied it was her fault when the cyclist claimed against her insurers.

Unfortunately head cams have become a necessary piece of recording equipment when cycling. Without one you risk getting absolutely no justice as you are not taken seriously. If you have one and a well positioned one with a good picture you at least stand a chance of getting pathetic justice. As has been seen in many many previous instances where cyclists have been knocked down drivers lie through their teeth to try avoid blame and prosecution for their dangerous and terrible driving. A head cam might not save your life but it might prevent the driver from getting away with what they have done to you by telling a pack of lies as your head cam will hopefully show what actually happened.

Avatar
bikebot | 10 years ago
0 likes

I'm loving the videos, you're drowning out another scary story with a feel good vibe that makes me want to go explore somewhere I've never been.  41

Though I'll probably discover another sodding hill  14

Take note editors.

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will | 10 years ago
0 likes

I can't believe the driver tried to dispute the claim... or was it the insurance company doing that on the drivers behalf?

The poor cyclists didn't see that car until the last minute did they?

Pages

Latest Comments