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Ride Within Your Abilities: Handling Dangerous Surfaces
Your chance of falling or being involved in a crash increases whenever you ride across:
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Watch for uneven surfaces such as bumps, broken pavement, potholes, or small pieces
of highway trash.
Try to avoid obstacles by slowing or going around them. If you must go over the
obstacle, first determine if it is possible. Approach it at as close to a 90 degree
angle as possible. Look where you want to go to control your path of travel. If
you have to ride over the obstacle, you should:
- Slow down to reduce the jolt if time permits.
- Make sure the motorcycle is straight up.
- Rise slightly off the seat with your weight on the footpegs to absorb the shock
with your knees and elbows, and avoid being thrown off the motorcycle.
- Just before contact, roll on the throttle slightly to lighten the front end.
If you ride over an object on the street, pull off the road and check your tires and
rims for damage before riding any further.
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Motorcycles handle better when ridden on surfaces that permit good traction. Surfaces
that provide poor traction include:
- Wet pavement, particularly just after it starts to rain and before surface oil
washes to the side of the road.
- Gravel roads, or where sand and gravel collect.
- Mud, snow, and ice.
- Lane markings, steel plates and manhole covers, especially when wet.
To ride safely on slippery surfaces:
- Reduce Speed - Slow down before you get to a slippery surface to lessen your chances
of skidding. You motorcycle needs more distance to stop. And it is particularly
important to reduce speed before entering wet curves.
- Avoid Sudden Moves - Any sudden change in speed or direction can cause a skid. Be as
smooth as possible when you speed up, shift gears, turn or brake.
- Use Both Brakes - The front brake is more effective even on a slippery surface. Squeeze
the brake lever gradually to avoid locking the front wheel. Remember, gentle pressure on
the rear brake.
- The center of a lane can be hazardous when wet. When it starts to rain, ride in the tire
tracks left by cars. Often, the left tire track will be the best position, depending on
traffic and other road conditions as well.
- Watch for oil spots when you put your foot down to stop or park. You may slip and fall.
- Dirt and gravel collect along the sides of the road - especially on curves and ramps
leading to and from highways. Be aware of what's on the edge of the road, particularly when
making sharp turns and getting on or off freeways at high speeds.
- Rain dries and snow melts faster on some sections of a road than others. Patches of ice
tend to crop up in low or shaded areas and on bridges and overpasses. Wet surfaces or wet leaves
are just as slippery. Ride on the least slippery portion of the lane and reduce speed.
Cautious riders steer clear of roads covered with ice and snow. If you can't avoid a slippery surface,
keep your bike straight up and proceed as slowly as possible. If you encounter a large surface so
slippery that you must coast, or travel at a walking pace, consider letting your feet skim along the
surface. If the motorcycle starts to fall, you catch yourself. Be sure to keep off the brakes. If
possible, squeeze the clutch and coast. Attempting this maneuver at anything other than the slowest
speeds could prove hazardous.
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Usually it is safer to ride straight within your lane to cross tracks. Turning to take tracks head-on
(at a 90 degree angle) can be more dangerous - your path may carry you into another lane of traffic.
For track and road seams that run parallel to your course, move far enough away from tracks, ruts, or
pavement seams to cross at an angle of at least 45 degrees. Then, make a quick, sharp turn. Edging
across could catch your tires and throw you off balance.
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Riding over rain grooves or bridge gratings may cause a motorcycle to weave. The uneasy, wandering
feeling is generally not hazardous. Relax, maintain a steady speed and ride straight across. Crossing
at an angle forces riders to zigzag to stay in the lane. The zigzag is far more hazardous than the
wandering feeling.
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Did You Know?
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Driver's Handbook
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 Manual de Manejo de Carolina del Norte |
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METHODS OF PAYMENT
 Payment for transactions at DMV Driver License Offices are limited to cash or personal checks drawn on a North Carolina bank or on out-of-state banks having a branch in North Carolina. No other forms of payment are accepted, including debit and credit cards.
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