One of the best
bikes I ever owned was my 1988 BMW R100RS. Of course there is the
small matter of it trying to kill me but what is a broken collar bone
and a few ribs between friends?
I had always thought
that the R100RS was one of the most beautiful bikes ever built. The
proportions were just right and every line and curve had a purpose.
Many consider it the first Super Bike.
I had just sold my
'76 CB750F (bad move) and bought the RS with the money (good move).
Just after bring it home I was riding up Rt 32 in Connecticut to show
it off to friends from Boston. Wide right hand curve at moderate
speed and suddenly I was down and sliding towards the curb.
This is when wearing
a helmet pays off. My head hit the curb and bounced off. Then my
shoulder hit the curb and went crunch, then the ribs followed with
crunchiness of their own. Minus the helmet my head would have gone
SPLOT like a watermelon hitting the ground after a five
story free fall.
A semi was behind me
but saw what happened and stopped diagonally to block anybody from
further mangling my body. I never got to thank him but he's one of my
heroes.
An ambulance showed
up but I declined a ride because I had no health insurance and didn't
need hospital bills on top of bike repair bills. Even in emergencies
one has to maintain perspective. I'd broken the collarbone before and
ribs are no big thing.
My friends showed up
as I was bidding the ambulance crew adieu. We examined the scene but
there seemed to be no explanation for the crash. After securing the
bike at the home of a friendly onlooker, one of the guys volunteered
to take me home on the back of his bike. Just imagine 35 miles of
bouncing along back country roads while holding my arm up so my
shoulder didn't hurt any more than it had to.
When I got home I
conceded that maybe this was more than a minor scrape and deserved a
better look. The urgent care clinic x-rayed the damage and informed
me that my collarbone was now in four pieces and some assembly was
required. I gave Dr. Lars Richardson at Massachusetts General
Hospital and asked him when he would be free to put me back together
again. He has a rather large file on me.
I went back to pick
up the bike and really couldn't figure out what went wrong. I wasn't
speeding, there was no sand in the road, nothing obvious jumped out
at me. Surprisingly the bike was nearly unharmed except for scrapes
on the valve cover and a crack in the fairing that I artfully covered
up with a CT Rockers sticker.
I
took the bike to Peter
Boggia at MotoBorgotaro
in Brooklyn. Peter is one of the best mechanics in the world for
European bikes and we'd done business before. I trailered it down and
told him that I Wouldn't need it back any time soon since I was
banned from riding for a while by Dr. Lars.
The
verdict came back that it was a combination of bad luck and poor
maintenance by the previous owner. The tires were old and hard as a
rock and the steering head bearings were worn and loose. It was a
cold night and the pavement was frigid also diminishing my traction.
The
BMW is a shaft drive that has a torque reaction as you get on and off
the throttle. Normally this is not a big deal but that night, as I
got back on the throttle to exit the curve, the rear end jacked up a
bit, which caused the forks to shift position in the loose bearings,
which caused the old, hard tires to lose their grip on the frigid
pavement. A chain of insignificant events that would cause me view
the world horizontally.
Peter
put the bike in perfect condition, finding and fixing a few other
problems for me. By the time my body was ready for the bike, the bike
was ready for me. After that it was one of the most enjoyable bikes I
have ever owned. Fast without being twitchy, able to eat miles with
speed and comfort, and able to breeze through corners thanks to
Peter's wizardry and a new set of tires.
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