|
The System of Motorcycle Control
From Chapter 2 of "Motorcycle Roadcraft: The
Police Rider’s Handbook to Better Motorcycling"
©The Police Foundation, UK, published by The Stationery Office, London
The need for a system of
motorcycle control
These notes explain the system of motorcycle
control, and show you how to use the system to negotiate hazards. A feature
of nearly all road accidents is human error. The purpose of the system of
motorcycle control is to provide a way of approaching and negotiating
hazards that is methodical, safe and leaves nothing to chance. If you use it
consistently with the right frame of mind, good observation and a high level
of skill in bike control, you should avoid causing accidents yourself and be
able to anticipate many of the hazards caused by other road users.
Using the system will help to
give you calm control of your machine, and enable you to deal with hazards
without getting flustered. Your progress will be steady and unobtrusive —
the characteristics of a skilled rider.
Riding skills
Riding requires more than pure
handling skills. Many hazards encountered by riders are unpredictable. You
need an investigative approach to recognise and negotiate them safely. You
should learn to expect the unexpected. Riding uses both mental and
physical
skills:
Mental skills
The ability to scan the
environment, recognise relevant dangers or hazards, decide on their priority
and form an achievable riding plan.
Physical skills
The ability to translate
intentions and thoughts into physical action accurately and smoothly.
In using these skills you need to
take into account:
- ability as opposed to
perceived ability (what you can actually do as opposed to what you think you
can do — in the average rider there is a significant gap between real and
perceived ability. A key objective of rider training is to bring perceptions
in line with reality)
- capabilities of the machine
- prevailing weather and road
conditions.
There is much to anticipate and
think about when riding. Road and traffic conditions continually change,
requiring you to adjust course and speed frequently. You need to take many
factors into account: the activities of other road users, where they might
be and what they might do; the closeness of other vehicles; the need to
signal your intentions; the road and surface conditions; the weather; and
the handling characteristics of your bike. The system of motorcycle control
simplifies this task. It provides a simple and consistent method of riding
ensuring that you overlook no detail and leave nothing to chance.
The system of motorcycle control
gives you that essential aspect of safe riding - time to react.
Hazards
A hazard is anything that is
potentially dangerous. A hazard can be immediate and obvious, such as a car
approaching you on the wrong side of the road, or it may be less obvious but
just as potentially dangerous, such as a blind bend which conceals a lorry
reversing into your path. Much of your road craft skill is in the early
recognition of hazards — the situations that are potentially dangerous — and
then taking the appropriate action to deal with them. One of the main causes
of accidents is the failure to recognise hazardous situations — if you fail
to see the potential danger you cannot take actions to avoid it.
On the roads you will meet three
main types of hazard:
- physical features such as
junctions, roundabouts, bends or hill crests
- risks arising from the
position or movement of other road users
- problems arising from
variations in the road surface, weather conditions and visibility.
At the end of your next journey,
look back over the way you approached and negotiated hazards and ask
yourself the following questions:
- Did you always know what was
happening behind before changing direction or speed?
- Did you always have the right
position, speed and gear for the hazard?
- Were you able to negotiate all
the hazards smoothly without any snatched last-minute adjustments?
- Did you always give yourself
time to react?
The System of Motorcycle Control

The system promotes careful
observation, early anticipation and planning, and a systematic use of the
controls to achieve maximum machine stability. It is a systematic way of
dealing with an unpredictable environment. It is central to Motorcycle
Roadcraft, drawing together all other riding skills in a
coordinated response to road and traffic conditions. It gives you the time
to select the best position, speed and gear to negotiate the hazards safely
and efficiently.
Hazards come singly and in
clusters; they overlap and change all the time. The system accommodates this
continual fluctuation by means of a centrally flexible element — you, the
rider. As with the other skills in Motorcycle Roadcraft,
you have responsibility for using the system actively and intelligently.
When you use the system to approach and negotiate a hazard, you consider and
use a logical sequence of actions to take you past it safely and
efficiently. If new hazards arise, you adapt by reassessing the situation
and reapplying the system at an appropriate phase.
The five phases of the system
The system is divided into five
phases:
-
Information
-
Position
-
Speed
-
Gear
-
Acceleration
Each phase is dependent on the
one before, and you should consider the phases in sequence. Normally you
would start by considering your information needs, and then work through
each phase in turn. But if road conditions change, you need to consider new
information and re-enter the system at an appropriate phase, continuing
through it in sequence. The system must be used flexibly in response to
actual road conditions; do not follow the sequence rigidly if it is
inappropriate to the circumstances.
The phases of the system cover
all the points you need to consider on the approach to a hazard. At each
phase there are a number of points to consider, but you should only apply
those points that are relevant to the situation.
The importance of the
information
phase
Taking, using and giving
information introduces the system, and continues throughout it. You always
need to be seeking information to plan your riding and you should provide
information whenever other road users could benefit from it. Because of your
increased vulnerability as a motorcyclist, your safety and at times your
survival depend on your ability to take, use and give information.
Information allows you to adapt the system to changes in road circumstances,
and so continuous assessment of information overlaps with and runs through
all the other phases of the system. It is the framework on which the other
phases - position, speed, gear, and acceleration depend.
Information phase
The information phase overlaps every other phase of the system.
Take
Look all round you. Scan to the front and sides. Carry out rear
observation at the appropriate points in the system. Always consider
rear observation before you change direction or speed. As you approach,
closely observe the quality of the road surface up to and through the
hazard.
Use
Using the information you have gathered, plan how to deal with the
identified hazards and make contingency plans for dealing with the
unexpected. Decide on your next action using the system as a guide. If
new hazards arise consider whether you need to rerun the system from an
earlier phase.
Give
If you have decided a signal could help other road users, give it;
remember other road users include pedestrians and cyclists. Your options
include indicators, brake light, flashing your headlight, arm signals
and sounding your horn. Give a signal whenever it could benefit other
road users, no matter what stage of the system you are at. Generally the
earlier the warning the greater the benefit.
Continuous assessment of
information runs through every phase.
Rear observation and signals
Constantly assess the situation
ahead and to the side for changes in the circumstances. Use rear observation
(mirror and/or looking behind) as often as is necessary to be fully aware of
what is happening behind you. Give a signal whenever it could benefit
another road user.
At certain points in the system
specific checks for information are important. Before you change
position or speed you need to know what is happening in front, to the sides
and behind you; mirror checks/looking behind at these points are essential.
Remember the standard advice for
manoeuvring: rear observation — signal — manoeuvre, even though you may at
times decide a signal is not necessary.
Use of the horn
Sound your horn whenever you
think another road user could hear and benefit from it. The purpose of the
horn is to inform others that you are there. It gives you no right to
proceed, and should never be used as a rebuke. It can be used at any stage
of the system. Always be prepared to react to another road user’s horn
warning.
The lifesaver check
The lifesaver is a last check
over the shoulder into the blind spots to make sure nothing unexpected is
happening before committing yourself to a manoeuvre. If you are turning, use
it to check the blind spot on the side to which you intend to turn. The
place for the lifesaver is just before the first part of the acceleration
phase. Use your judgement about when to use it: In congested urban
situations a lifesaver check is normally essential, especially when turning
right into a minor road; but during high speed overtaking, when you are
certain what is happening behind, it is often safer to keep your eyes on
what is happening ahead.
When you use a lifesaver, do it
early enough to allow you to adopt an alternative plan. There is no use
looking over your shoulder as you start to turn the machine.
Position
Position yourself so that you can negotiate the
hazard/s safely and smoothly. Before you change position consider rear
observation.
Take account of the road surface and other road users
—including pedestrians. cyclist and children.
Speed
Adjust your speed to that appropriate for the hazard,
taking into account visibility, the road surface, the degree of
cornering required, the activities of other road users and the
possibility of unseen hazards.
Use the throttle, brake or gears to give you the
speed that will enable you to complete the manoeuvre. During the later
stages of braking change to the appropriate gear.
Make good use of acceleration sense.
Aim to make all adjustments in speed smoothly and
steadily; early anticipation is essential for this.
Gears
Select the appropriate gear for the speed at which
you intend to negotiate the hazard.
Pass through intermediate gears during the later
stages of any braking by the block changing method or by systematically
working through the gears, engaging each appropriate gear as speed is
lost.
Except in slippery conditions, avoid using your gears
as brakes.
Always avoid late braking and snatched gear changes.
Acceleration
Consider rear observation.
Use the throttle to maintain your speed and stability
through the hazard. Open the throttle sufficiently to offset any loss of
speed due to cornering forces
Taking account of your speed, the road surface, the
amount of turn required, other road users, and the road and traffic
conditions ahead and behind, decide whether it is appropriate to
accelerate away from the hazard.
Choose an appropriate point to accelerate safely and
smoothly, adjust the amount of acceleration to the circumstances.
Use the system flexibly
The key point to remember is that
the system depends on your using it intelligently and responsively. It is
not an automatic mechanism but has to be adapted by you to the circumstances
that arise. Used intelligently, it provides a logical but flexible sequence
for dealing with hazards:
- you should consider all the
phases of the system on the approach to every hazard, but you may not need
to use every phase in a particular situation
- the information phase spans
the whole system and entails a constant reassessment of plans
- if a new hazard arises
consider whether you need to return to an earlier phase of the system.
Once you have learnt the system,
practise it continually. It will become second nature, forming the basis
upon which the finer points of your riding can be built.
Practise applying the system
Familiarise yourself with the
five phases of the system and practise working through them whenever you
ride. Remember to use the system flexibly according to the circumstances.
At first it might help to name
each phase out loud as you enter it.
Review your performance and
identify whether you:
- consider each phase
- consider all the aspects of
each phase
- systematically work through
the phases.
Where you have identified
problems, work through them one by one, solving the first problem before you
go on to the next.

|