View Poll Results: Helmet wearing habits?
I've never worn a bike helmet




178
10.66%
I used to wear a helmet, but have stopped




94
5.63%
I've always worn a helmet




648
38.80%
I didn't wear a helmet, but now do




408
24.43%
I sometimes wear a helmet depending on the conditions




342
20.48%
Voters: 1670. You may not vote on this poll
The helmet thread
#626
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As for the Walker study, it is certainly interesting and deserves further study; but it was a tiny experiment that has never been repeated, and as such needs, in my mind, further experimentation to support his conclusions (as I believe Dr. Walker admits in the study).
https://www.dot.state.fl.us/research-...977-01_rpt.pdf
"Motorists provided 0.5ft additional lateral separation to female bicyclists and 0.35ft additional separation to casually dressed compared to athletically dressed cyclists." p viii

#627
Senior Member
Dr. Walker and Closetbiker will probably try to blind you with science and statistics and claim that helmeted riders are passed more closely because the drivers SEE the helmet with their EYES and that that affects their ATTITUDE and consequently BEHAVIOR, but that's just Walker and Closet trying to fool you.
Keep the faith brother. (And keep making money selling helmets in your shop too.)
Keep the faith brother. (And keep making money selling helmets in your shop too.)
(Actually, we got some leftover Giro Sections for sale at half off retail, which is at or below cost, so ya got me there.)

#629
Senior Member
Goodness, no.
Depends on what side of the issue you're on. Obviously, I thought Monster Pete was drastically misrepresenting the pro-bare head side of things as being entirely more reasonable than some certainly can be.
I usually don't use an inflammatory phrase for such, just quoting Monster Pete... That's why it was in quotes (" ").
3) Maximum protection includes drivers being aware and safe, which is degraded by helmet use. Either drivers will drive too close to helmeted riders, or helmet use will decrease ridership and without a critical mass of cyclists, driver reaction to them will remain less than safe. Helmets are less safe than riding safely, so obviously helmets are not part of a riding strategy with maximum protection as a goal.
Thanks for not proving any point I made wrong.
Actually, no, many come here for reasonable discourse and get totally ambushed by the bare-head crowd. They may come in with an aggressive or incorrect stance, but their introduction to rebuttal in here is hardly as reasonable and neutral as Monster Pete puts forward. As evidenced by the first poster I responded to above, and...:
Really? I read that post as an entirely reasonable and level headed summation of a contentious issue; an issue that utterly lacks in controlled data to back up either side, and is fueled on both sides by statistical studies with contradictory conclusions. I think that Monster Pete hit the nail on the head.
1) Some people have asserted that helmets are useless, this is true. ...But it is possible that helmets can exacerbate some injuries.
2) Since non-serious injuries from single party bike crashes rarely show up at hospitals and in injury reports, this is hard to prove either way;
3) Again, almost no one states that helmets do not prevent any injury (I can't remember a single poster holding that stance, honestly; feel free to look back through the threads to correct me, since it's your claim).
4) Well, this is debatable.
2) Since non-serious injuries from single party bike crashes rarely show up at hospitals and in injury reports, this is hard to prove either way;
3) Again, almost no one states that helmets do not prevent any injury (I can't remember a single poster holding that stance, honestly; feel free to look back through the threads to correct me, since it's your claim).
4) Well, this is debatable.
Thanks for not proving any point I made wrong.
No, you do, by taking the most extreme representation of the helmet skeptic crowd and presenting it as an average stance. To be guilty of the same I would have to lump all pro-helmet posters in the same boat as rydabent. And that would be disingenuous, as some reasonable and intelligent folk have come into these threads to defend the idea that wearing a helmet is the only reasonable thing to do.
Helmets are useless for mitigating death and serious brain injury. The manufacturers and engineers say so. They're useful for preventing minor scrapes and cuts at the expense of possibly causing serious rotational injuries.
Sure it does. Every helmet wearer is sending a clear message that cycling is an abnormal, dangerous activity which requires special protective equipment. Like beekeeping, or sado-masochistic sex.
Ah, yes, the truth MUST be moderate. It's a law of nature that compromise is truth. Fact is: Rydabent and his fellow hammock-jockey septuagenanarian fear-mongers have no evidence that widespread adoption of helmets results in a widespread decrease in serious head injuries. The experiment has been tried for over 15 years in Australia, N.Zealand and large parts of Canada and it's an effing failure. Time for them to shut the eff up and wear it if they want.
Sure it does. Every helmet wearer is sending a clear message that cycling is an abnormal, dangerous activity which requires special protective equipment. Like beekeeping, or sado-masochistic sex.
Ah, yes, the truth MUST be moderate. It's a law of nature that compromise is truth. Fact is: Rydabent and his fellow hammock-jockey septuagenanarian fear-mongers have no evidence that widespread adoption of helmets results in a widespread decrease in serious head injuries. The experiment has been tried for over 15 years in Australia, N.Zealand and large parts of Canada and it's an effing failure. Time for them to shut the eff up and wear it if they want.

#632
Senior Member
Walker's study has not been replicated, but there are some similar results from a Florida DoT study of 2000 interactions:
https://www.dot.state.fl.us/research-...977-01_rpt.pdf
"Motorists provided 0.5ft additional lateral separation to female bicyclists and 0.35ft additional separation to casually dressed compared to athletically dressed cyclists." p viii
https://www.dot.state.fl.us/research-...977-01_rpt.pdf
"Motorists provided 0.5ft additional lateral separation to female bicyclists and 0.35ft additional separation to casually dressed compared to athletically dressed cyclists." p viii
But... not only do I have long hair, where riders could certainly mistake me for female until they get at least a partial profile, I also dress casually. Does that make up for wearing a helmet, where passing distance allowed by motor vehicles is concerned?
No one can say for sure...

#638
Senior Member
So wouldn't it be fair to say, if it's clear that selling helmets produces a verifiable profit for manaufactures, but not clear that there has been a verifiable decline in injuries to cyclists wearing these helmets, that the helmet industry is more about profit, than safety?
Last edited by closetbiker; 11-19-11 at 02:42 PM.

#639
Senior Member
So wouldn't it be fair to say, if it's clear that the helmet industry produces a verifiable profit for manaufactures, but not clear in any verifiable way that injuries to cyclists wearing helmets has declined, that the helmet industry is more about profit, than safety?
However, I can't think of any safety-product related company, off hand, that is not in it for profit, first and foremost. Generally, if companies are not turning a profit, they go out of business...
Still waiting for the punchline here...

#640
Senior Member
The punch line is, the joke is on cyclists.
The focus on helmets has reduced safety for cyclists (through misdirection from proven methods of increasing safety) while producing profits for fear mongers.
If a helmets fiscal profitability was as poor as it's efficacy, their manufacture would be discontinued.
The focus on helmets has reduced safety for cyclists (through misdirection from proven methods of increasing safety) while producing profits for fear mongers.
If a helmets fiscal profitability was as poor as it's efficacy, their manufacture would be discontinued.

#641
Senior Member
btw, I'm guessing those Giro Sections are going for something like $33?
Even if that is your cost, isn't that still a lot of profit for something that cost about $5 and hasn't been shown to do too much to reduce injury?
Even if that is your cost, isn't that still a lot of profit for something that cost about $5 and hasn't been shown to do too much to reduce injury?

#642
Senior Member
The punch line is, the joke is on cyclists.
The focus on helmets has reduced safety for cyclists (through misdirection from proven methods of increasing safety) while producing profits for fear mongers.
If a helmets fiscal profitability was as poor as it's efficacy, their manufacture would be discontinued.
The focus on helmets has reduced safety for cyclists (through misdirection from proven methods of increasing safety) while producing profits for fear mongers.
If a helmets fiscal profitability was as poor as it's efficacy, their manufacture would be discontinued.

#643
Senior Member
You're not suggesting helmet efficacy is as well established as helmet profitability are you?
Now that would be hyperbole.
Now that would be hyperbole.

#644
Senior Member
And no, if manufacturing cost is $5, then 10x markup for retail price @ $50 is about right based on the only other manufacturing I know, books. There's quite a few people making money along the way from manufacturer to retailer to consumer.
Plenty other products with low cost of mfg, high price, of dubious benefit. Pet rocks come to mind...

#645
Senior Member
Are you under the mistaken impression that the two have, or should have anything to do with each other?
Helmet profitability is very obvious: helmet companies exist. Scientists theorize a force in the universe called gravity, too.
I don't disagree with you here, y'know, just that I don't assign near the value that you do to this: you seem outraged; barely rates a shrug from me as statement of the obvious and near inconsequential.
I refuse to dabble in hyperbole.

#646
Senior Member
More like $25-27.50?
And no, if manufacturing cost is $5, then 10x markup for retail price @ $50 is about right based on the only other manufacturing I know, books. There's quite a few people making money along the way from manufacturer to retailer to consumer.
Plenty other products with low cost of mfg, high price, of dubious benefit. Pet rocks come to mind...
And no, if manufacturing cost is $5, then 10x markup for retail price @ $50 is about right based on the only other manufacturing I know, books. There's quite a few people making money along the way from manufacturer to retailer to consumer.
Plenty other products with low cost of mfg, high price, of dubious benefit. Pet rocks come to mind...
That would be a manufactured, phycological benefit - not a concrete and verifiable benefit, no?

#647
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I wonder who came up with the idea that all cyclists ought to wear helmets?

#648
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The context of this thread (and you're correct that context and following along are important) is that many people believe that helmets are useful for preventing concussions. Evidence of this includes the many posts to this and other threads where people state that a helmet saved their life and the explicit justifications for mandatory helmet laws. Denying this context and suggesting that actually, most helmet wearers are aware that the helmet will only save them from minor injuries is a misleading reframing of the thread.
Which is inherently hard to determine as has been stated ad nauseam before on this thread.
I strongly doubt that there is a signficant population of people with minor skull fractures who have not sought medical attention. My point is that helmets are promoted, and believed by the majority of their wearers, as an effective way to prevent serious brain injury including concussions. The fact that populations before/after the application of this treatment show no decrease in serious brain injuries suggests that helmets are useless for this widely held belief.
The point was that while you suggested that the data on rotational injury was so inconclusive that it could be dismissed easily this is not the viewpoint taken by several helmet manufacturers.
I obviously don't disagree that a helmet can prevent some injuries and have never said so. This is an example of your irritating attempt to create two extrema in between which you are a "moderate". The question is not "do helmets prevent some injuries", but rather, is the helmet-wearing hucker encouraged into his bicycle ballet by the false belief that the helmet will prevent him from suffering serious injuries. Does said hucker believe that his risk is the same as taking a shower?
Emphatically not. You have a plethora of standards to chose from. But it should be obvious that a downhill helmet is completely different in form to a road helmet. What my friends wear for it is essentially a motorcycle helmet. Not what anyone would want to wear to the store : https://www.downhill-mtb.com/archives/105
Sounds like one of the ways in which risk compensation might occur: helmets and armor, by shielding their wearers from the normal unpleasant deterrents of cuts and bruises facilitate the ignoring of obvious deterrents to an activity which could lead to death.
1)Sure, some people were hitting high speeds on road descents long before helmets entered the scene, but is this true for downhill MTBing? It seems to me that the pairing of wicked-cool adrenalin activities with supposed safety equipment is a completely recent phenomenon. Did repackers hit speeds above 30mph?
2)On the one hand you admit risk compensation and then you go on to deny it. Helmets may not "make" people engage in high risk activities but they sure as hell seem to _encourage_ them into it.
2)On the one hand you admit risk compensation and then you go on to deny it. Helmets may not "make" people engage in high risk activities but they sure as hell seem to _encourage_ them into it.
2)I wasn't trying to deny risk compensation, just pointing out that there are people who decide to engage in high risk activities regardless of whether or not they perceive it to be made safer through safety gear.
But yes, by making dangerous activities seem safer, the increasingly ubiquitous presence of helmets might be encouraging people who would otherwise not engage in said dangerous activities into increased levels of risk. So I guess that risk compensation from helmet promotion can put some people at greater risk, but I have a hard time blaming helmets for this, and not the people who've opted into risky activities without proper research, and the marketeers who've implied that helmets are far more effective than they actually are.
Hopefully there are more helmet threads like this on skateboarding forums, mountain climbing forums, skiing forums (although there isn't one on the skiing forum that I frequent; at least not a stickied one), etc... to help counter this pervasive misconception.
Because I don't believe you should take it upon yourself to speak for "the bare-headed crowd" when in fact there are a large variety of reasons why we all individually chose not to wear helmets. I find it presumptious and irritating of you to present yourself as some sort of voice of reason.
I find this either obviously wrong or meaningless.
I don't like commenting on *your* choices, so I'd prefer to reframe it more abstractly:
Does wearing a helmet lead the wearer into situations in which the second factor in your equation is increased dramatically?
Does wearing a helmet lead the wearer into situations in which the second factor in your equation is increased dramatically?
Last edited by GriddleCakes; 11-19-11 at 10:07 PM. Reason: spell check feature is awesome, grammar check sorely lacking ;)

#649
Senior Member
If you rode without a helmet in '85, no one blinked. Do the same 10 years later, and you were likely to be lectured. Australia, New Zealand, Ontario, BC, had, or soon were to pass laws on helmet use, so the base work had been done by this point. It seems much of it was by Bell.
Last edited by closetbiker; 11-19-11 at 10:13 PM.

#650
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I usually don't use an inflammatory phrase for such, just quoting Monster Pete... That's why it was in quotes (" ").
3) Maximum protection includes drivers being aware and safe, which is degraded by helmet use. Either drivers will drive too close to helmeted riders, or helmet use will decrease ridership and without a critical mass of cyclists, driver reaction to them will remain less than safe. Helmets are less safe than riding safely, so obviously helmets are not part of a riding strategy with maximum protection as a goal.
Thanks for not proving any point I made wrong.
Actually, no, many come here for reasonable discourse and get totally ambushed by the bare-head crowd. They may come in with an aggressive or incorrect stance, but their introduction to rebuttal in here is hardly as reasonable and neutral as Monster Pete puts forward. As evidenced by the first poster I responded to above, and...:
