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Avoiding Diesel

I picked up a message on an e-mail group the other day about a rider who crashed on diesel. According to the mail, the amount of diesel spilled on the road was considerable - several of his mates nearly crashed too - in fact there was even some talk of the spill being deliberate. Spills of this size fortunately are not common but the tone of most of the messages was that diesel "will have you off if you hit it". Well, it will at very least cause you to slide but most spills can be predicted and avoided with a little forward thinking.

Clearly diesel is very slippery, particularly in the rain - so the trick is to stay off it!  It's fairly straight forward to spot. Fresh diesel is very black - wet and shiny looking. In the rain, you get the familiar rainbow effect as it washes all over the road. Old diesel which isn't usually slippery is a dull black mark on the road. Very often though, you can smell diesel before you see it, particularly if it is a big spill so use your nose.

Think where it will likely be spilled on the road. Consider where and when lorries and buses operate with full tanks - take care near industrial estates and bus depots, particularly in the morning. With our current price of fuel, lorries arriving on ferries are likely to have tanks filled to the brim. Watch out near filling stations (and at the pumps themselves too). A broken down lorry at the side of the road might just have split its tank and dumped gallons on the road. If you see a line of diesel in an adjacent lane, consider the possibility that the vehicle trailing it will change lane ahead - keep back from the car in front so that you can see the surface. If you see temporary Police warning triangles take care - it may well be an accident ahead. Be careful at the scenes of accidents - there may well be diesel, engine oil or antifreeze on the road.

In particular, watch the surface where vehicles change direction - for example corners, junctions and roundabouts. This is where diesel will slosh out of a tank with a missing cap. One of our basic riding rules is that we never travel faster than the speed that allows us to stop in the distance we can see to be clear, but riders rarely consider the road surface when applying the rule. Diesel spill frequently happen on roundabouts where riders go for a bit of "knee down" action, and as a result are unable to avoid a spillage out of site on the far side of the island - if you want to get your knee down, do a sighting lap first!

On a right hand bend a vehicle travelling in your direction will tend to dump its fuel near the left kerb on the exit which will be around the corner and out of sight as you set your line up for the corner. This could be a problem if you run wide yourself, so a safe line is one that stays towards the centre of the lane and doesn't take an extreme position on the exit, at a speed that allows you to change direction if necessary - you should always have a margin for safety. A vehicle coming the other way will lay it near the centre white line on your approach to the bend, and is more easily seen on the approach.

On left handers, the situation is reversed and the spill you have to worry about will be on the exit near the white line, again out of sight initially. Take a safe line that does not rely on extremes of position and speed.

Use your observation links - if you see diesel on one right hand bend, the chances are it will be on the next right hand bend/junction/roundabout too.

Petrol can also be spilled. It is just as slippery as diesel - unfortunately it is almost invisible, and evaporates quickly, so the evidence disappears.

If you do find yourself about to ride through diesel, don't try to steer and don't try to brake. Keep the bike as upright as possible - in a corner, you may be able to swerve hard to tighten the bend, to give yourself space to pick the bike up as you cross the spill. Don't forget that the tyres will still be slippery on the far side of the spill - give it a moment for the oil to wear off before flinging the bike on its ear.

Think, scan and plan ahead and diesel should be no more than an irritant, albeit a dangerous one.

 

 

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HAZARD AVOIDANCE

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Note: these pages have been rearranged and you may not arrive at the right page following a keyword search from a search engine - use the index link above to search for the tip you are interested in.

However, the upside is that they shouldn't move around any more when I add a new article!


Copyright © 1999-2008 Kevin Williams

Survival Skills
CDROMs
£12.99

Course Notes
and
Tarmac Tactics
If you want to know about advanced riding skills, start here - two Survival Skills publications on CDROM - both packed full of practical riding knowledge, hints and tips, in an easy-to-read format
 

 

Getting Started
Explains Direct Access and how to pass the test

Guide to CBT
Tells you everything you need to know about your first day on two wheels

Get them
here!

 


 

Last Page update Tuesday, May 13, 2008 

Survival Skills is an approved trainer and assessor
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Buckinghamshire County Council

and "National Motorcycle Escort Group" Qualified

Copyright © 2008 Survival Skills & Kevin Williams

 Last Page update Tuesday, May 13, 2008