Each
individual rider is 100% responsible for:
a) safely operating their vehicle in accordance with all
applicable Federal, State and local laws.
b) making sure that they and their vehicle are un-impaired,
and are currently functioning safely.
c) making sure that they can perform and maneuver safely in
the riding environment that they are in. Should they be not 100%
sure of their ability in the current ride, they must remove
themselves from the situation. At all times, each rider must ride
within their capabilities.
d) section (a) - (c) above and thus, ultimately,
their own safety, actions and/or lack of action.
It is the duty of every rider to make sure the environment is safe
for themselves as well as for other riders. In doing so, every
ride will be as safe as can be.
Formation
Riding will be in a
standard State Patrol (staggered) formation. In staggered
formation, the bikes form two columns, with the leader at the head
of the left column, so he will be able to view all bikes in the
formation in his/her rearview mirrors, and be able to see around
vehicles the group approaches. The second bike will head the
right column, and will ride approximately 1 second behind the
leader (and in the opposite side of the lane). The other riders
will position their bikes 2 seconds behind the bike directly in
front of them, which puts them 1 second behind the diagonal bike.
This formation allows each rider sufficient safety space, and
discourages other vehicles from cutting into the line.
The last rider, or
Tail Gunner, may ride on whichever side of the lane he
prefers. He will have to change sides during the ride, based on
the situation at the moment.
Ride Leader
The Ride Leader must be
aware of the length of the columns, and must gauge the passing of
merges, highway entrances and exits, etc., to allow for maximum
safety and keeping the group together. He must make sure that he
leaves enough time/space for the formation to get into the
appropriate lanes before exits, etc.
All directions come from
the Ride Leader. The Ride Leader makes all decisions regarding
lane changes, stopping for breaks and fuel, closing of gaps,
turning off at exits, any concerns of what lies ahead,
accepting/rejecting radioed messages from other individuals, and
so on. No individual will assert himself
independently without direction from the Ride Leader to do so.
Tail Gunner
The Tail Gunner serves
as the eyes of the Ride Leader. He watches the formation, and
informs the Ride Leader of any potential problems within the
group. He watches other vehicles, and informs the Ride Leader (and
anyone else with radios) of hazardous conditions approaching from
the rear, such as vehicles trying to cut into the formation and
trucks passing with potentially
dangerous wind blasts. He will watch for merging lanes, and will
move into a merging lane (or stay in a merging lane just vacated
by the group) in order to "close the door" on other vehicles that
may otherwise find themselves trying to merge into the formation.
At the Ride Leader’s request, the Tail Gunner changes lanes before
the formation, to secure the lane so the formation can move into
it.
New Riders
The position of
new (inexperienced with GROUP riding) riders within the group is
significant. New riders should be positioned as close to the front
as possible.
Lane Changes
All lane changing
starts with a radio request from the Ride Leader to the Tail
Gunner. The Tail Gunner will (when it is safe to do so) move into
the requested lane and will inform the Ride Leader when the lane
is clear.
At this point, the Ride
Leader has three options:
- Simple Lane
Change. This is an ordinary lane change, and can be used in
most situations.
- After the Tail
Gunner has secured the new lane, the Ride Leader will put on his
directional signal as an indication that he is about to order a
lane change. As each rider sees the directional signal, he also
turns his on, so the riders following him get the signal. The
leader then initiates the change. All other riders change lanes
too. The important concept is that NO ONE moves until the bike
in front of him has started moving.
- Block Lane
Change. This can be used interchangeably with the Simple
Lane Change. It requires a little more work, but it is well
worth the effort. It’s quite impressive to watch, and gives the
riders a tremendous feeling of "togetherness". This sounds a
little complicated, but is actually very simple to do.
- After the Tail
Gunner has secured the new lane, the Ride Leader will put on his
directional signal as an indication that he is about to order a
lane change. As each rider sees the directional signal, he also
turns his on, so the riders following him get the signal. The
leader then raises his left arm straight up. Each rider repeats
this signal. Then, as the leader lowers his arm to point to the
lane into which he’s moving, he actually initiates the change.
All other riders lower their arms at the same time and change
lanes too. This allows the entire formation to move from one
lane to another as a single block.
- Rear Fill-in.
This is sometimes necessary if a long enough gap cannot be
maintained in the new lane, for example when trying to move from
the right lane to the center and vehicles from the left lane
keep cutting into the opening.
- After the Tail
Gunner has secured the new lane, the leader (usually at the
suggestion of the Tail Gunner) will call for the group to fill
in the space from the rear. He signals this by raising his hand
to shoulder height and "pushing" it towards the new lane. All
riders repeat the signal, and the last bikes move into the space
in the new lane ahead of the Tail Gunner, then the next-to-last
bikes move in ahead of those, and so on until the Ride Leader
finally moves into the space ahead of the entire formation.
-
Emergencies
- In the unlikely
event of an emergency condition, the Ride Leader will make every
attempt to move the formation to the shoulder in an orderly
manner. If a bike breaks down, let the rider move to the right.
DO NOT STOP. The Tail Gunner will stop with the problem bike.
The Ride Leader will lead the group to a safe stopping place.
-
Tolls
- The Ride Leader
should be aware of tolls and collect money from all riders in
advance. When the formation arrives at the toll booth, the Ride
Leader pays for all bikes, and all bikes proceed through the
toll. Many toll booths have counters that count the number of
vehicles coming through. To accommodate these, ride through the
toll booth one at a time.
- If some people in
the group are using EZ Pass, they will split out from the group,
and the formation will reform on the other side of the toll
booth. Make sure the Ride Leader knows in advance how many bikes
he is paying the toll for.
-
Hand Signals
- Each
rider (and passenger) should duplicate all hand signals given by
the rider in front of him, so that the signals get passed all
the way to the back of the formation. The following signals are
used in addition to the standard (right turn, left turn,
slow/stop) hand signals.
Block Lane Change
- The leader (after
having the Tail Gunner secure the lane) raises his left arm
straight up. Each rider repeats this signal. Then, as the leader
lowers his arm to point to the lane into which he’s moving, he
actually initiates the change. All other riders lower their arms
at the same time and change lanes too.
Fill in from rear
- After having the
Tail Gunner secure the lane and putting on his directional
signal (which is repeated by each rider), the Ride Leader raises
his left hand to his shoulder and "pushes" his open hand toward
the lane into which he wants to move. This signal is repeated by
all riders, and each rider in turn, rearmost first, moves into
the space ahead of the riders behind them.
Single up
- When conditions
warrant single file (narrow road, anticipated wind-blast from
trucks, obstruction, pedestrians, etc.) the Ride Leader will
raise his left hand straight up, holding up just his index
finger. All other riders will repeat this, and the two columns
will merge into one.
Staggered
Formation
- After singling up,
when single file is no longer necessary, the Ride Leader will
raise his left hand with thumb and pinky out, other fingers
closed, rotating his wrist back and forth (indicating left,
right, left, right). All other riders will repeat this and
resume staggered formation.
Tighten Formation
- When the Ride
Leader feels that the formation should be tighter (bikes closer
together) (usually after being informed by the Tail Gunner), he
raises his left hand with fingers spread wide and repeatedly
closes them into a fist. All other riders repeat this and close
up all unnecessary space in the formation.
Road Hazard
- This is the one
signal that can be initiated by ANYONE. Anyone seeing a
hazardous condition on the road surface (roadkill, oil, gravel,
significant pot hole, etc.) will point at it. All following
riders will repeat this, and all riders will avoid the hazard.
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