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- July 20, 2009 at 8:19 am #13836TT07Participant
Shamelessly copied from the BBC News Site (For some reason this 2 year old article is in the top 5 read today[?])
https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/6670313.stm
The Isle of Man’s Tourist Trophy motorcycle races are celebrating their centenary. They’ve claimed dozens of lives but are seen as a symbol of freedom of choice in an increasingly regulated world.
To see a competitor flash down Bray Hill at the start of the TT is an extraordinary thing, even to the non-motorcycle fan.The roar of even a single 1000cc engine can be heard as much in the solar plexus as in the ears.
We all think we know what racetracks look like – squiggly circuits of beautiful flat road, courses littered with safety features like gravel traps and tyre barriers.
But the TT – the longest and oldest motorcycle course in the world – is 37.73 miles of closed public road. It is narrow country road, with overhanging trees, whitewashed cottages fronting directly onto the track and tricky corners bordered by solid dry stone walls.
Hay bales are often all that separates a miscalculating rider from serious injury or death.
Element of danger
Morecambe rider John McGuinness holds the current lap record at an average speed of over 129mph. Riders, who race against the clock, can exceed 200mph on some stretches.
“It’s the longest circuit in the world by far. It’s part of history, almost where motorcycling started. The speeds are unbelievable.
“On Bray Hill, you go from 0-180mph down a straight. On a normal road elsewhere, you would immediately go to jail or kill yourself.
“It looks ridiculously fast and mental and insane, 200mph on a road looks like absolute madness. But I leave a little bit, my safety buffer.”
There’s no escaping the element of danger, and many riders who died pursuing the sport they love are remembered in the names of corners and milestones.
The Isle of Man has always been prepared to close the roadsBirkin’s Bend remembers Archie Birkin, killed avoiding a fish cart in practice in 1927. The Graham Memorial is dedicated to Les Graham, killed on the second lap in 1953. The 11th Milestone is a tribute to Reuben Drinkwater who died in 1949. Joey’s is for Joey Dunlop, perhaps the greatest rider, who died in Estonia in 2000.
In all, more than 200 riders have died in the TT and its sister event the Manx Grand Prix over the last 100 years.
Frozen to bike
As another of the race favourites, Lincolnshire rider Guy Martin, explains: “The danger is a big thing why I like it, that’s my main thing. It is thrilling. People think you are mad for saying that.”
TT riders were always made of tough stuff. John Surtees, the only man to have been motorcycling and Formula 1 car world champion, remembers racing in 1959 in appalling conditions. He had to be lifted off his bike at the finish.
“I had hail and I had rain. The hail was so strong it took paint off. I sort of got frozen on the spot. Worst weather conditions I’ve raced in. The Isle of Man can throw everything at you.”
The TT races had their genesis in Britain’s fear of speed and danger on the roads.
25,000 attend annually
50-55,000 this year
Average helicopter time to fallen rider – six minutes
Section of course open one-way to fans
More than 200 deaths in TT and grand prixThe 1903 Motor Act imposed a 20mph speed limit on cars, and the legal impossibility of closing roads for racing meant car and bike enthusiasts had to look for a more liberal regime. They found it in the Isle of Man.
The island, with its own legal system and distinct culture, is a very different place to its near neighbour, Britain.
On the island, aversion to the idea of speeding enforcement is so great that a “safety camera” was attacked by arsonists soon after installation.
In Britain, often referred to simply as “across” by islanders, the newspapers like to paint a picture of a manic wave of health and safety zealotry forcing kids to wear goggles to play conkers and “nannying” citizens with excessive regulation.
Long controversy
“There is that much government legislation on health and safety these days, but it ain’t quite got to the Isle of Man,” Martin, who also races lawnmowers, notes.
By the post-war era speeds had jumped massivelyStuart Barker, author of TT Century, lost his friend Gus Scott, who died in 2005 after colliding with a race marshal who was on the track. The marshal also died.
“You can’t argue that it isn’t dangerous. How much longer it can last in today’s society, I don’t know. Even in the 1920s it came in for flak, with people saying the bikes were too fast and it had to stop.”
But the ultimate decision has to lie with the riders, and the Manx people who host the event, Barker says.
“It is a breath of fresh air to get away from the crushing environment of regulation.”
To McGuinness, the safety groups who would see the race diluted are a “bunch of do-gooders”.
“Everyone wants to kick it in, but we all know that we accept the risks. Maybe we are hard-nosed bastards.”
Risk remains
There has, however, been a drive for better training of marshals in recent years, and more money spent on safety, but riding the course remains a risk.
David Jefferies, killed in 2003, put it succinctly to a reporter.
Bikes have changed dramatically“No-one is forcing me to go, I’m doing it completely off my own back. I enjoy doing it. There are so many things in life that you aren’t allowed to do for some pathetic reason that some bloke in a suit has decided because it’s dangerous or some other reason.”
But the risk is not just confined to the competitors. Unlike virtually every other motor race in the world, in the TT, the fans can taste the danger too.
One of the most notorious features of the TT fortnight is “Mad Sunday”, a tradition that sees a large section of the track – from the Ramsey Hairpin to Creg-ny-Baa – made one-way to the public for one day. Fans get to be racers for a day.
Mad Sunday
There are no speed cameras on the island’s A-roads. They’d be pointless. There is no island-wide speed limit, although there are limits in towns and accident blackspots.
When the government decided to extend the Mad Sunday concept to the full fortnight of the TT festival for the centenary, critics said it would be both inconvenient and an encouragement to fans to travel at unsafe speeds.
But the authorities take the view that by avoiding head-on collisions the prospect of deaths will be greatly reduced.
“They can ride the mountain course one way. Sometimes you are going to get the odd accident. They take it at their own risk,” McGuinness suggests.
The TT’s supporters point out it has been important in pioneering techniques to keep riders safer.
Richard Fairbairn, of Motorcycle News, says it is the world’s biggest safety laboratory. Non-slip road marking paint, high-grip road surfaces and flush cats’ eyes have been all been tried on the island and then adopted elsewhere.
The event is the major tourist draw to the island. This year at least 20,000 motorbikes will be brought to the island as well as many fans travelling by plane.
For every islander who despises the noise, inconvenience, crowds and danger, there is another who recognises an emblem for a little-thought-of island.
And for motorcycle fans, the TT will remain a symbol of adults being free to pursue a passion, even at the cost of risking their own lives.
July 20, 2009 at 10:46 am #58902imperialdataKeymasterGood find TT, that’s a good read. That old argument about it ‘being up to the rider if he wants to take risks’ will go on and on it seems.
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