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Rules for Group Riding Safety
The purpose of riding in an organized group instead of an
undisciplined pack is to provide the additional safety that a
well-organized group inherently generates. This comes from within
the group and from the outside. When a group rides in an orderly
fashion, people dont get in each others way, and the organization of
the formation itself discourages cars from attempting to cut in. I
have even seen trucks move to the far side of their lane to minimize
wind blast when they see a well-ordered formation "single up" and
move as far away from the truck as their lane allows. Once riding
rules have been adopted by a club, EVERYONE Riding with the SCRC
is expected to follow them. Anyone violating the rules, and
compromising everyone else's safety, will be warned, and if their
actions continue, will no longer be welcome to ride with the club.
The following rules are compiled from a number of sources. Most
clubs that ride in orderly formations follow similar rules. Details
may vary from one club to another, sometimes because of the style of
riding they do, or sometimes because there are a number of
reasonable options, so they chose the one they prefer.
NO ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION WHILE WE ARE RIDING !!!
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.
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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.
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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 Leaders request, the Tail Gunner changes lanes before the
formation, to secure the lane so the formation can move into it.
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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.
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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:
(A)
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.
(B)
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. Its 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 is 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.
(C)
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.
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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.
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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.
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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 is moving,
he actually initiates the change. All other riders lower their arms
at the same time and change lanes too.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Road Hazard:
This is the one signal that can be initiated by ANYONE. Anyone
seeing a hazardous condition on the road surface (road kill, 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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