Anti-lock Braking Systems (ABS)
Despite
the general impression that ABS equipped vehicles can stop faster than
those without, in general this is not true. ABS is primarily intended
to help prevent the loss of control (caused by locked brakes), not to
in some magical way make the brakes more effective at stopping the
vehicle.
The
reason ABS is not particularly effective in terms of braking ability
on dry surfaces is that it is generally pretty easy to avoid locking
the brakes anyway. So, I suppose, there are those that will argue that
ABS helps you stop faster on slippery surfaces even if not on dry
ones.
In fact
that is not always true either. There are tests that show improved
stopping performance (for cars and trucks) on WET surfaces, where
drivers are more apt to overuse their brakes to the point of locking
them, but there are several other studies that demonstrate absolutely
convincingly that braking distances increase with ABS over non-ABS
equipped vehicles when riding on loose gravel or snow covered
surfaces. (This, because gravel and loose snow piles up and tends to
create a 'dam' in front of a locked wheel where a rolling wheel tends
to ride up and over a much smaller 'dam'.)
But
'maintaining control' is a good thing by itself, right? Surely that is
good enough reason to require every vehicle to have ABS equipped
brakes, right?
Nope.
In
February of this year (1996) the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration announced it had dropped the federal safety standard
requirement for anti-lock brake systems on all new cars.
They
did so because studies showed a 0% decrease in the overall number of
accidents when comparing ABS equipped cars against those without ABS,
AND because these studies showed a 40% increase in single
vehicle run-off-the-road accidents with ABS equipped cars. (Apparently
your odds of getting into an accident if you lock your brakes in a car
is less than if you do not - implying that if you lock them you will
likely simply slide in the direction you were moving, but if you
maintain some measure of (impaired) control you are likely to throw
the vehicle into a path that takes you off the road.)
I think
ABS makes sense for a cage, and maybe more sense for an 18-wheeler,
but is of essentially no value on a motorcycle. It affects stopping
distance insignificantly. What it is intended to do is help maintain
control if you ride over surfaces that provide uneven traction - such
as a patch of ice. A cage could hit that patch with just one tire, or
just the tires on one side, and braking and control could easily be
lost as a result. If you hit ice with a motorcycle it will invariably
be with both tires. Meanwhile, a slide is a slide is a slide.
On the
other hand, if your bike is equipped with ABS you do not have to be as
skillful with your brakes and if you want to eliminate the chance of
locking either your front or rear wheels, ABS is just the ticket for
you. (I think working at making your braking skills as good as
possible is a better strategy for almost anybody.)
One
other thing, you might consider ABS as a form of insurance. I, for
example, have deer whistles on my bike as a form of insurance even
though I have essentially no confidence that they are effective. If
price is not an issue, and even if you are not totally convinced that
ABS will save your life someday, it might be worth it to you to have
ABS on your bike.
Obviously,
these are just my opinions on the matter. I do not want to leave you
with the impression that I'm recommending against having ABS. Instead,
I'd prefer you made that decision based on being informed and having
realistic expectations.
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