I'm talking about abrasion and slide time. Tumbling is actually good in terms of reducing abrasion injury because it's when we slide that the clothing hooks up, gets stretched and either rips, pulls seams apart or wears through.
Seriously, go take a look at the modern stuff... you won't even know you're wearing it.I'll never have hard armour in anything again - I'd rather have no armour!!
I've had textiles that are no good either - or that ride up and expose skin to road. Makes your choices!
But that's why you've got MotoCAP... you can see how well various garments perform on a range of tests that replicates real crashes. It's about making informed choices rather than taking pot luck.
It does... most crashes are collisions with cars or hard objects... that's what makes the lower leg vulnerable.Depends on how/when/where you crash! I've only ever skinned/cut knees - so far!
I clipped some Armco with my shin back in the 90s... didn't even know I'd hit it till I saw the damage to the boot.Like I said, we have to make choices. I protect the bits I feel need the most protection to enable me to continue to live alone. Not sure how I could protect lower legs for all eventualities though!!
Ultimately we can't armour ourselves against every eventuality and we can't protect everything either - internal injuries for example from a heavy impact - but we can make informed decisions.
For example, based on the knowledge of which bits are more and less likely to get injured I know back injuries are quite rare so I don't bother with a back protector on the road because most of them are pretty uncomfortable / hot.
And independent clothing testing means e can choose stuff that works rather than relying on what the manufacturer tells us.
And then we can scale our protection according to where we ride and the risks we take. I have leathers for the track, textiles for the road and Bullitt denims for the really hot days and 20 mph days in the city. I should probably wear my high boots in town too.
Until they finally manage to build a bike which as many secondary safety systems that wrap us up like a car's safety cage, that's all we can do
So, I'm not telling anyone what they should wear, just pointing out that informed decisions ARE possible!