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joona
November 30th 03, 12:12 AM
I want to know what kind of a helmet (BMX/Fullface/regular) are you
using? And I mean the brand and model of your helmet. I'm thinking of
buying a helmet sometime soon (I've been thinking about it for about 3
months now) but some recent crashes on ice and falling to my back have
made me feel I need to buy one really soon. Probably next week.

At the moment I have some options. I most likely will go for a regular
bike helmet, because they are lighter and usually have more vents. So
far the best options I've found are from
Giro: Targa, Skyline or Corius. (I know that Switchblade would be a
great helmet, fullface/normal and all, but it doesn't fit on my
budget)
Bell: Avanti, Aquila or X-ray(it's on sale right now, otherwise too
expensive)
Mango: Escape or Flash

I did a little searching through older threads and didn't find anything
else than: "wear a helmet you moron" written every where. They had no
recommendations on different kinds of helmets.


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onewheeldave
November 30th 03, 01:47 AM
Good decision (to get a helmet).

There's been a few threads on best types of helmet, but not much on
specific brands.

Here's a good thread for comparisons of skate/BMX helmets and bike ones:
-

http://tinyurl.com/x1k5

To sum it up, skate helmets offer more protection to back of neck area
and can take multiple impacts (so you don't have to worry too much about
it getting knocked around).

Bike helmets are better ventilated and deal better with sweat but, cos
they're designed to crumple on impact, are single use and you have to be
careful not to drop them.

If I were you I wouldn't worry about brands cos they all, even the cheap
ones, have to follow the safety standards.

I have a bike and a skate helmet, both low end (around £15), I mainly
use the bike helmet cos I ride fair distance/mild muni, and it's
comfortable. If I did trials or hoppy/jumpy muni, I'd probably use the
skate helmet.

Lastly, here's a page of search results for threads that discuss
relative merits of the two types: -

http://tinyurl.com/x1k6


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Klaas Bil
November 30th 03, 08:12 AM
On Sat, 29 Nov 2003 18:12:01 -0600, joona
> wrote:

>I want to know what kind of a helmet (BMX/Fullface/regular) are you
>using? And I mean the brand and model of your helmet.

I am using a middle-end (if there is such a thing) bike helmet. Brand
AGU, model Testa, weight about 250 g. It can be seen a various angles
in <www.xs4all.nl/~klaasbil/snow.htm>. I don't think I've ever fallen
on it, but I don't do MUni or fast road rides without it.

Klaas Bil - Newsgroup Addict
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joona
November 30th 03, 10:45 AM
One of the local bike shops has the Giro Targa on sale. It costs 60€ so
I'll probably go with it. It offers quite a good protection, even on the
back of the head.
[image:
http://www.giro.com/europe/images/cycling/helmets/targa_silverblue.jpg][image:
http://www.giro.com/europe/images/cycling/index/indexcyc_12off.gif]
If you compare it to the Giro Semi, which is for BMX, there's not too
much difference on the coverage.
[image:
http://www.giro.com/europe/images/cycling/index/indexcyc_11off.gif]


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joona
November 30th 03, 05:41 PM
X-Complaints-To:
Lines: 13
Xref: intern1.nntp.aus1.giganews.com rec.sport.unicycling:108304


Decided to go with the Bell X-Ray. Some of the bikers I've met
recommended it.


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gerblefranklin
November 30th 03, 07:55 PM
I have a Giro Semi (w/o the visor). It's realy good, and saved me pretty
well at the muni weekend. I was doing some light trials on the first
day, and I fell, and hit my head on a rock. I barely felt it, but my
helmet showed a dent. I was glad I had that particular type of helmet,
cuz the hit was in a place where most bike helmets wouldn't protect.


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super_evill
November 30th 03, 07:57 PM
I use my skull!


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joona
November 30th 03, 08:09 PM
gerblefranklin wrote:
> * I was glad I had that particular type of helmet, cuz the hit was in
> a place where most bike helmets wouldn't protect. *


This is a problem with most of the cheaper helmets. They don't usually
protect the back of your head too well. I've noticed that the price is
usually close to 60€ before you get a helmet that protects the back of
your head. I've read some reviews and people really like the X-ray.
Everyone says it fits really well. And it has one hand adjustment. So
the normal price for X-ray is between 120€-130€, now I can buy it for
77€.


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napalm
December 1st 03, 07:08 AM
After crasking my regular bike and scraping the back of my head up i
decised to go with a traditional skate helmet. It is snug and won't ride
up if force is applied to it. I went for the ProTec brand as they were
recomended by a BMXing friend. It cost me $70Aus so it wasn't that bad
at all. Thas my 2cents
Mark
PS: it aslo passes as a waterski and snowboard helmet which is a good
bonus.


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Adrian
December 1st 03, 10:02 AM
onewheeldave wrote:
> *If I were you I wouldn't worry about brands cos they all, even the
> cheap ones, have to follow the safety standards.
> *


True, they should all offer the same level of protection (assuming
you're comparing like with like), but different brands may fit your head
better, I find the Giro helmets are a much better fit.

Try them on before you buy if you can.

Adrian.


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Rowan
December 1st 03, 12:28 PM
None.


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Klaas Bil
December 1st 03, 12:53 PM
super_evill wrote:
> *I use my skull! *

I recommend using your brains. :-)

Klaas Bil


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Rowan
December 1st 03, 01:06 PM
Klaas Bil wrote:
>
>
> > -Originally posted by super_evill-
> > *I use my skull!*
> *
> I recommend using your brains. :-)*
Use your brains as a helmet? Are you suggesting he removes his hard
skull and lands on soft brain? Joking aside I think the brains method
works well. You can assess dangers with your brain and avoid them as you
see fit. A helmet must help crazy people who do stupid things that have
them end up on their head, most people aren't that way inclined. Having
said that I felt a bit guilty when Jackie borrowed my unicycle and said
she hit the back of her head on the concrete floor when she fell. Maybe
it's just crazy people and beginners who need helmets. It's a matter of
personal preference. Brain+helmet is probably the safest combo, because
a helmet won't replace your common sense.


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joona
December 1st 03, 02:19 PM
Rowan wrote:
> *Maybe it's just crazy people and beginners who need helmets. It's a
> matter of personal preference. Brain+helmet is probably the safest
> combo, because a helmet won't replace your common sense. *


I think I'm a beginner (only four and half months of riding, two months
of more intense MUni and trials practice), and I'm sometimes a bit
crazy. I tend to do stupid things because people talk me into it (is
dupe the word to call me?). Actually I don't usually even need people to
talk me into trying things.

edit. And I just bought the X-Ray, it's really comfortable.


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super_evill
December 1st 03, 06:16 PM
Rowan wrote:
> *
> I recommend using your brains. :-)*
Use your brains as a helmet? Are you suggesting he removes his hard
skull and lands on soft brain? Joking aside I think the brains method
works well. You can assess dangers with your brain and avoid them as you
see fit. A helmet must help crazy people who do stupid things that have
them end up on their head, most people aren't that way inclined. Having
said that I felt a bit guilty when Jackie borrowed my unicycle and said
she hit the back of her head on the concrete floor when she fell. Maybe
it's just crazy people and beginners who need helmets. It's a matter of
personal preference. Brain+helmet is probably the safest combo, because
a helmet won't replace your common sense.



I agree.


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super_evill
December 1st 03, 06:16 PM
Rowan wrote:
> *
> I recommend using your brains. :-)*
Use your brains as a helmet? Are you suggesting he removes his hard
skull and lands on soft brain? Joking aside I think the brains method
works well. You can assess dangers with your brain and avoid them as you
see fit. A helmet must help crazy people who do stupid things that have
them end up on their head, most people aren't that way inclined. Having
said that I felt a bit guilty when Jackie borrowed my unicycle and said
she hit the back of her head on the concrete floor when she fell. Maybe
it's just crazy people and beginners who need helmets. It's a matter of
personal preference. Brain+helmet is probably the safest combo, because
a helmet won't replace your common sense.



I agree.


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danger_uni
December 1st 03, 10:56 PM
super_evill wrote:
> *Use your brains as a helmet? Are you suggesting he removes his hard
> skull and lands on soft brain? Joking aside I think the brains method
> works well. You can assess dangers with your brain and avoid them as
> you see fit. A helmet must help crazy people who do stupid things that
> have them end up on their head, most people aren't that way inclined.
> Having said that I felt a bit guilty when Jackie borrowed my unicycle
> and said she hit the back of her head on the concrete floor when she
> fell. Maybe it's just crazy people and beginners who need helmets.
> It's a matter of personal preference. Brain+helmet is probably the
> safest combo, because a helmet won't replace your common sense. *



I smacked my the side of my head pretty hard falling off a really
slippery north shore obstacle on the weekend- doesn't happen often but I
was really glad to be wearing a helmet! I've been wearing Lazer brand
helmets for the last couple of years; they seem pretty good.

Kris Holm.


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aust
December 2nd 03, 02:48 AM
I havent been using a helmet lately but just recently ive smacked my
head three or four times just riding around my house on icy
roads/obstacles ( it was extremely painful ) and am now really keen on
buying a helmet. I think im going to go for the skateboarding/BMX style
helmets, they seem to have the most protection and aesthetic appeal.


Austin


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Bonduranto
December 2nd 03, 02:55 AM
I skateboarded a few years back, and i kept my helmet from that
It's just a plain helmet, made by pro-tec, about $30us. It does get
hot, but it goes way down on the back and seems like it would do a
better job if i actually did fall on it


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Rowan
December 2nd 03, 03:06 AM
danger_uni wrote:
> *I smacked my the side of my head pretty hard falling off a really
> slippery north shore obstacle on the weekend- doesn't happen often but
> I was really glad to be wearing a helmet! I've been wearing Lazer
> brand helmets for the last couple of years; they seem pretty good. *
No offense Kris, but I think you fall under the category of crazy
people. How many sane people would unicycle off the labotimizer drop and
live to tell the tale (repeatedly)? When I said your brain can assess
dangers and avoid them, I didn't mean hunt down dangers and ride as
close to them as possible. I think helmets suit your style of riding
Kris, keep on wearing them! On the (off topic) subject of drops, do you
ever crush your nuts on big drops Kris? What about your ankles, do they
fold back sometimes when you land? After spraining my ankle a while
back, it is really weak and can't handle very big drops, and I
re-injured it a bit by going off a small (3 foot) drop, prolonging the
healing process.


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danger_uni
December 2nd 03, 08:15 PM
Rowan wrote:
> *No offense Kris, but I think you fall under the category of crazy
> people. How many sane people would unicycle off the labotimizer drop
> and live to tell the tale (repeatedly)? When I said your brain can
> assess dangers and avoid them, I didn't mean hunt down dangers and
> ride as close to them as possible. I think helmets suit your style of
> riding Kris, keep on wearing them! On the (off topic) subject of
> drops, do you ever crush your nuts on big drops Kris? What about your
> ankles, do they fold back sometimes when you land? After spraining my
> ankle a while back, it is really weak and can't handle very big drops,
> and I re-injured it a bit by going off a small (3 foot) drop,
> prolonging the healing process. *


Risk assessment when riding is certainly difficult- most of the time it
definately boils down to experience.

In the case of obviously high consequence situations like riding on a
bridge railing, the consequence is obvious and it is utterly clear that
the difficulty needs to be low enough that you are sure you won't fall.
I won't try to justify this because you can't- it's a personal decision
that must be taken very seriously.

For me, the scarier situations occur where it's much more technically
difficult and the consequences are moderate: you might hurt yourself,
but then again you might be just fine if you fall properly or ride it
successfully. The lobotomizer drop is in the latter category.

I've never bagged myself, nor broken a seat, nor bent or broken a
seatpost. Personally I think that if you land properly, even if you
wipe out, all of this can be totally avoided with proper technique.
Avoiding drops to flat ground greater than maybe 5 feet would probably
probably help to- drops to flat suck! Sometimes I feel like making a
bumper sticker that says, "Friends don't let friends drop to flat".

I have jammed my foot up towards my shin before (quite a few times), and
this hurts- I agree. I used to wear ankle supports (although I don't
right now), and although they help greatly with twists and also
compression from jumping off high things, they don't help this problem.
Ultimately it's better I think to try to avoid this by using good
technique on drops.

Kris


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