OHV Training - ATV Classes, Motorcycle Classes, Snowmobile Classes

You Have The Power


by Bill Uhl, classes@OHVtraining.org

After Charlie Williams and I wrote "Quiet, Please," an article published in the February Trail Rider Magazine, I received responses such as the following by Dean Walker of Orofino, Idaho.

Excess noise hurts all types of motorsports. The real reason people
slap on the loud pipes isn't that they produce more power. It's that
somebody in high school had a set of straight pipes on a car or pickup,
and MAN, that sounded cool!

While opening the exhaust hole up might increase top horsepower, it
does little or nothing to improve the low-end torque response of most
motors. In fact, most run better with a little back pressure.

Unlike, Dean Walker, part of the motorcycle riding population does not believe that sound is a problem. Is sound a friend or a foe?

We become so accustomed to some sounds that we pay little attention to them, yet others are like fingernails on a chalkboard. If we want to ensure our rights to travel on public lands, it is the sounds that we have become unconscious of, and how they travel through the forest, that we must become more aware of. If we want our children and grandchildren to have the right to enjoy our favorite sport, we have no choice but to pay attention to how sound -- and how it varies according to conditions in the woods.

If you are riding along a fast-moving stream, the sound of your bike can only be heard for 10 - 15 seconds, but if you place that same bike on a ridge trail, the sound will last as long as 15 minutes. Additionally, as the ridge goes up and down, the noise will come and go. The bottom line is to always keep our objective in mind. The more we decrease the noise level we produce, the more places we get to play. LESS SOUND = MORE GROUND = MORE FUN.

If we as motorized recreationists choose to bury our heads in the sand like ostriches, not noticing the effects of the noise we make, the day we finally raise our heads, we may be horrified. Our right to ride on public lands may have been stolen from us.

As I've discussed with those who have emailed me after the last article, we need a strategy to create a grassroots movement to prevent future problems and resolve the challenges we already face.

THE FIRST STEP IS TO RECOGNIZE THAT WE HAVE FAR MORE POWER THAN WE HAVE BEEN ACKNOWLEDGING. Here are just a few examples.

The above actions will go a long way toward creating the grassroots movement that we absolutely must have if we are to save our sport from extinction. We have the numbers. We have the know-how, and we have the vocal power. We have the bargaining chip of the cash we spend. You get the message? We have the power to pull this off.

For too long, we have been reacting to an onslaught of governmental and societal pressures. Now, we have a huge opportunity to turn the tide. We are not "victims," unless we program ourselves to be, so let's be proactive. Let's take back our sport. I challenge you to enter this race -- the one race that each of you must enter and win -- if we are to preserve our right to ride.


To fulfill your training needs, contact us directly at:

OHV Training™
1121 Bunker Creek Rd.
Chehalis, WA 98532 USA

EMAIL: classes@OHVtraining.org

 

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