Hm...I remember 3 of them.
1. When riding next to a row of parked cars which poses the greatest hazard?
a. Parked cars pulling away from the curb
b. A car door opening in your path
c. A pedestrian walking out from between two parked cars
I debated between A & B and picked the wrong one. (A was deemed correct)
2. When the front tire goes flat which of the following should you do?
a. Apply the front and back brake and move to the right.
b. Apply the back brake and move to the closest shoulder.
c. Apply the front brake and move to the closest shoulder.
I picked B but A was correct.
3. If you need to perform an emergency stop while in a curve, but do not have time to straighten the bike what should you do?
a. Apply both the front and rear break ....more words
b. Apply the rear brake
c. apply the front brake and lean the bike to the lower side.
I picked B, again A was correct.
hm...looking at this I'm noticing a trend with my answers.
I say the first one was a toss up, but tell me if you know why A is more correct than B. I guessed on the second one. But the third; man I remember over and over in the MSF course being told to NEVER use the front brake while in a lean or your sure to go down.
If anyone can explain why I got that last one wrong I'd appreciate it. Any additional knowledge I can get is appreciated.
I got three questions wrong when I took my test, too! Can't remember which three....
Here's some explanations:
On the first one, it does say "greatest" hazard. An entire car moving into your path is easily the worst of the three....
Second:
Breaking with the tire that is flat is in general a bad idea, and best to be avoided. That's the one you have no control with. For an excellent explanation of flat tires and what to do, see here:
http://www.bayarearidersforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=185853Third:
An emergency stop means stop as fast as possible, which means both breaks. As stated above, it
is possible to feather the front in a curve (I do it all the time, something I learned in road biking). If you really need to stop, however, and the bike is leaned, applying more or less equal pressure to front and back will give you the best chance of making it through. The bike will stand up, but you'll be scrubbing speed at the same time, and, as stated previously, less speed is always better if there's a tree in your path. Also, you might just be able to recover enough to lean the bike back over (at your reduced speed) and make it through your turn.
The test is tricky. Some of the questions have answers where there's no "right" answer, just a "best" answer.
But, you passed! Congratulations!!
[moto]