Dictionary Definition
motorcyclist n : a traveler who rides a
motorcycle
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Someone who rides a motorcycle
Synonyms
Translations
- French: motard
Extensive Definition
Hunter
S. Thompson's book Hell's Angels includes an ode to the joys of
pushing a motorcycle to its limits on the open road: he states that
"with the throttle screwed on there is only the barest margin, and
no room at all for mistakes... that's when the strange music
starts, [and]... fear becomes exhilaration [and the]... only sounds
are the wind and a dull roar floating back from the mufflers.
Similarly, T. E.
Lawrence wrote of the "lustfulness of moving swiftly" and the
"pleasure of speeding on the road" on a motorcycle, which he
compared to the sensation of "feel[ing] the earth moulding herself
under me", coming alive, and "heaving and tossing on each side like
a sea."
Milan
Kundera also noted that "speed is the form of ecstasy the
technical revolution has bestowed on man"; unlike a runner, "when
man delegates the faculty of speed to a machine" such as a
motorbike, "from then on, his own body is outside the process, and
he gives over to a speed that is noncorporeal, nonmaterial, pure
speed, speed itself, ecstasy speed." Not all motorcyclists have a
"need for speed", but many do. Speed draws many people to
motorcycling, because the power-to-weight ratios of even low-power
motorcycles rivals that of an expensive sports car. The
power-to-weight ratio of high power sport bikes is
well beyond any mass-production automobile. All for a fraction of
the price of those automobiles.
High speeds on a motorcycle can also be more
exhilarating than high speeds in an automobile. Not only is the
sensation of speed greater since the rider is not separated from
the environment of the road, but motorcycles negotiate turns by
leaning. And the greater the speed, the greater the lean, sometimes
to the point of scraping parts of the motorcycle on the road. Some
riders will point proudly to the worn-away parts of their
motorcycle, proof that they take turns so fast that they must lean
the motorcycle over to the limits of its capabilities.
Repairing
Motorcyclists will refer to maintenance or repair of a motorcycle as wrenching, as in "turning a wrench." UK motorcyclists refer to a wrench as a "spanner", and the activity of working on the bike is similarly known as "spannering". Melissa Holbrook Pierson points out that the do-it-yourself self sufficiency is "part of [motor]bikes' allure in an increasingly monolithic, unfixable world." She also claims that motorcyclists "become a member of a community, linked first and foremost to anyone who rides; when another [motor]bike passes, you...[w]ave, and perhaps [give] a thumbs-up."Historically, wrenching was a necessary skill for
riders, since the materials and technology used in motorcycles
often meant that repairs had to be done on the road-side miles from
home. Modern motorcycles are as reliable as automobiles, but the
feeling that many riders have that their motorcycle is more than
just a means of transportation leads them to want to do any
wrenching on the bike themselves. This drive to wrench reaches its
zenith with rat bikes.
Riders of rats eschew paying anyone else to work on their
motorcycles on principle, and therefore do all their own
wrenching.
References
External links
- Season of the Bike "The difference between driving a car and climbing onto a motorcycle is the difference between watching TV and actually living your life."
- Mailing List Roundup Comprehensive listing of motorcycle-related email lists.
- IHIE Guidelines for Motorcycling - these authoritative Guidelines are the first in the UK, setting out comprehensive, practical guidance for highway engineers, traffic engineers, road safety officers and transport planners on providing a safer transport environment for motorcycles, mopeds and scooters.
- CAV Natonal Road Capt Rider's Handbbok
motorcyclist in Spanish: Motero
motorcyclist in Hungarian:
Motorkerékpározás
motorcyclist in Russian:
Мотоциклист