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What if cyclists paid 'road tax'?; “Get on the rubbish cycle path!”; LNER upgrades bike storage, but is it good enough?; Tour of Britain host regions announced; Cav misses out; Don't try this at home, bike maintenance edition + more on the live blog

It’s Thursday, Cav’s kicking off his season in Oman, and Ryan Mallon is back for the penultimate live blog of the week
10 February 2022, 17:15
Back in Black: Tour de la Provence leader’s jersey honours Bernard Tapie

After winning today’s prologue of the Tour de la Provence in dominant fashion, Filippo Ganna will wear this slick looking leader’s jersey, designed to honour the memory of businessman and former cycling team owner Bernard Tapie, who died in October last year after a long battle with cancer.

Tapie, a businessman famed for rescuing bankrupt companies, made his first foray into the sport as the mercurial and controversial owner of La Vie Claire, the all-conquering squad led by Tour de France winners Bernard Hinault and Greg LeMond.

Since 2019 the Tour de la Provence adopted a Piet Mondrian-inspired jersey as an homage to La Vie Claire and Tapie, one of the race’s co-organisers.

Tapie has been credited with bringing a sense of drama and flamboyance – along with astronomical wages – to cycling in the 1980s. At the 1984 Tour he famously attempted to persuade LeMond to join his new team by arranging a clandestine, Bond villain-esque meeting with the American at night, and subsequently declared his new signing cycling’s first ‘million dollar man’.

Tapie wasn’t just an enigmatic figure in cycling circles, of course. A former colleague of mine, a Glasgow Rangers fan, still hasn’t forgiven him for 1993 and all that…

In any case, this design has reminded me to restart my petition to bring back the white Paris-Nice leader’s jersey. Come on, ASO, sort it out…

10 February 2022, 16:37
Updates from the Tour de la Provence: Filippo Ganna is still very, very good

Top Ganna’s Ineos Grenadiers teammate Ethan Hayter also put in a very strong performance to finish 12 seconds behind the Italian in the 7.1km prologue, becoming the second British rider to finish second today, after You Know Who in Oman

10 February 2022, 16:20
Real mature...
screenshot-2022-02-10-161225

When a potential road.cc user applies for an account, we ask them what they ride. Looks like a future comedian from Y7 happened across us during an IT class! 

10 February 2022, 16:17
Peloton: We’re doing great actually, membership is booming…
10 February 2022, 16:05
Drafting Dumoulin

Yesterday on the blog, we shared a heart-warming video of a young cyclist training with Tom Dumoulin and Rigoberto Urán in Colombia. 

The day after, however, the wrong sort of training video emerged when Dumoulin and a few of his Jumbo-Visma teammates were filmed racing onto the back of a lorry to draft behind it.

While that particular move is something most cyclists have done at least once, Dumoulin’s spot of drafting was sure to provoke the ire of some on Twitter, especially in the wake of Egan Bernal’s horror crash in Colombia two weeks ago.

Juan Clavijo, a commentator for Spanish Eurosport, wrote: “After what happened with Bernal, it is surprising to still see these videos of professional cyclists.

“Clinging to the truck to take advantage of its 'slipstream', with zero visibility and a sudden stop from having a good scare.

“Dumoulin is just one example, unfortunately.”

10 February 2022, 14:45
Hill climb graffiti Pay your road tax (Image Ali McLean)
What if cyclists paid 'road tax'? A professional spreadsheet jockey crunches the numbers…

Fancy some more ammunition for when your cousin at Christmas or some faceless online troll next grumbles on about cyclists not paying the mythical beast that is ‘road tax’?

Well, look no further, as numbers nerd Matthew has gotten in touch, after he applied his spreadsheet skills to calculate how much ‘road tax’ cyclists would pay if the government decides to introduce a road user charging system in place of vehicle excise duty, as recommended by MPs on the Transport Committee this week

If road pricing is introduced, which would charge motorists nationwide for using the roads, it will of course only add more weight to the oft-repeated cry of “cyclists should pay road tax” (despite cyclists being more likely than average to also own a car).

Basing his figures on curb weight and miles driven or ridden, Matthew worked out if a typical cyclist paid £10 a year under a new road pricing system, the average motorist would have to pay £5,250.

Using the same comparison, if a driver paid £180 a year, a cyclist would only have to 34p in ‘road tax’.

Road Tax figures (Matthew Kerry)

“Thought you might like to use this the next time someone says, ‘pay your road tax’”, Matthew told road.cc. Indeed…

10 February 2022, 13:10
Bike maintenance: don’t try this at home?

On the subject of looking after your bike...

Replying to Joe’s tweet, ex-Cannondale rider Ted King says he works on his bike “now more than ever”, even as technology has evolved: 

 Meanwhile, former racing nomad, Strava bandit, and current Jukebox pro Phil Gaimon appears to have a very appealing golden rule when it comes to fixing his own bike:

 What do you think?

Has new technology put you off tinkering with your machine, or did the pandemic turn you into an expert bike mechanic?

10 February 2022, 12:49
Paris-Roubaix or a Scottish summer?

As someone who spent a year riding his bike around the East Neuk of Fife, I can assure you he’s not wrong... (I'm joking! I'm joking!)

10 February 2022, 12:41
Much Off Ebike drivetrain tool 2
Muc-Off launches new eBike drivetrain tool

Some tech news for you e-bikers this lunchtime: Muc-Off has launched its eBike Drivetrain Tool (£19.99) for easier lube application, with the bike care brand saying that not only does its solution make maintenance quicker, it’s safer on parts too.

The motor on an e-bike means the chain doesn’t spin backwards with the crank arms as it does on a regular bike and so Muc-Off’s new tool is designed to lock firmly into an e-bike sprocket bolt which allows the drivetrain spin backwards freely, Muc-Off explains. No more needing to flip your bike upside down or wheel it forwards to apply lube to the chain.

“Due to the force generated by the motor, an eBike drivetrain is subjected to significantly higher torque loads than that of a traditional bike, so chain lubrication becomes a vitally important part of the maintenance regime,” explains Muc-Off.

“An eBike drivetrain which is either not lubed, or that is lubed with a non eBike specific lubricant, can lead to snapped or stretched chains, as well as increased wear to expensive components such as cranks, cassettes, and derailleurs.“

Muc Off ebike drivetrain tool 1

The tool is said to be compatible with most e-bike chain rings (excluding spiderless), thanks to the supplied 5mm, 6mm Hex & T30 Torx bits which are designed to snap into place with a magnetised connection.

Is this the solution for all your e-bike chain-related woes?

10 February 2022, 12:12
Tour of Britain announces 2022 host regions – and shoots down complaints

Bear with me here, but the Tour of Britain organisers must feel like rock stars sometimes.

And no, I’m not talking about the swathes of adoring fans on the roadside, nor am I referring to drugs (though the race in its current form has been running since the mid-2000s, so I’m sure there were some knocking about back then…).

No, I’m talking about how when every rock band announces a tour, no matter how big it is, there’s always some wise guy popping up in the comments to ask, “why aren’t you playing my town?”

It seems the ToB now has the same problem.

This morning, the organisers announced the host regions for the 2022 race. Starting in Aberdeen on Sunday 4 September, the race will travel through Scotland, before taking in the north-east of England, North Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire, first ever full stages in Gloucestershire and Dorset, and finishing a week later on the Isle of Wight.

A few fans, however, weren’t happy with the route and took to Twitter to express their disappointment. “Play Cardiff!!!,” I hear them cry.

The organisers, who seem to be acutely aware of the neediness of some British cycling fans, promptly slapped down these complaints with a pre-prepared FAQs page and some excellent, withering responses:

The race’s FAQs page, which outlines the financial and logistical factors that shape the Tour of Britain’s route, reads: “Hopefully, for many, many people, today’s announcement has whet the appetite for what promises to be eight unforgettable days of racing in September.

“We appreciate that our annual route reveal is an emotive day for cycling fans in the UK. Believe us when we say that we’re sorry for not visiting your hometown or the climb you’ve been riding up for years. However, this has nothing to do with us ignoring places: sadly it’s not possible to visit every part of Britain in just eight days.

“Putting together each year’s route is a logistically and strategically challenging task.

"Unfortunately we cannot cover every part of Britain during an eight-day bike race. It’s impossible and unfortunately the nature of the beast when it comes to organising events. Take this year’s Tour de France route, for example: look how much of the country that doesn’t cover in 21 days of racing!

“Under the rules set by the UCI, the sport’s governing body, we cannot have any stage above 240 kilometres in length. Also, the maximum average daily distance permitted is 180 kilometres, so from starting out in Aberdeen city cente, we’d have to take the most direct route to get riders to the Isle of Wight within the rules. Even then, that would be a push!”

Nevertheless, cycling journalist and author Ed Pickering did make one suggestion that I’m sure the organisers will happily take on board:

10 February 2022, 11:41
Oh man, Oman… Gaviria pips Cav to first sprint win of 2022 – not that you would have seen it…

Mark Cavendish missed out on the win on his first day of racing of 2022, as UAE-Team Emirates’ Fernando Gaviria held off the fast-finishing Manxman on stage one of the Tour of Oman.

Not that we could tell from the coverage, however. Watching the live feed on OmanSports TV, the helicopter pilot sped away right on the line, losing our footage, just as it looked like Cav was about to overtake the fading Colombian.

I couldn’t understand a word the commentators were saying, but their exasperated reaction spoke for all of us watching.

Gaviria Tour of Oman (via Twitter - Tour of Oman)

Hopefully the cameras will stay trained on the riders tomorrow when Quick Step’s Cavendish, who looked very sharp in the final kick, will seek to open his account for 2022 as he gears up for a probable/possible/impossible [delete as appropriate] tilt at that record-breaking win number 35 at the Tour de France.

10 February 2022, 10:42
Cambridge CYCLOPS junction (Camcycle)
Cambridge: the cycling capital of England

A recent survey carried out by cycling retailer Sigma Sports has found – rather unsurprisingly – that Cambridge is the most bike-friendly area in England (details weren’t available for Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland – typical). 

According to the figures, 51.2% of adults cycle at least once a month and 44.8% once a week in Cambridge, a number no doubt helped by all the students rushing about to their classes.

As if to illustrate that point, Oxford came in second with 43% of the city’s adults riding their bikes once a month.

Six of the top ten, however, belonged to London, with Hackney beating Lambeth to the final podium place behind the Oxbridge duo.

Here’s the top ten, including the breakdown of the numbers:

Sigma Sports - bike friendly areas in England

As the cycling capitals of England, it will again come as no surprise to readers that Cambridge and Oxford also sit on top of the pile of areas with the most bike thefts. They’re just used to striving for excellence, I suppose. 

10 February 2022, 10:10
LNER upgraded bike rack (credit- Martin Cox, Twitter)
LNER’s upgraded bike racks spotted… but many still aren’t happy

Nearly two-and-a-half years since London North Eastern Railway (LNER) vowed to upgrade cycle storage on some of its new trains – after Cycling UK said the system the company had in place was “downright dangerous” – the first newly upgraded bike rack has been spotted in the wild (well, on an LNER train, but you know what I mean).

The latest generation of high-speed trains rolled out by LNER and Great Western Railway (GWR) featured limited space for bikes (road.cc’s Jack Sexty even reviewed GWR’s offering on this very blog back in 2019 – let’s just say his critique was blunt…). 

Due to the limited storage space on the new trains, it was also necessary to hang bikes vertically from hooks that were unsuitable for wheels wider than those of a typical road bike.

Cycling UK dismissed the system as “downright dangerous” and said: “Lifting a bike to reach an overhead hook, on a moving train and with other passengers around you, is simply not safe.”

Following this criticism, LNER accepted the need to go back to the drawing board and improve their bike storage.

Fast forward to 2022 – it feels like we have, I know – and the new upgrades are in on LNER services, which will finally accommodate wider wheels and contain new tracks to hold the bike in place.

Commuter Martin Cox was cautiously optimistic about the changes:

 But others weren’t as impressed:

 So what’s the solution?

 And, finally and most importantly, what was Jack Sexty’s view on the whole thing?

“They still need ripping out.” Blunt as ever, Jack.

10 February 2022, 09:05
Cycle Path, Preston (credit - Phil Wrigley)
“Get on the bike path!” “Eh, what bike path?”

We saw some particularly unconvincing examples of cycling infrastructure on the blog yesterday – one was a national cycling route that effectively turned out to be a bog, and another was a simple lick of paint flagrantly ignored by a certain Brad Wiggins. Who does he think he is, a Tour de France winner?

Well here’s another lamentable piece of UK cycling infra to shake your head at today (with a bonus near miss thrown in too). Yesterday, road.cc reader Phil told us about a recent encounter with a bus driver who, after giving Phil a scare with a close pass, told him to “get on the bloody cycle path”.

Cycle Path, Preston 2 (credit - Phil Wrigley)

Eh… does he mean that bit of dirt by the hedge? I think I’ll take my chances on the road, mate.

“I recently had a run-in with a Stagecoach bus driver, who close passed me through a pinch point where there is a pedestrian crossing island in the centre at Red Scar, Preston,” Phil told us.

“He almost brushed my arm, he was that close. I caught up with him at the next bus stop. Before I could say anything he opened his window and told me to ‘get on the bloody cycle path’.

“Here is the cycle path. Great, isn’t it?”

Cycle Path, Preston 4 (credit - Phil Wrigley)

Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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120 comments

Avatar
GMBasix | 2 years ago
1 like

Quote:

look no further, as numbers nerd Matthew has gotten in touch

All the way from America?

Avatar
GMBasix | 2 years ago
4 likes

@velosam - yes, flexible bike areas are better, but they still have the issue that when some person randomly sits on the middle seat (even if other seats are available), you are still seen as the 'intruder' if you ask them to move to allow you to park your bike. And it's often still insufficient for urban rail services, when 6-8 cyclists are trying to use the train.

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HLaB replied to GMBasix | 2 years ago
0 likes

Sounds like the train I got the other night. One bloke sat in the middle. I did get him to move down one by saying, would you mind moving as I don't want to hit you with my wheel. Apart from that empty seat on a busy train there was nowhere to go to be fair, until the next station when everyone got off. Instead of moving to one of the dozen now empty seats, he just put his headphones on and stretched out 👎

Avatar
Adam Sutton | 2 years ago
6 likes

Some drivers, Teslas for example pay zero vehicle tax. Some (many) cylists are drivers who pay vehicle tax on multiple vehicles, but understand cycling is also a valid form of transport for many journeys.

One day we might appreciate the person rather than the vehicle they are using at any given time.

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numbersnerdmatthew replied to Adam Sutton | 2 years ago
0 likes

That's a valid point and one the reasons why I didn't include the weight of the rider in my calculations. Except in aviation, all taxation is based on the vechicle, not the number of passengers. You could argue that a car with 5 passengers should pay more tax because it's heavier, but then it could also pay less as it lowers the weight per person (thus penalising under utilised vechicles). Cycling is unique in that the rider is the engine, operator and passenger all at the same time. That all said the £5250 is a good "shock" figure to slap down the next luddite who think cyclists should pay road tax.

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to numbersnerdmatthew | 2 years ago
2 likes

Cycling is also unique in that the weight of the vehicle is less than the weight of the driver.

Even a Honda CB125 is 130kg, which is more than the vast majority of bikers.

Avatar
mdavidford replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
6 likes

wycombewheeler wrote:

Cycling is also unique in that the weight of the vehicle is less than the weight of the driver.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
5 likes

wycombewheeler wrote:

Cycling is also unique in that the weight of the vehicle is less than the weight of the driver.

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

wycombewheeler wrote:

Cycling is also unique in that the weight of the vehicle is less than the weight of the driver.

The average skateboard weighs around 11 pounds or 5 kilograms

a typical squirrel weighs 1-1.5lbs.

Does your reduced size skateboard weigh les than 1/8 a normal skateboard?

Avatar
mdavidford replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
0 likes

wycombewheeler wrote:

The average skateboard weighs around 11 pounds or 5 kilograms

a typical squirrel weighs 1-1.5lbs.

Does your reduced size skateboard weigh les than 1/8 a normal skateboard?

It's titanium, obviously.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
0 likes

wycombewheeler wrote:

The average skateboard weighs around 11 pounds or 5 kilograms

a typical squirrel weighs 1-1.5lbs.

Does your reduced size skateboard weigh les than 1/8 a normal skateboard?

Yes it does

Avatar
Adam Sutton replied to numbersnerdmatthew | 2 years ago
2 likes

Some seem completely baffled to find that a cyclist can own a car, it is quite odd but then in some ways the same happens with those who are just cyclists towards car owning cyclists.

Something is going to have to change though, with the shift to EVs and less revenue. There is talk of road charging per mile etc. Whatever they do though it would be nice if they actually maintained the roads and engaged brains when designing new roads around new developments, rather than bodge repairs and think about cycling as an afterthought. I went for a gravel bike with tougher wheels and wider tyres mainly because the roads around here are so bad. 

Avatar
Clem Fandango replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
12 likes

D minus

Must do better

Avatar
numbersnerdmatthew replied to Clem Fandango | 2 years ago
1 like

I didn't forget to include the weight of the cyclist themselves, I deliberatly chose not to include it as all taxation (except for aviation) is done on the vehicle, not the number of passengers. Although, cycling is a bit odd in that the cyclist is both the engine, operator and passenger all at the same time.

If you start including the weight of passengers potentially a car with 5 people should be paying less per person than a car with 1 person, VED then becomes of Personal Mobility Excise Duty rather than a Vehicle Excise Duty.

I think that deserves as least a "C"

Avatar
mdavidford replied to numbersnerdmatthew | 2 years ago
2 likes

Clem's D minus wasn't aimed at you, but at the local 'controversialist's' dubious critique of your work.

Avatar
swldxer replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
4 likes

SPELLED "KERB" IN THE UK.

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numbersnerdmatthew replied to swldxer | 2 years ago
0 likes

curse those American spell check settings in Excel!

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mdavidford replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
10 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

What if cyclists paid road tax (according to their weight)? The person (Matthew), forgot that you have to include the cyclist in the weight of the bike + person combined.

If we're including the weight of the person, then presumably we'll also have to tax pedestrians, who will have to pay nearly as much as cyclists.

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
4 likes
mdavidford wrote:

Garage at Large wrote:

What if cyclists paid road tax (according to their weight)? The person (Matthew), forgot that you have to include the cyclist in the weight of the bike + person combined.

If we're including the weight of the person, then presumably we'll also have to tax pedestrians, who will have to pay nearly as much as cyclists.

Anyone wearing high heels will have to pay the most on the pressure argument.
I think even the most mentally deficient understands that wear on the roads is not proportional to tyre pressure, so this argument is clearly nonsense

Avatar
numbersnerdmatthew replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
2 likes

I did actually do 2 versions, 1 including the weight of the rider (70kg), but then you could argue the weight of the car should also go up by 5*70kg as well. Results are below. Discounted as you said you'd have to start weighing pedestrains as well.

Avatar
andystow replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
14 likes

Road wear is proportional to the tyre load to the fourth power. If anything, the spreadsheet is overestimating what the cyclist should pay.

Bike + rider: 90 kg
Smart car plus driver: 800 kg

(800/90)^4 = 6242. If a driver of a Smart car paid £180, the cyclist should pay just under 3p. If the cyclist paid £10, the Smart car driver should pay £62,420.

I'll even include a link that has nothing to do with cycling so you can't claim it's biased.

https://www.insidescience.org/news/how-much-damage-do-heavy-trucks-do-ou...

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to andystow | 2 years ago
6 likes

andystow wrote:

(800/90)^4 = 6242. If a driver of a Smart car paid £180, the cyclist should pay just under 3p. If the cyclist paid £10, the Smart car driver should pay £62,420.

I would very happily accede to the demands that cyclists pay tax and stump up my tenner a year if that was the deal!

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
3 likes

I assume you're interested - and if so the answers are just a Google away.  However being as you've a complex mind and knowing you're right you won't be impressed.

I suspect if we made our roads out of concrete - like many runways - they would indeed last longer.  Especially our cycle paths.  I've no idea how the cost / time would pan out, nor whether tarmac replaced more frequently is held to be less energetic / environmentally damaging than concrete replaced less.  Concrete certainly fairs better against the various lubricants and fluids used in cars - and aircraft.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

I've not tested citrus degreaser on it though. Or any of the latest round of "energy drinks".  So it's still possible that cyclists could be the downfall of the built environment.

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wycombewheeler replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

I've not tested citrus degreaser on it though. Or any of the latest round of "energy drinks".  So it's still possible that cyclists could be the downfall of the built environment.

speak for yourself, I might have to cut back on the number of bikes I have.

Avatar
andystow replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
11 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

Not quite, firstly a car has four wheels vs a bike's two wheels, and secondly a car has a much wider and higher contact area of its tyres, which cause far less abrasion per mass of vehicle to the road surface. It's about the amount of pressure being exerted on the ground, which is inversely proportional to the contact area.

I'll give you the factor of two, so the driver now only pays 3121 times as much.

Garage at Large wrote:

If you cycle down the road with diamond-edged spikes on the bottom of your bike, you'll create far more damage to the road than even an articulated lorry. A jumbo jet taking off at Heathrow airport would have a mass of 439,985 kg. How come the runway surface doesn't need mending every time there is a takeoff?

What a funny assumption, that since airport runways sort of look like roads to you, they must be constructed like them. An airport runway serving large jets is 17-20 inches (half a metre!) of solid reinforced concrete thick! If motorways were built like runways the cost would be [even more] astronomical.

An asphalt motorway is more like 6" (15 cm) of asphalt over various base layers of gravel and sand, which add up to a comparable thickness to a runway, but aren't nearly as strong. A jumbo jet would indeed cause a lot of damage to it, else the clever engineers could save a lot of money building runways that way.

Edit: see the design section in this article:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_strip

"The road will need a thicker-than-normal surface and a solid concrete base."

Garage at Large wrote:

So while these simplistic calculations might impress simple minds, they are completely incorrect.

Your pressure method is far more simplistic, backed by schoolboy maths instead of research. The damage is not material directly under the tyre being compressed. The entire road is deflected for quite a distance around. You can easily do the experiment by standing on the edge of a roadway as an HGV rolls past a metre away and feel the vertical movement through your shoes. Now see what you feel as the heaviest cyclist you know rolls past you. You seem to see a lot of them.

Due to this deflection, there's a speed component to the rate of damage, too, with faster vehicles causing proportionally more damage. So I'm taking that factor of two I gave you back.

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to andystow | 2 years ago
8 likes

Yes but if cars were full of helium and roads were made of marshmallows and bikes had diamond-edged spikes on their wheels and weighed 25 tonnes they would have to pay more tax than cars. Have you factored that into your simplistic calculations? Have you? And how come skyscapers sit on the ground but don't sink into it, simpleton? That definitely proves some made-up old bollocks I'm desperately trying to defend without any intelligence or the most basic scientific or practical knowledge, doesn't it?

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IanMSpencer replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
4 likes

Ah, so that's why when I ride off into a gateway for a wazz I sink up to my ears and when a car drops off the side of the road in winter it definitely never destroys the verge and never sprays copious amounts of mud onto the road. Always wondered about that... NOT!

It must be why they can't afford to build cycle paths, because to cope with the load it must need a far deeper concrete base than the bit of compacted gravel that their budgets can usually afford.

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numbersnerdmatthew replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
2 likes

This was purely an excersise in demonstrating the futily of "Road Tax" for cyclists

Avatar
Simon E replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
3 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

So while these simplistic calculations might impress simple minds, they are completely incorrect.

You're talking to yourself again.

Either you're being deliberately provocative and making stuff up for laughs or you are really, REALLY STUPID.

Or both.

I could ride up and down the main road by our estate endlessly for the rest of my life and never do even a fraction of the damage done to the surface by the motorised traffic over the last few years.

That's on a straight road. On bends the sidewaysforces create additional wear. Then consider the damage done to utility trenches and patching, the incredibly rapid expansion of these and potholes in bad weather, the broken or sunken drain/inspection covers, smashed kerbs and a hundred other things that add up to "road wear".

On top of that there is the frequent damage to roadside walls, bridges, hedges, signs and other infrastructure, such as the stone bridge repair on a normally busy back road that required a week-long road closure last month or the pulverised chevron sign I saw on a bend earlier this week.

That's before we get to all the buildings damaged by vehicles, as shown in the long and ongoing topic in the road.cc forum, with 778 posts to date.

Then there are the 23,529 KSI and 115,584 casualties of all severities (316 people every single day) in 2020. [DfT]

And we haven't even started on the initial cost of putting this stuff in place - the planning, the materials, logistics and labour required for bollards and raised kerbing, speed humps, refuges, crossings, traffic lights, new access roads, even roundabouts, flyovers and bypasses. Why should cyclists pay a specific additional fee above and beyond our general taxes for those when we don't have need for them? Why do we subsidise car use so heavily?

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