This was your strong comment on people using hands free mobile phones, which you have backed up with your choice not to converse with vehicle passengers when driving. Admirable and respected
Likewise what's your comment on people using sat navs and separately driving/riding tired?
Sometimes I'm more of a grumpy old git than others! but if you read the post again you will see I am referring to those who drive off and the immediately pick up the phone rather than users of hands free kit.
I've used Sat Navs both in the car and on the bike since 2003. As long as you don't try to play with them on the move then I don't find them a distraction, having said that I am not sure about those people who don't use the sound. Don't you have to concentrate on the screen to see where you are supposed to go? I accept the voice prompts as the price for knowing where I am going so that I can concentrate on the traffic.
What I do find is becoming more widespread is the positioning of said Sat Nav in the drivers view of the road, likewise phones are often mounted this way too. I am extra wary of such drivers as I think it is a good indication of their priorities. The Sat Nav or phone is obviously more important than a clear view of the road!
I have had such people tell me it's OK because they can see around the devices. Unless they can show that one of the fundamental laws of physics, namely light travels in straight lines, does not apply to them I continue to think they are wrong. What is actually happening is that their brain is filling in the gaps for them, fooling them into thinking they can somehow see around an object. The brain in effect makes it up as you go along. This is the effect that has been shown to happen when people turn to scan for oncoming traffic for instance when waiting to emerge from a side road. We think we see a continuous view like a film as we turn our heads but what actually happens is that, just like a film, the brain stitches single frames together to make a movie. Rather like flicking the pages of one of those animated cartoon books I remember from my childhood. This is one reason why bikes can be difficult to see. Telling people to look out for bikes is not enough we need to educate people as to just how we see especially about how much of what we think we see is actually the result of guesswork carried out inside our own heads.
Since you ask my take on driving/riding tired (by which I take it you mean tired to the point that your concentration and reactions are suffering) is that it is not big or clever. It certainly is not a sign of being a "real" biker whatever that might mean. To me all it shows is that you are prepared to take risks with other people lives rather than stop for a rest. As with many such things if you have your own private roads go ahead, do anything you like, ride for 24 hours non stop on a bike that has had no maintenance in years. But if you use public roads you have a responsibility to the rest of us to not add unnecessarily to the dangers of using such roads.
In case some of you are thinking he is not just a grumpy old git he is also being superior let me add this. I have in the past used a hand held mobile whilst driving I have also driven so far in a day that I finished the last hour of the trip in a trace like state. An incident on the M40 about 15 years ago convinced me to put my phone away whilst driving. The traffic if front braked, I saw it late because I was on the phone and had to brake very hard to avoid a collision. In the car with me were 3 very good friends. All four of us had wives or partners and families and thinking of those families made me realise that I had risked destroying their lives for the sake of that phone call. Since that day I ignore the phone whilst driving, I do leave it on so that I know someone was trying to get through. I will then either stop as soon as possible or wait until the end of the journey. No phone call is, for me, worth the risks involved in taking a call on the move.
John