I'd like to get people's opinions on where they feel its safer or more dangerous to ride: on GTA city or suburbian streets , on the 400 series highways, or outside the city on secondary 2-4 lane roads/highways.
Mostly agree with this. Only caveat is what does he mean by most dangerous? I think your list is correct for a crash. For a fatal crash, rural/secondary moves up to first or second. You have less intersections in the country but higher speeds so the impact is worse.GTA city - most dangerous
400 city - 2nd most dangerous
rural/secondary - 3rd
rural 400 - 4th
highway is probably the safest, traffic all going in the same direction and way less distractions. Personally i just make sure i'm moving slightly faster then everyone else.
I think it is the least safest, faster speeds, more idiots, more vehicles, larger vehicles, and construction (lane shifting, and shrinking)highway is probably the safest, traffic all going in the same direction and way less distractions. Personally i just make sure i'm moving slightly faster then everyone else.
You're unsafe at all times, where you're driving makes no difference
perhaps you don't ride downtown enough i feel like every time i make it out i level up. heck we didn't even start discussing taxis yet.I think it is the least safest, faster speeds, more idiots, more vehicles, larger vehicles, and construction (lane shifting, and shrinking)
Last year I avoided the 401 completely because of the construction which had the lanes all ripped apart.
All the time, I use lakeshore as my bypass for the 401 and I actually I find it quite easy all together. There is so much congestion and slow traffic, and construction it's hard to get into trouble, and for jerks to make dumb moves. ?perhaps you don't ride downtown enough i feel like every time i make it out i level up. heck we didn't even start discussing taxis yet.
at least the highway provides the option to speed up, doing that on the city street is asking for it.
I don't know about here, but in my circles of sportbike riders in BC, somebody crossing the centre line was probably the most common cause of serious crashes. Either the bike or an oncoming car runs wide or cuts a corner on a twisty road, most of which are blind, with predictable results.I often see cruisers riding side-by-side on Hwy. #2 with one guy clinging to/hanging over the center line. He wouldn't do that in the city or on the 401 but feels that out here he can live his Easy Rider wet dream. It makes me cringe to think of what could happen if an approaching driver sneezed, spilled coffee, turned to look out the window or anything else that would cause them to get close to or cross the center line.