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It was a
beautiful New England Winter day, towards the end of February.
I was riding to a friends house (the friend will go un-named for now)
and we were to ride our scooters to Lumpy's house. I arrived at AA's house
(short for Armor-All), and he was putting the finishing touches on his
scooter, while his wife and young son looked on. He had just finished
washing and waxing it and it looked great, even his tires were shining.
His scoot always looked great and considering that it's 18 years old,
WOW. I was shooting the shit with his wife while he dug out his helmet
(unfortunately he lives in MA and MA has a helmet law), donned his chaps,
leather and gloves and after the usual "ride safe", from his wife, we
were on our way to Lumpy's.
We had decided that we would take the highway most of the the way and
do some serious back roads riding after we picked up the Lump. We were
about two miles from his house and as usual AA was in the lead as we made
a right hand turn to come off of the rotary onto Rte. 2.
All of a sudden I could see AA leaning farther and farther into the turn
(we were only going about 30 MPH). The next thing I saw were sparks flying
as his exhaust hit, which bounced the scoot back up about 4 inches, only
to have the rear tire slide out from under him for good. AA was sliding
in front of his scooter when he came to a halt, although his scoot wasn't
quite ready to slow down yet. It decided to keep sliding until the front
end had pinned him to the pavement.
As I was riding by I yelled to him, "Don't move, I'll be right there."
I pulled over the big Ultra, hit the kill switch and left it on it's jiffy
stand right in the middle of the right hand lane of the highway. I ran
back and lifted his scooter off of him and tried to determine his health
first and then once I determined he was okay, try to find out about the
health of his ride. It was actually in pretty good shape. The right side
rear turn signal was hanging by the wires, the exhaust was scraped up
and the throttle grip had all of the rubber chewed off of the end. Other
than that it looked okay. We pushed it into the gas station, I got my
scoot outta there too, and gave it a good going over. Everything looked
good, a lot of gas had leaked out while the scooter layed on it's side
and it didn't want to fire up. While AA tried to start it up, I called
Lump from the pay phone and gave him the news and told him that AA may
not be coming out due to his... stupidity.
Finally it fired up and we rode the 2 miles back to his house to better
inspect his health. On the ride home AA could tell that the front end
got twisted, so we rode VERY slow. Once back at his place his back started
getting a little sore and we noticed that he had some minor road rash,
right through his leathers. We re-counted both our versions of the crash
and then AA said "I guess I didn't wipe enough of the Armor-All off the
tires." I think I laughed so hard that I was in tears. Of course Lumpy
and I have had a lot of fun with him over this and we at first gave him
the name Crash, until Lumpy's wife nicknamed him Dumpy, and I guess that
one's going to stick. Luckily Dumpy is okay and he made the trip to Daytona
with Lump and I, although he had to rent a scooter from my friend Stephanie
at Iron Horse Vacations in Orlando, FL.
Now you know why not to put Armor-All on your tires.
OneEye
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