Motorcycle commute
#41
Using 'they' like that has absolutely nothing to do with "the current thing"
"The patient should be told at the outset how much they will be required to pay."
[3]"But a journalist should not be forced to reveal their sources."[3]
This use of singular they had emerged by the 14th century, about a century after the plural they.[4][5][2] It has been commonly employed in everyday English ever since
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_they
"The patient should be told at the outset how much they will be required to pay."
[3]"But a journalist should not be forced to reveal their sources."[3]
This use of singular they had emerged by the 14th century, about a century after the plural they.[4][5][2] It has been commonly employed in everyday English ever since
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_they
I got my education in the 1960s, well before “the current thing”. Do I believe you and Wikipedia or my English teachers and textbooks.
#42
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 44,886
Likes: 684
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
99% of APC users are lurkers (not counting bots). If somebody starts a discussion, conversation will happen and that's often of use to the silent majority even if the vocal few don't see it. I see it because I access the admin statistics, and we actually get emails from folks who appreciate the balance we try to strike here (otherwise I wouldn't be wasting my time).
Some general sharing on a topic doesn't have to directly revolve strictly around the OP's narrow specific needs, even if he made them crystal clear which he did not. It's a conversation, not a transaction.
#43
Line Holder
Joined: Jan 2021
Posts: 246
Likes: 7
Not sure what happened to this thread but I’ll chime in on topic;
I rode my bike (2009 Er6n) to work for several years out of LAX. I would 💯 recommend for LAX pilots who have to drive more than 30-45min in traffic because;
-no traffic (lane filtering is not only legal but encouraged/accepted in CA)
-bikes get to park in the terminal garage for free. Princess parking, no employee bus, right out front. You can’t beat that.
- weather is rider friendly, especially near LAX. Always cooler than inland.
I used 3 tie down straps for my bike; roller behind me with one strap sideways, 2 straps in-line with the bike that crossed each other. Then my other bag I attached with bungee cords.
I had a Givi storage box on the back where I’d put my shoes, and hat (and uniform shirt/jacket on hot days). I’d leave all my gear on the bike (it has hooks). I’d also use a bike cover cuz the bike would get dirty if I didn’t.
Once I got good at it, it would take about 10-15 min front end, 5-10 min back end to get the bike ready and leave.
I had a 35 mile commute; in traffic with employee parking, that could easily be 45min to 1hr20min drive plus 20-40 min for the bus. On the bike, 50-60 min from my house to the gate
I rode my bike (2009 Er6n) to work for several years out of LAX. I would 💯 recommend for LAX pilots who have to drive more than 30-45min in traffic because;
-no traffic (lane filtering is not only legal but encouraged/accepted in CA)
-bikes get to park in the terminal garage for free. Princess parking, no employee bus, right out front. You can’t beat that.
- weather is rider friendly, especially near LAX. Always cooler than inland.
I used 3 tie down straps for my bike; roller behind me with one strap sideways, 2 straps in-line with the bike that crossed each other. Then my other bag I attached with bungee cords.
I had a Givi storage box on the back where I’d put my shoes, and hat (and uniform shirt/jacket on hot days). I’d leave all my gear on the bike (it has hooks). I’d also use a bike cover cuz the bike would get dirty if I didn’t.
Once I got good at it, it would take about 10-15 min front end, 5-10 min back end to get the bike ready and leave.
I had a 35 mile commute; in traffic with employee parking, that could easily be 45min to 1hr20min drive plus 20-40 min for the bus. On the bike, 50-60 min from my house to the gate
Last edited by Furloughedboi; 08-15-2023 at 12:39 PM.
#44
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 44,886
Likes: 684
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Not sure what happened to this thread but I’ll chime in on topic;
I rode my bike (2009 Er6n) to work for several years out of LAX. I would 💯 recommend for LAX pilots who have to drive more than 30-45min in traffic because;
-no traffic (lane filtering is not only legal but encouraged/accepted in CA)
-bikes get to park in the terminal garage for free. Princess parking, no employee bus, right out front. You can’t beat that.
- weather is rider friendly, especially near LAX. Always cooler than inland.
I used 3 tie down straps for my bike; roller behind me with one strap sideways, 2 straps in-line with the bike that crossed each other. Then my other bag I attached with bungee cords.
I had a Givi storage box on the back where I’d put my shoes, and hat (and uniform shirt/jacket on hot days). I’d leave all my gear on the bike (it has hooks). I’d also use a bike cover cuz the bike would get dirty if I didn’t.
Once I got good at it, it would take about 10-15 min front end, 5-10 min back end to get the bike ready and leave.
I had a 35 mile commute; in traffic with employee parking, that could easily be 45min to 1hr20min drive plus 20-40 min for the bus. On the bike, 50-60 min from my house to the gate
I rode my bike (2009 Er6n) to work for several years out of LAX. I would 💯 recommend for LAX pilots who have to drive more than 30-45min in traffic because;
-no traffic (lane filtering is not only legal but encouraged/accepted in CA)
-bikes get to park in the terminal garage for free. Princess parking, no employee bus, right out front. You can’t beat that.
- weather is rider friendly, especially near LAX. Always cooler than inland.
I used 3 tie down straps for my bike; roller behind me with one strap sideways, 2 straps in-line with the bike that crossed each other. Then my other bag I attached with bungee cords.
I had a Givi storage box on the back where I’d put my shoes, and hat (and uniform shirt/jacket on hot days). I’d leave all my gear on the bike (it has hooks). I’d also use a bike cover cuz the bike would get dirty if I didn’t.
Once I got good at it, it would take about 10-15 min front end, 5-10 min back end to get the bike ready and leave.
I had a 35 mile commute; in traffic with employee parking, that could easily be 45min to 1hr20min drive plus 20-40 min for the bus. On the bike, 50-60 min from my house to the gate
All of this is true. But you still have to deal with generic LA drivers, overloaded trucks from down south running on bald recaps, drunks, dopers, reckless thugs doing 100+, etc. And a lot of construction zones with poorly marked random lane shifts (never know if the cagers will follow the temp lane lines or original lane lines which are only partially obscured).
Might be OK at certain times of day, but if your intent is to lane split to beat rush hour traffic that looks like false economy to me.
Lane splitting in SOCAL will catch up with you and if it takes my decades of experience to recognize that so be it. Your gopro won't generate a bubble of invulnerability either.
#46
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 9,348
Likes: 332
I probably wouldn't do any sort of long commute in a big metro area... if you already ride you know that kind of traffic is very fatiguing.
And if you do it long enough you're likely to get hit in rush hour traffic. Really not worth the career risk, or even six months on STD.
Anymore I only ride when and where it's fun and safe. And dry.
And if you do it long enough you're likely to get hit in rush hour traffic. Really not worth the career risk, or even six months on STD.
Anymore I only ride when and where it's fun and safe. And dry.
I was gonna say. There are some brave souls in this thread if they actually want to ride a motorbike in LA or NYC traffic. You couldn't pay me enough to take that as an option to commute.
#48
It depends on seniority. If you are senior to me then I would highly recommend riding a motorcycle to work. It’s totally safe, especially during rush hour.
Also have some extra salt at dinner and look left when crossing the street in London…..
Also have some extra salt at dinner and look left when crossing the street in London…..
#49
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