
Since lots of other people find them annoying, they have to have a justification, and "safety" it is - even if the rider is also wearing no helmet and just a cotton T-shirt for protection. The bottom line of that opinion piece was that "loud pipes save lives" is just an after-the-fact justification used by people who really just like the sound of their loud pipes. The laws of physics were debated and anecdotal evidence was presented. It’s really the only way you’re going to avoid collisions with other motor vehicles.Way back in the early days of Common Tread, we ran an opinion piece titled " Stop saying loud pipes save lives." It drew hundreds of comments, some of them supportive and some of them angry retorts from fans of loud pipes. There’s several of these safety techniques, so stay safe out there, and remember to be a defensive motorcycle rider by implementing techniques to make yourself visible to other motorists. They say to go to by the “be seen, not heard” motto, which means to do other defensive maneuvers to let motorists know you’re there other than just relying on the noise of your bike. Instead, the study suggests that bikers don’t go by the loud pipes save lives motto. The study concludes that bikers should not rely on the noise that their bike creates to cause awareness of their existence on the road by other motorists. I’m sure there are instances where a motorist becomes aware of you just because of the noise of the bike, but it’s very unlikely. Are There Situations Where Loud Pipes Help?

They’re distracted, and they’re not likely to hear the noise from your motorcycle. They’re not driving convertibles, they typically have at least the radio on, they are talking with someone in the vehicle, they’re on the phone, etc. The number two reason why this is a myth is that most motorists have their windows up. The noise is going backward, not to the sides or the front, so it’s less likely that the motorists that are going to potentially wreck with you aren’t going to hear you coming.


This is because head-on collisions minimize the effect of the loudness of your exhaust pipes, for obvious scientific reasons, which is your exhaust pipes are pointed behind you. The main reason why its a myth is because most motorcycle wrecks do not occur where a motorist is striking the biker from the rear. What they found was no, it is an absolute myth, and the reason is interesting. What Do Studies Say About The “Loud Pipes Save Lives” Motto?īeing that I am a motorcycle accident attorney, I found a study that studied this phrase and whether the loudness of the pipes, exhaust pipes of the bike, lead and correlated to less motorcycle wreck events.
