Jan 13, 2016

The How, Why, Where, and What I Ride Survey

All Rights Reserved © 2016 Thomas W. Day
 
Way back in 2011, I stuck a survey up on Survey Monkey and asked my readers to take part in the silliness. I should be the last guy on the planet to administer a survey because I tend to disbelieve everything claimed in every survey in the history of humans. Still, I got a fair number of responses (more than my free Survey Monkey account would let me access, in fact) and I made an attempt at compiling the information. About half-way through the project, I was distracted by something bright and shiny (my Yamaha WR250X) and the whole project fell through the cracks. You, my brilliant friends and readers, are atypical as hell and I suspect nothing gleaned from this survey would have squat to do with the attitudes of the average motorcyclist.
I always end up with a stupidly large “dead pool” is article ideas that will never see the light of day anywhere; blog or MMM column. Regardless, here is what I ended up with, statistics-wise:
In the dead of a past winter (2011), I was suffering cabin fever and my bike was practically encased in ice. Outside temperatures were in the negative numbers and the usual distractions failed me. The only break in the winter national television monotony came in mid-January when Ryan Villopoto beat James Stewart at the first ever Dodger Stadium Supercross. No fun like that for us here in Minnesota this year, thanks to the Metrodome's dome failure. So, I came up with a brilliant plan to piss off as many people as possible with a motorcycle survey called "The How, Why, Where, and What I Ride Survey." Ten questions, all designed to elicit as much animosity as possible. I promoted the thing on Cycle World and MMM's Facebook sites, on the MN-Sportbike and MN-Dualpurpose maillist, and got about  500 responses over the last 20 months.
 
 

Response
 
 
 
 
for daily transportation (weather and season permitting)
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72.00%
for recreation.
clip_image001[1]
90.00%
for social events (group rides, poker runs, charity runs, etc.).
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32.00%
off-road racing.
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5.00%
road racing.
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3.00%
Ok, I can absolutely believe this set of numbers. In retrospect, I should have made this a "pick one" question because I think the answers overstate the number of us who use motorcycles for daily transportation. The 90% recreational figure is absolutely believeable, though.
 
adventure touring bike
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47.00%
a sport bike
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39.00%
a dirt bike
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19.00%
a dual-purpose bike
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52.00%
a cruiser
clip_image001[9]
16.00%
a sport touring bike
0.00%
a standard
0.00%
a touring bike
clip_image001[10]
25.00%
Good enough. I'm a little surprised at the two 0% categories, though.
 
an adventure touring bike
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38.00%
a sport bike
clip_image001[12]
18.00%
a dirt bike
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1.00%
a dual-purpose bike
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27.00%
a cruiser
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5.00%
a touring bike
clip_image001[16]
11.00%
Seems consistent with #2.
 
a 250cc or smaller sportbike
0.00%
a 250cc or smaller standard
0.00%
a 250cc or smaller cruiser
0.00%
a 250cc or smaller dirt bike
0.00%
a 250cc or smaller dual-purpose
clip_image001[17]
2.00%
a 251cc-750cc sportbike
clip_image001[18]
4.00%
a 251cc-750cc standard
clip_image001[19]
8.00%
a 251cc-750cc cruiser
clip_image001[20]
1.00%
a 251cc-750cc dirt bike
0.00%
a 251cc-750cc dual-purpose (adventure touring)
clip_image001[21]
43.00%
a 251cc-750cc tourer
clip_image001[22]
2.00%
a 751cc-1200cc sportbike
clip_image001[23]
6.00%
a 751cc-1200cc standard
clip_image001[24]
5.00%
a 751cc-1200cc cruiser
clip_image001[25]
1.00%
a 751cc-1200cc dirt bike
clip_image001[26]
1.00%
a 751cc-1200cc dual-purpose (adventure touring)
clip_image001[27]
18.00%
a 751cc-1200cc tourer
clip_image001[28]
4.00%
a 1201cc-and-up sportbike
clip_image001[29]
1.00%
a 1201cc-and-up standard
0.00%
a 1201cc-and-up cruiser
0.00%
a 1201cc-and-up dirt bike
0.00%
a 1201cc and up dual-purpose (adventure touring)
0.00%
a 1201cc-and-up tourer
clip_image001[30]
4.00%
Again, this seems consistent.
 
a shorty helmet
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11.00%
a 3/4 helmet
clip_image001[32]
18.00%
a full-face helmet
clip_image001[33]
99.00%
an off-road 3/4 helmet
clip_image001[34]
7.00%
an off-road full-face helmet
clip_image001[35]
27.00%
off-road armor (vest or full-body)
clip_image001[36]
16.00%
armored riding jacket
clip_image001[37]
96.00%
armored riding pants
clip_image001[38]
85.00%
armored motorcycle boots
clip_image001[39]
80.00%
motorcycle gloves
clip_image001[40]
98.00%
weather-proof riding gear
clip_image001[41]
91.00%
eye protection (other than a helmet's face shield)
clip_image001[42]
46.00%
heated vest, gloves, and/or suit layer
clip_image001[43]
54.00%
Wow! Who would have guess that 99% of any group of riders would own a full-face helmet?
 
a shorty helmet
clip_image001[44]
2.00%
a 3/4 helmet
clip_image001[45]
5.00%
a full-face helmet
clip_image001[46]
94.00%
armored riding jacket
clip_image001[47]
92.00%
armored riding pants
clip_image001[48]
43.00%
armored motorcycle boots
clip_image001[49]
62.00%
motorcycle gloves
clip_image001[50]
92.00%
weather-proof riding gear
clip_image001[51]
20.00%
eye protection (other than a helmet's face shield)
clip_image001[52]
30.00%
heated vest, gloves, and/or suit layer
clip_image001[53]
4.00%
none of the above
clip_image001[54]
2.00%
Ok, this was my first piece of evidence that my self-selecting group of riders was not typical. We all know that 94% of us do not always wear a full-face helmet.
 
when the temperature is below 0F
clip_image001[55]
47.00%
when the temperature is below 32F
clip_image001[56]
44.00%
when the temperature is below 50F
clip_image001[57]
4.00%
when the temperature is above 80F
0.00%
when the temperature is above 90F
clip_image001[58]
3.00%
when the temperature is above 100F
clip_image001[59]
12.00%
when it is raining
clip_image001[60]
10.00%
when there is a possibility of ice on the road
clip_image001[61]
69.00%
after consuming enough alcohol to suggest that I might be under the influence
clip_image001[62]
88.00%
 
A surprising amount of honesty here; especially in the alcohol consumption question.
This is pretty honest appearing, too.
 
0-500 miles
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1.00%
501-2,000 miles
clip_image001[66]
17.00%
2,001-5,000 miles
clip_image001[67]
16.00%
5,001-10,000 miles
clip_image001[68]
39.00%
10,001-20,000 miles
clip_image001[69]
20.00%
20,001 or more miles
clip_image001[70]
7.00%
Contrast this with the Craig's List sales data and we know either my group is self-deluding, non-typical, or lying.
At least 14% of the group knows itself well.

1 comment:

T.W. Day said...

Sorry. This was horribly formatted originally. So, I made an attempt at making it more readable. Hope it worked.