So, here's the real question: I had more than one occasion in my motorcycle life where I did something stupid and the bike and I went down. On each occasion before I even thought about whether I'd broken a bone, I checked on whether the bike had been damaged. Is that the average biker S.O.P.? Check on the bike first...or was I nutz?
When I first got the KZ400, I kept forgetting that there was a gas shut-off/on valve. The bike would start without my opening the gas valve and I could ride a short stretch because of the residual gas in the carburetor.
My apartment was less than one block from Minneapolis' Lake Street, a main thoroughfare. I'd completely forgotten to turn the gas valve to the on position. I got on Lake Street, traveled about two blocks and got to a red light. As I sat at the red light, waiting for green, the bike died. I was in the right lane. I could not get the bike started because the gas line was shut off and cars were stacked up behind me. Finally, the car that had been directly behind me swung around in the left lane, slowed to almost a stop, when the guy in the passenger seat yelled, "Turn on the gas, *******!"
I turned on the gas, the bike started, and totally embarrassed, I gave the bike far too much gas and let out the clutch too fast. The bike did a wheel stand and went over backward. Thank God I'd spent the money on a very high tech multi-layered eggshell helmet that crushed and absorbed the impact when my head hit the pavement. It was a helmet that was good for one impact, then replace. I was fine. The bike was fine. The helmet was trash and was replaced as soon as I got to the Kawasaki dealership. But, again...the first thing I checked was whether the bike was okay.