
Head-on Collision
A frontal collision between two vehicles traveling in opposite directions. The deadliest crash type — speeds combine.
What is it
A head-on collision is a frontal crash between two vehicles traveling in opposite directions. For a motorcyclist, it is almost always fatal — the speeds combine, doubling the impact force. Even at 40 mph each, the result is equivalent to hitting a wall at 80 mph.
How it happens
- A car crosses into the oncoming lane — overtaking, distraction, or impairment
- The rider crosses the center line — misjudged pass or corner error
- Narrow road with no markings — both riding near the center
How to reduce the risk
- Stay on the right side of your lane — especially through curves and over crests
- Never overtake without full visibility of the oncoming lane
- Anticipate oncoming vehicles drifting into your lane
- On narrow roads, reduce speed — give yourself time to react
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Related terms
Highside
A violent ejection over the top of the motorcycle — one of the most dangerous motorcycle crashes.
Lowside
The motorcycle slides out and falls to the inside of the turn. Less violent than a highside but far more common.
Stoppie
Flipping over the front wheel from excessive front brake force. The rear wheel lifts off the ground.
Whiskey Throttle
Involuntary throttle opening from panic — the hand grips tighter, accelerating the bike uncontrollably.
Tank Slapper / Wobble
Uncontrollable handlebar oscillation at speed — the bars violently slap side to side.
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Rear-end Collision
A vehicle strikes a motorcyclist from behind — at traffic lights, in traffic, or during sudden stops.