5 steps after an accident on the engine

          5 steps after an accident on the engine


Traffic accidents are never a beautiful and wonderful thing, but they are especially dangerous when driving a motorcycle. For the driver of the engine, even a minor impact on the vehicle poses a high risk of serious bodily injury, which is not nearly the same for vehicle cars in the same accident.
5 steps after an accident on the engine
Engine driver protection begins with good training and continues with regular driving practice to gain more experience.
Although there have been major changes in what materials are used and in the manufacture of motorcycle equipment in terms of comfort and protection. However, none of these items is 100% protection against a car accident in general. When participating in a car accident, it's important to know how and when to react to protect yourself, your passenger and your engine from further injuries and damage.
We hope this is a list you will never have to use, but it's better to be sure.
  1. Stay calm 
    If there has been an accident in which you have fired from the engine, do not move from place unless you are threatened by another danger - upcoming vehicles, falling from that same position, and more. Leave and start to feel your body - from toes to your head. Evaluate the pain you feel and the ability to start. Try to remember at that moment that you may be in shock and that the adrenaline has muted the pain that can both disrupt the possibility of judging your physical condition. If you think you are not hurt, you can start moving and / or moving your equipment with yourself. 

    Since this is an extremely stressful event, you can solve anxiety through deep breathing and counting in yourself. You need a normal judgment that you can well evaluate the situation in which you are.
  2. Assess the situation 
    If you have a passenger, check his condition, and then the condition of all others involved in a car accident. You should instruct all to check for yourself as you did in the previous step. If necessary, call 112 and seek urgent medical attention. Check as far as you can, the location of the traffic accident to identify potential hazards such as fires, leakage of dangerous liquids, upcoming vehicles, and so on. With great care, ensure the safety of all attendees. When you do it and all potential hazards are prevented, call the police at 192 and report an accident.
  3. Note the details 
    Most people today have a smart phone so use it and record the details of an accident through photos, videos, or writing your notes. 

    What to note : date, time, location, weather (un) opportunity, road accident situation, accident description from your perspective including the draft state of the vehicle at the time of the accident, injury and damage, model and mark of all involved vehicles, names, phone numbers and insurance data of all involved participants (including names and numbers of potential witnesses). 

    What to paint : traces of sliding or braking, traffic signs, visible obstacles, road abnormalities, and property damage.
  4. Contact an insurance company 
    Call your insurance home as soon as possible and give them the information you previously provided and be proactive in helping with any other information. The insurance is there to help you after the accident, and in order for them to do it, it will help you as much as you can to speed up the process.
  5. Hold the evidence 
    Save all the photos and other evidence you provided with contact details for all attendees including witnesses and police officers. Get a copy of a police report, and prepare also notes that include names, date and time of telephone conversations with the insurer and police officers. Print out exchanged emails and the like, and save all costs related to an accident (eg traction, vehicle storage and the cost of a hired replacement vehicle.) These documents will strengthen your case if there are some complications.

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