<div class="wpcnt">
			<div class="wpa">
				<span class="wpa-about">Advertisements</span>
				<div class="u top_amp">
							<amp-ad width="300" height="265"
		 type="pubmine"
		 data-siteid="109460728"
		 data-section="1">
		</amp-ad>
				</div>
			</div>
		</div><h6><span style="color:#260202;">Mystery of Riderless &#8216;ghost&#8217; motorbike filmed cruising along Paris highway solved</span></h6>
<p><span class="embed-youtube" style="text-align:center; display: block;"><amp-youtube data-videoid="obeZkhMlTes" data-param-rel="1" data-param-showsearch="0" data-param-showinfo="1" data-param-iv_load_policy="1" data-param-fs="1" data-param-hl="en-US" data-param-autohide="2" data-param-wmode="transparent" width="620" height="349" layout="responsive"><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obeZkhMlTes" placeholder><amp-img src="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/obeZkhMlTes/hqdefault.jpg" alt="YouTube Poster" layout="fill" object-fit="cover"><noscript><img src="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/obeZkhMlTes/hqdefault.jpg" loading="lazy" decoding="async" alt="YouTube Poster"></noscript></amp-img></a></amp-youtube></span><br />
The mystery behind bizarre footage of a riderless motorcycle cruising down a Parisian highway has been solved.<br />
A video, filmed last month and published by French newspaper Le Parisien last week, showed a motorbike travelling in the outer lane of the A4 Autoroute near a guardrail, before cruising out of sight of the camera.<br />
The footage initially bewildered viewers.<br />
However, days after releasing the video, Le Parisien interviewed the rider, who was able to shed light on the mystery.<br />
The man said he had been knocked off his bike in a collision with a car before the footage was filmed.<br />
The driver of the car stopped to pick him up, and the pair unsuccessfully searched for the bike before continuing on to hospital.<br />
The rider, who suffered an arm injury, received a call days later from police to say the bike had been recovered far from the reported crash site.<br />
And an expert stunt motorcyclist lifted the lid on what most likely happened to the bike afterwards.<br />
&#8220;The pilot may have fallen, and in view of the motorcycle, with a very low center of gravity, it was possible to continue its journey,” said Jean-Pierre Goy who has featured in James Bond films.<br />
“I’ve seen motorcycles ride like this even longer, especially with the cruise control blocked.”<br />
The Frenchman added that motorbikes can travel without a rider for more than 600 meters, about a third of a mile.</p>

What was propelling the Riderless ‘ghost’ motorbike seen cruising along Paris highway

