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#11 |
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I think its just a case of finding the limit for yourself, I know i have reached a bit of a watershed in my road riding as I seem to have an angle of lean where I cant go any quicker round the corners because my brain is telling me to keep the bike from leaning any further over. Its the mortality issue and the fact that if i binned it I would be very annoyed! Maybe I should buy a rat bike and throw it into corners to see what happens- most likely i'll fall off and end up breaking something on me. On the track I guess its different. The ideal scenario would be to use a hired bike where you dont mind so much if it goes down. Only then will you be able to see how much grip you can acheive. I think the Conti RA tyres say that they can hit a limit of 50deg lean angle, which for me is a lot further than I'm prepared to lean it. Think it may be time for some tuition for me.....
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#12 |
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on some tyres you wont get rid of the chicken strips on an SV
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#13 |
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This is an interesting thread and thanks for the link to the race shool info too.
Tonight I came back from the local town on a road I've not used before and the weather was intermittent showers with some dry roads and some damp stretches. deliberately taking it easy because I'm on (race scubbed) Supercorsa Pro Sc's that were almost warm never mind up to temperature, I came to a very tight (dry) left hand corner that was masked by a blind summit. As I crested the sumit (at the speed limit surprisingly) it took me a little by surprise but with cars coming the other way I just leant over.. and over, and over. ![]() I got round without going over the double whites. When I got home I checked the tyres and I'd actually managed to clear off the "race scrubbing" from the front and back tyre. That means I've been over as far, it not a little farther than the guy who sold me them. And that's a long way, I can tell you! I would *never* have believed that this was possible with 1) the temperature of the tyres, 2) The dirt on the road versus the track, 3) the speed I was riding. They didn't even hint at letting go either. There was a very interesting article in Bike magazine earlier this year on Grip and it was basically confirmed that (as long as the road is dry and clean) a road rider will never be able to find the limit of grip and that crashing is due to rider error and not tyre grip. You will either hit something (gravel, mud, horse crap, fence etc) or run out of road before the tyres let go. Tonight, I belive them. I also followed a BMW K1200 this morning in the rain and I couldn't keep up with him through the bendy bits. My tyres were slipping all over the place whist he seemed to be effortlessly carving through wet twisties. I finally caught him up at some traffic lights and he was using Conti Road attacks. He must have had an extra 5-8 degrees of lean more than my SC Pro's with them. Very impressive. The new PR2's should be even better. The problem, now tyres are so good, is that if it *does* go wrong, you are so far commited at the point where it does that there's very little chance of saving it. Collecting a slide when you are leant over more than 45 degrees is going to be impossible. There are now fewer crashes due to better tryes but the ones that do happen are usually much worse because of the level that things went wrong. I've found a good way of gauging your lean level and comfort is to use your toe. Boots with Toe sliders can be used as a measure of how far you are actually over quite accurately and it is quite repeatable. If you don't have toe sliders it's fairly easy to knock some up. When coming into a corner, stick your toe out and when it grounds out you know the angle. Next time on that corner, try a little further etc. If it starts to go a bit squirrely at a particular angle of lean, you know quite accurately where that was from your toe. So when out and about, if you place your toe on the "comfort" side of where it was when things got a little pear shaped, you'll always be fine. Unless Jemima, riding Snowdrop, happens to leave a big steamy one right on the line through the next corner. Take heed of horse signs ![]() I've not used super sticky tyres on the road before (but I have used slicks on the track a long time ago) and I'm used to taking road tyres to the limit. But when you've got all of that extra grip in reserve it takes a lot of self belief to actually use it on the road ![]() ![]() Cheers, Carl Last edited by Berlin; 21-09-07 at 01:09 AM. |
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#14 |
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Dunno if I said before, but last time at Cadwell I saw a guy on a CBR600 ride off the outside of the entry to the Gooseneck (basically a right-hander with a banked-over braking area) at a serisouly soft-**** lean angle because he thought the bike wouldn't go round the bend, just like you. I was behind him and had been thinking that if he carried on like this he'd fall off it.
I used to toeslide on older bikes where the ground clearance was less, but only on the left (right sides are my problem, I have plenty of homework to do!) and now I'm getting into kneesliding properly they do both help, a bit to judge the angle but also a bit to take away some of the fear of leaning over too far, not sure why though. Re the BMW, I don't know how smooth you are, but on old bits of crap i could lean them over enough to make the pegs deck out up to about 55mph as long as it was dry and you were smooth, if you weren't smooth then forget it. Even in the damp I could still toeslide at those speeds, I have the ground down wellies to prove it. Being smooth is, to me, one of the most important things on the road when its' slippery. Anyway perhaps digressing a bit! |
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#15 | |
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I was asked in this thread http://forums.sv650.org/showthread.php?t=96442 why my hand was so far off the throttle and onto the bar end. My answer was for smoothness. Gripping the bar end slightly whilst cornering means at speed your much less likely to jolt the throttle more or less if you hit a bump and accelerating out of the corner can be controlled more progressively. I find it helps anyway. The smoother you are the more you can feel when something like grip is going. |
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#16 |
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Supercorsas are great tyres. You can’t expect massive lean in the wet as they are slicks after a point
![]() And sure if you had a perfect surface you struggle to exceed grip, but the whole point is that there are very few places where you don’t encounter stones/mud/horse dung at some point in a turn so it is a bit pointless saying in perfect conditions!!! ![]() As for your toe slider tip ... that is the same/exact function that kneesliders should be used for ... |
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#17 | |
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Young kids on the old bikes are scrapping knees, and the old guys (some are 50/60+) are just just toesliding getting the same lean, faster cornering speeds and are normally infront of the young guys. |
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#18 |
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I think i find that the bike tends to feel a bit unstable at the front when leant over. Im attributing that to the fairly soft suspension lifting and diving over the uneven surface, I actually think that I should maybe push the preload up on the rear shock slightly. I need to find out what setting its at.
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#19 | |
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IMHO its all about smooth progressive control, you will probably find your faster too, |
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#20 | |
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Because of my weight 13.6st Mine is on the maximum setting front and rear, felt amazingly different, doesn’t make playing about on particularly bumpy roads much fun though unless your concentrating 120%. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Grip in Wet? | AndyL | Bikes - Talk & Issues | 33 | 28-10-08 11:33 PM |
more grip? | noob-saibot | SV Talk, Tuning & Tweaking | 1 | 09-10-08 04:20 PM |
Omg Omg GRIP | freddifredfred | Bikes - Talk & Issues | 18 | 21-01-08 12:00 AM |
Need more grip!!!! | DarrenSV650S | Idle Banter | 34 | 09-12-06 06:52 PM |
Help me get a grip! | svpilot | SV Talk, Tuning & Tweaking | 11 | 02-09-05 08:54 PM |