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17-10-07, 06:10 PM | #41 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
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17-10-07, 06:38 PM | #42 | |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
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A bit of rear is gonna help for a bit of mid-turn correction, but if you properly need to slow down, you are gonna need some front ... |
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17-10-07, 06:58 PM | #43 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
i tired abit of front the other day
wobbler is the word |
17-10-07, 07:13 PM | #44 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
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17-10-07, 07:24 PM | #45 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
no mid turn, i took my eyes of the road for a second, cant really remember what happened, but a rider error anyway
had to give it a little squeeze on the brakes, wobbled abit, stayed upright pay more attention next time |
17-10-07, 07:58 PM | #46 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
I brake when I want, where I want and how I need....that's advance technique and not the "ooh, never touch the brakes" rubbish........IMHO
Leant over at say a round about and someone pulls out on me, I shut the throttle if need(goal is to have neutral throttle really) and I start braking as I reduce lean angle. Most people who come off whilst braking leant over, have done so because they have panicked, haven't read the road surface properly and so have applied too much braking for that particular surface or plain can't brake smoothly enough/properly. Ben
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Nemo me impune lacessit. Last edited by 21QUEST; 17-10-07 at 08:02 PM. |
17-10-07, 11:39 PM | #47 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
Like when I came off my 125, "oh f###, forgot that speed bump" while on the shiny tar seal stuff... down you go. Lack of experience. Got me a smashed up wrist.
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18-10-07, 09:10 AM | #48 | |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
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If you're thinking about doing IAM, why not go along on a taster observed ride and make up you're own mind if they can improve your riding at all? I didn't agree with everything they said (and I still don't now), but there was enough that I did learn that was useful that I have retained. You can always discard the "no toes on the pegs, no 2 finger braking" nonsense once you've passed. I know you're a lot more experienced a rider than me, but I know people who've been riding 20-30 years before doing IAM and still have gotten loads out of it. |
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18-10-07, 10:09 AM | #49 |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
I think that is my problem, although willing to accept there are always things to learn observation etc wise, I am too set in my old ways to change my riding style side of things … coupled with the self belief that I fundamentally don’t think my riding style is detrimental to safety per-say (how is 2 finger braking and riding on toes bad safety wise?) ... so unwilling to change anyway!! To me, what is the point artificially blagging it for a test? – this is suppose to be a way of riding you are sighing up to, not a hoop to get you on the road (or whatever)) - I do the test, I intend to ride like that forever more ... not cherry pick bits ... else it is meaningless!
Ok, so lets face it, we already know I am never going to pass an IAM test as I ride on my toes (at times) I ALWAYS brake 2 fingers (didn't realise they were two more commandments that I was also breaking) ... I tend to brake into corners … and these are just the riding techniques we have identified … there are probably many more riding STYLE commandments I break … So however good my observation, road positioning etc may or may not turn out to be in their eyes, I’d still fail as I have broken so many of the other commandments!!! Last edited by Blue_SV650S; 18-10-07 at 10:13 AM. |
18-10-07, 10:21 AM | #50 | |
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Re: Advanced riding – braking
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Similarly, I find riding toes on the pegs more comfortable on the SV when going reasonably briskly, so it reduces fatigue, not to mention the improvements in feedback from the pegs letting you know what the bike is doing. I ride covering the back brake when in 30s, but not out on NSLs. Besides, on the SV throttleing off is enough to commence the shift of weight to the front of the bike before you start braking properly and this takes long enough that I can move my toes a couple of inches. I passed my IAM test in spite of doing both these (despite trying to change my habits, just till I'd past the test, they are already too deeply ingrained in my riding style and I see little reason to change them, until someone can give me a proper reason to), although he did mention both of them. Now I've passed, I don't make any effort to "undo" what I see as a perfectly safe riding style. |
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