Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 16 to 25 of 25

Thread: prep for taupo the 10th

  1. #16
    Join Date
    27th July 2004 - 00:36
    Bike
    NC700X XR250 MTS1200
    Location
    Auckland, NZ
    Posts
    3,275
    Blog Entries
    2
    ermm... wonder if I'll have a bike for taupo....

  2. #17
    Join Date
    30th October 2003 - 21:46
    Bike
    TL1000S , XB12R
    Location
    Napier, New Zealand
    Posts
    431
    Quote Originally Posted by Gixxer 4 ever
    You inspired me. New front brake pads today. Air box out and cleaned the K/N. Must get some flushing fluid and oil for it. Plugs out and reset. Darn they looked good. Nice colour but big gaps so reset and installed. Drag down the drive and the new front brake pads are stoppy material. Think I better ride this week to get the pads bedded in. Got to love the track days to get the work done. Oil and filter later this week. Think it might get synthetic as the rev limiter seems to get used on the track. Wish I could see the tacko on this fecking bike.
    See you in Taupo.
    You got time to look at the Tach ???

  3. #18
    Join Date
    13th January 2004 - 11:00
    Bike
    Honda PC800
    Location
    Henderson -auckland
    Posts
    14,163
    well it looks like Ill be there with another new motor -having just blown mine up racing today
    To see a life newly created.To watch it grow and prosper. Isn't that the greatest gift a human being can be given?

  4. #19
    Join Date
    8th June 2004 - 12:00
    Bike
    BMW K1200R
    Location
    Under a bridge downtown
    Posts
    1,208
    Quote Originally Posted by XJ/FROSTY
    well it looks like Ill be there with another new motor -having just blown mine up racing today
    Hell's bells! How many hours did you get out of this one?
    We're all fucked. I'm fucked. You're fucked. The whole department is fucked. It's the biggest cock-up ever. We're all completely fucked.
    -Sir Richard Mottram

  5. #20
    Join Date
    12th June 2004 - 23:15
    Bike
    ..
    Location
    ..
    Posts
    2,797
    Quote Originally Posted by Morepower
    You got time to look at the Tach ???
    No but I didn't want to admit that. I was feeling guilty about not using mirrors last time but as Frosty said the people behind you will take care of the passing you just keep your line. So I am happy. I should change before the rev limiter kicks in. After all we are not racing and the limiter really slows the bike down.

  6. #21
    Join Date
    13th January 2005 - 11:00
    Bike
    fire breathin ginja ninja
    Location
    Taka, Aucka
    Posts
    6,419
    Quote Originally Posted by XJ/FROSTY
    well it looks like Ill be there with another new motor -having just blown mine up racing today
    you do know there's a gearbox on yer bike too...?

  7. #22
    Join Date
    30th October 2003 - 21:46
    Bike
    TL1000S , XB12R
    Location
    Napier, New Zealand
    Posts
    431
    Quote Originally Posted by Gixxer 4 ever
    No but I didn't want to admit that. I was feeling guilty about not using mirrors last time but as Frosty said the people behind you will take care of the passing you just keep your line. So I am happy. I should change before the rev limiter kicks in. After all we are not racing and the limiter really slows the bike down.
    Fold the mirrors in , they will only distract you when the TL's are passing

  8. #23
    Join Date
    9th July 2004 - 12:34
    Bike
    KTM300EXC
    Location
    Porirua
    Posts
    493
    Hi guys - I'm by no means the fastest rider round Taupo - Motoracer etc kick my arse but I have learnt a few things about Taupo which if you may find of use to think about if you haven't been there before; or not!

    I'd be interested to hear what other racers think about this too:

    This is for me on an RGV so don't try this straight away on your GSXR1000!

    Speaking in terms of doing a lap starting at the start/finish line:

    Turn one - A fastish left hand sweeper that drops away from you just after the apex. Depending on your bike you should be able to keep the throttle pinned until the seal changes (you'll see the join) - pop up and brush the brakes while tipping it in, and change down (for me) two gears. Try to keep you weight off the front because if you load it too much you'll get into strife as the track drops away from the wheel. The corner opens up on you more than you think so you can keep a part thottle on through the turn and then pin it once you feel comfotable, for me the apex but I think braver riders start earlier. Try to keep it pinned after the apex all the way to the white line that is painted across the track then:

    Turn two - left hand hairpin. BRAKE! Down one more gear (for me) A hair pin is a hair pin but don't go too wide on the exit and try to keep it smooth. Try to exit more or less in the middle and then keep the power on the whole way through the next set of esses:

    Turn three, four, five (if you can call them that) - right hander with some good knee down action. If you exited the hair pin more or less in the middle you should be nicely placed to enter this turn - nice and flat and you are accelerating hard, up one, two then three gears into the next left hander and then again into a right. Unless you're on a big bike you should be able to keep accelerating hard the whole way through; at least keep the throttle on if not accelerating. The left has a little (Turn 4) bump and you need to watch not getting you knee caught in the grass/fairly high curb here. All the time through the esses think about your exit line through the lot of them into the final turn; the left handed sweeper. If you over cook the esses you can get into trouble quickly on the entry into the sweeper as a lot of riders run off the side of the track here having gone a bit hard thorugh the esses.

    Turn Six - this sweeper is quite tricky to learn and I still aren't happy I've got it right. After coming out of the esses you should have the throttle pinned, and be more or less in the middle of the track. Once again there is a seal change that helps as a braking marker. On my RGV I try to keep the throttle pinned until I'm about 30 metres past the seal change; then on the brakes and go wide; missing where your brain tells you the apex is. Go out wide as if you're riding off the track, then peal it over and throttle on. Gear selection going into this turn for the exit is crucial. You can tell if you got it right 'cuase on the exit you'll be tucked in, accelerating as hard as you can onto the start/finish straight and at that time just getting to the edge of the track just where the curbing runs out, having apexed almost as teh straight opnes up. It's sort of a double apex turn but the first apex is imaginary - its not actaully the edge of the track its more like in the middle of the track. You can pass heaps of riders in this turn.

    Other faster rider's comments welcomed on the above - hope you might point out where I can go faster.....!

    Have fun. my funds can't stretch to being there.

  9. #24
    Join Date
    13th April 2004 - 13:57
    Bike
    Riffer
    Location
    Hamilton
    Posts
    477

    not me

    Quote Originally Posted by That Guy
    Hi guys - I'm by no means the fastest rider round Taupo - Motoracer etc kick my arse but I have learnt a few things about Taupo which if you may find of use to think about if you haven't been there before; or not!

    I'd be interested to hear what other racers think about this too:

    This is for me on an RGV so don't try this straight away on your GSXR1000!

    Speaking in terms of doing a lap starting at the start/finish line:

    Turn one - A fastish left hand sweeper that drops away from you just after the apex. Depending on your bike you should be able to keep the throttle pinned until the seal changes (you'll see the join) - pop up and brush the brakes while tipping it in, and change down (for me) two gears. Try to keep you weight off the front because if you load it too much you'll get into strife as the track drops away from the wheel. The corner opens up on you more than you think so you can keep a part thottle on through the turn and then pin it once you feel comfotable, for me the apex but I think braver riders start earlier. Try to keep it pinned after the apex all the way to the white line that is painted across the track then:

    Turn two - left hand hairpin. BRAKE! Down one more gear (for me) A hair pin is a hair pin but don't go too wide on the exit and try to keep it smooth. Try to exit more or less in the middle and then keep the power on the whole way through the next set of esses:

    Turn three, four, five (if you can call them that) - right hander with some good knee down action. If you exited the hair pin more or less in the middle you should be nicely placed to enter this turn - nice and flat and you are accelerating hard, up one, two then three gears into the next left hander and then again into a right. Unless you're on a big bike you should be able to keep accelerating hard the whole way through; at least keep the throttle on if not accelerating. The left has a little (Turn 4) bump and you need to watch not getting you knee caught in the grass/fairly high curb here. All the time through the esses think about your exit line through the lot of them into the final turn; the left handed sweeper. If you over cook the esses you can get into trouble quickly on the entry into the sweeper as a lot of riders run off the side of the track here having gone a bit hard thorugh the esses.

    Turn Six - this sweeper is quite tricky to learn and I still aren't happy I've got it right. After coming out of the esses you should have the throttle pinned, and be more or less in the middle of the track. Once again there is a seal change that helps as a braking marker. On my RGV I try to keep the throttle pinned until I'm about 30 metres past the seal change; then on the brakes and go wide; missing where your brain tells you the apex is. Go out wide as if you're riding off the track, then peal it over and throttle on. Gear selection going into this turn for the exit is crucial. You can tell if you got it right 'cuase on the exit you'll be tucked in, accelerating as hard as you can onto the start/finish straight and at that time just getting to the edge of the track just where the curbing runs out, having apexed almost as teh straight opnes up. It's sort of a double apex turn but the first apex is imaginary - its not actaully the edge of the track its more like in the middle of the track. You can pass heaps of riders in this turn.

    Other faster rider's comments welcomed on the above - hope you might point out where I can go faster.....!

    Have fun. my funds can't stretch to being there.
    for me entry into the hairpin from the middle of the track(blocking) then exit in the middle or wider if you need to block the entry to the right. exiting esses run over to the left entering sweeper from left this is again for blocking but also gives you more exit speed from the esses. brake through the sweeper until you get to about the last grey line pointing at the suzuki sign then let off on the gas the bike will drop in all by itself. hope this helps, im not a racer but am just about nudging the high 44 sec laps at taupo. my funds also cant stretch being there (my tyres are buggered) but may come along and help out.
    I'm off to the pub, I may be sometime.

  10. #25
    Join Date
    9th July 2004 - 12:34
    Bike
    KTM300EXC
    Location
    Porirua
    Posts
    493
    Yep agree with the blocking lines if you're being chased - gotta keep that pesky competition outta the way

    Suzuki Sign? I'm way to busy to notice that (didn't know there was one!) but I'll have a look next time and see where it puts me.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •