
Originally Posted by
Sheba
Hey, have probably a very silly question, but thought I'd throw it out there anyway.
No silly questions - only silly answers!

Originally Posted by
Sheba
I'm looking to do my BHS soon, and also reading a bit about the NZ road code. In it they mention very briefly about countersteering and pushing the handle bars in the direction of where you want the bike to go, and it seeming like the 'wrong' thing to do but being the most effective means of changing direction and controlling your bike.
Firstly, forget about it for your BHS - you won't be going fast enough. You're going to have enough on your mind anyway. If there was one REALLY important piece of advice for your BHS it would be: TURN YOUR HEAD AND LOOK WHERE YOU WANT TO GO.
In the longer term, there seem to be two schools of thought around countersteer:
1) It's something that just happens naturally. You lean your body which leans the bike - or maybe you lean your body and it shifts your weight onto your inside hand which countersteers and leans the bike.
2) It's a concious decision. Steering isn't achieved by shifting your weight - but my pushing on the inside bar. This causes the bike to lean - then you can shift your weight if you need to (i.e. if you are going REALLY fast and need to move your centre of gravity).
I subscribe to the second theory - the reason being that in the event of an emergency, the person who consciously uses (2) is more likely to correctly countersteer and be able to swerve rapidly. Having said that, my personal opinion would be brake. It's choosing between: do I reduce the likelihood of a crash by swerving (but therefore increase the consequence) or do I reduce the consequence by braking (and therefore increase the likelihood). Risk is a measure of likelihood X consequence. (R=CL).
Anyway, that's opening a whole other can of worms. Do you ride a push-bike? Get yourself on a moderate hill - maybe going around 30 KM/H and push on one side of the handle bars and see what happens.
P.
The chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one, he said.
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