...it's all in the head...
...it's all in the head...
As a well-spent day brings happy sleep, so life well used brings happy death
Γύρος στη νίκη
The gyroscopic effect of the rotating masses....wheels in particular....means the bike prefers a left turn.
Get a bicycle front wheel and hold the axle in your left hand. With your right hand, spin the wheel in what would be the forward direction and the wheel will want to turn to the left
I have read on Amerikan forums that this is the case...
In that case, I should be less confident in a straight line...
Yeah - I wonder about lateral dominance as well...
I seem to have overcome this difference - to some extent anyway. More confident than I was in the right handers.
My just swapped out front tyre was much more worn on the right side than the left...makes no sense to me. But then nothing makes sense to me anyway...![]()
. “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis
"No matter what bike you ride. It's all the same wind in your face"
Yeah, next time you are on the road take note of which way its slopping.
I remember way back in the day when I started MX that I had this favorite left or right corner thing. For the life of my now I can't remember which side it was because after a few race meetings you become equally comfortable with either side.
To overcome this problem try the following. Go to your local Park and Ride or what ever parking lot doesn't have many cars around. Put some cones or something on the ground and make a figure 8 and start practicing corners. Work on all aspects of the corner, throttle application, body position etc then start gradually leaning over more and putting the gas on a little harder and sooner.
Thought it was time to stop when I saw 80kph on the speed![]()
Go do a few track days. If you are pushing it, you will be concerntrating on so much other stuff that you will forget you "handedness". Depending on where you go you may also get some great advise from instructors.![]()
If you can keep your head when all about you are loosing theirs.........it's quite possible you haven't grasped the situation.
Lots of pertinent opinions here.
I know I bang on about it but visibility is the key for me. I approach a right hander hard to the left of my lane, not in the kerb though, to maximise my visibility through the corner. Once I can see through the corner or the vanishing point starts to move away, I can aim for an apex to take me through the corner safely & usually quickly or stay wide to avoid the camper van / logging truck / myopic pensioner using my bit of road.
Perhaps the biggest thing with left / right corner preferences is planning before the corner rather than in it.
Yeah this really important. It's critical to not lean on the bars, but just steer by linearly applying a little forward bar-force (not displacement) to gently adjust your line. If you haven't forced yourself to do this from day one it can be nearly impossible for it to be automatic later on, and that can take years and years to fix, if it's fixable at all.
"I am a licenced motorcycle instructor, I agree with dangerousbastard, no point in repeating what he said."
"read what Steve says. He's right."
"What Steve said pretty much summed it up."
"I did axactly as you said and it worked...!!"
"Wow, Great advise there DB."
WTB: Hyosung bikes or going or not.
No. Scalloping is a slight hollow in the rubber. If was off center on the right hand side and behind the water channel (sipe) moulded into the tyre.
The front tyre was still fairly triangular.
The rear had a pronounced flat section in the center. This certainly made the bike feel unstable in transitions as the contact patch width became very thin as the bike tipped in. Once heeled over the grip increased again.
This sensation however was the same turning left or right.
I reshaped the rear with a surform file as a short term 'band aid'. It helped a bit but nothing like the feeling of a new tyre with good profile
"I don't like it, and I'm sorry I ever had anything to do with it." -- Erwin Schrodinger talking about quantum mechanics.
Funny, I'm far more confident throwing it over into a right hander. I'm more worried about losing it on a left and going splat into oncoming traffic.
Originally Posted by Kickha
Originally Posted by Akzle
i have the same issue, but turning left is always harder for me. Talking mainly in an offroad/gravel situation but onroad it is there too. Dunno why and it bugs the hell outta me but its always been like that.
Maybe we could stereotype people depending on which way they prefer to turn.
I mentioned vegetables once, but I think I got away with it...........
I agree with the comment that said it is all in the head. Assuming there isn't something wrong with the bike. A good way to see if it is the bike ......is to go on an even stretch of road (no slope) and let go of the bars. Does it pull to either side? If no, then you should be OK as long as the tires aren't messed up.
So, cure = track school. Trackdays are great, but if you are doing something wrong and don't know about it, then you might keep on doing the same thing. People often have a different body position depending which way they are turning. At a school, you can get help from riders who know what they are talking about and they can get you out of bad habits. After that, go do some trackdays to polish things off a bit more. Then street riding should feel very natural and you won't even think about things like that anymore.
FYI as far as the bike being the problem it could be:
- front to rear wheel alignment as mentioned before
- your front fork pinch bolts could possibly be holding the lower pars of your forks in a slightly twisted manner. Loosen the pinch bolts and bounce the front by grabbing on the front brakes and (engine not on) rocking the bike.... then tighten them back up.
- forks could be twisted... something twisted with frame/triple tree or swingarm, I don't know if you guys have a http://gmd-computrack.com/ location in NZ or something similar... they can check for straightness.
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