Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........![]()
" Life is not a rehearsal, it's as happy or miserable as you want to make it"
PHEW.....JUST MADE IT............................. UP"
Well, I'm right handed, and my.... hangs left.......
But I do like to go faster around left handers than rights!
I figure its because the rear brake lever is on the right hand side of the bike, and when cranked around a right, my foot is too far from the lever incase I need to stand on the brakes (in an upright position) in a hurry due to unforseen obstacles.
Well, that's my theory.....
On my sidecar, I'm just as quick on either sides, as my inboard foot does the braking.
Is it still beastiality if ya fuck a frozen chicken??
coriolis effect p'raps?
it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
(PostalDave on ADVrider)
I'm left handed but prefer left hand corners, so I don't think it is to do with whether you are left or right handed
I was going to go on an overly complex explanation of moving masses and that all, when I realised there is a far more simple explanation: If you look at all masses capable of producing gyroscopic effects on a bike (basically the wheels and the crankshaft), youll see that those are symetrical re the center plane of the bike.
Take a bike cornering left. Look at how the wheels move. Now look at same bike on a mirror, and compare it with it cornering right. You see exactly the same thing, so the effect is symetrical and has no influence.
To better illustrate it, now imagine a boxer BMW and look at it crankshaft. As I don't know how it goes, let's say it rotates so upper side goes right. If the bike leans to the left, it leans against the rotation of the crankshaft. Its image in the mirror will also lean agaist it. But when the bike leans right, it goes with the crankshaft, so mirror image and real bike are not exactly the same. In this case, the gyroscopic effect of the crankshaft may have some influence.
P.D.: Yes, I know its a bit late; it's been a damn couple of busy days.
It's in the mind I think, don't dwell on it... when riding just focus, do some track days or your fav bit of road over and over again. Don't look at speed, that's not what you want.. it's body position,.. speed will come on it's own. Would say most (I did) will have to make a conscious effort when doing a right hander, but in time it will feel just as good.. well 90% as good as a left hander! You may have to do it in stages and nail every stage before moving to the next etc..before your hangin off the seat!
Oh plus left handers you have no fear of a car crossing into your lane once your commited to your line aye!..![]()
DUCATI ------- A real bike in a sea of shit!
Some time back I was fishing at the outlet of Lake Wanaka and got talking to an American who was fishing in the same location. It turned out that this guy was an optician and while most of out talk was about what fish see, nylon refraction in moonlight and other fishing related subjects one comment of his did stand out and might offer an explanation of why most bikers prefer the lefthand corner be they in the northern or southern hemisphere, female or male or left or right handed.
The optician just happened to mention that for most of us our eyesight is naturaly focused to the left. I have spent some time in trying to find something on the net on this but have been unable to confirm this one way or the other. Whether this would have an effect on the preferance of a lefthand turn I can offer no opinion but this may give cause to why the lefthand is so much preferred by most riders no matter if this is north or southern hemisphere, male or female, road camber or for that matter left or right handed.
As to why this lefthand focus preference is natural the other comment he made in relation to this is that the sun moves from right to left. This was more of a personal opinion but this may explain some issues on why most of us prefer the left hand bend to the right.................who knows.
Skyyrder
Free Scott Watson.
I'm right handed, left footed, hanging left and I don't look right, but am more comfortable going into right handers than left... it did used to be the other way around!!!
Could be an eyesight thing. I was told by an optician that, in general, most people have one eye for short vision and one eye for long... It was news to me, but makes sense if depth perception is more acurate when looking to the left...
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
Ask an archer, he will explain. One of the first things they do when you enter an archery is testing your "guide eye". That is the eye that finds the point you are looking at and targets on things, the other one just follows. A quick test is to wink an eye. Which one did you close? The guide one is the one you left open.
Most people's guide eye follows handness. That is, for a RH person the guide eye is the right one. But on some rare cases it doesn't follow. I'm one of those rare cases, RH but left guide eye (I have to use a left-handed arc).
I prefer lh turns, so my guess is that the eye has nothing to do.
Good theory, though.
Why you need to think about explanation when you can just do it like McJim? I like it.Originally Posted by McJim
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