Google andrew Templeton in Wellington, and invest some $$$$$ into your life span. Get some training...
P.s. You should've learnt how to change gear during your Basic Handling Skills.
Google andrew Templeton in Wellington, and invest some $$$$$ into your life span. Get some training...
P.s. You should've learnt how to change gear during your Basic Handling Skills.
Remember, that GOOD QUALITY TRAINING stays with you forever. It doesn't get sold with your bike, or expire with your rego. It stays with you FOREVER..
It's not the message that is DELIVERED, but the message that is RECEIVED that is important.
I disagrozzle. I'm teaching basics at the mo & what seems the simplest thing for me can be a mountain to climb for a complete novice. I'm learning a lot from the experience about perception & confidence.
Pulling away took a little time, too much focus on the throttle & not the clutch. Looking down at the front wheel = a stall. Looking where you want to ride & your off. It's a subtle thing.
A very quiet back road to practice going up and down through the gears. Coming to a complete stop each time ... Repeat untill the cows come home ... and then some more ...
Practice DOES pay off ...
When life throws you a curve ... Lean into it ...
so , i dont know what is correct , but i pull clutch in as i let go of throttle , letting it slip back through my fingers , pull the shifter to the next gear up , then let the clutch back out an onto the gas.
1st is first for a reason , its the first gear you should use , that simple buddy
gears and smooth shifting , personally , from a motorsport background , I know that the smoother you shift , the better all round , try and be as smooth as possible with everything as much as you can
downshifting , i simply pull clutch in , push down to lower gear , blip the throttle and let the clutch out , blipping the throttle helps the engine meet the higher revving for the lower gear , guys drifting cars dont do this , and consequently , lock the rear wheels up , using the engines compression , short story , make it smooth , itll be quicker an easier
1. Put the bike in 1st gear
2. Rev the bike to the redline.
3. Release the clutch as quickly as possible.
4. Call an ambulance.
As Tricia 1000 says: Get some professional training & learn how to do it properly!!
Call on Andrew Templeton (04) 232 0110 www.roadsafe.co.nz
Book in for the Learn to Ride & Basic Handling Skills Courses, which includes the BHS test required to get your learners motorcycle licence
Roadsafe are the contracted provider (by the Councils & ACC) of rider training courses for the Wellington region (as well as Nelson, Tasman, Marlborough & Hamilton). So once you have a licence & your own bike, you can attend full day professional training courses & it will only cost you approx $20!
There are too many self taught bikers on the road, & people who learn from Muppets!![]()
Good quallity training will stay with you for life!![]()
GET ON
SIT DOWN
SHUT UP
HANG ON
Definitely some training and find some back roads to just practice, practice, practice on. In terms of the throttle, clutch, gear thing - try not to think about it so much. If you think about it, you'll stuff it up. If you don't think about it, it'll happen![]()
Hi these youtubes - starting off and here re downshifting, are some of the better ones applicable for your situation. If its any help, I'd do a fair amount of low speed control stuff on your bike, empty car parks, enough so it becomes automatic and natural, so allow plenty of time.
Whatever you do stay inside your comfort envelope on the road. Good luck
Please do NOT follow the advice of posts like hitchers. It is so easy for the experienced to mock newbies. From reading your info you were/are a scooter rider, so used to a 'twist and go' vehicle.
As a 'self taught' rider from the buy it, stick L plates on it and ride it out the shop door school of survival. The best advice you are being given in this thread IS Andrew Templeton. My partner did the BHS course with him, and I watched a good section of it. He, put bluntly, knows his shit.
If the road to hell is paved with good intentions; and a man is judged by his deeds and his actions, why say it's the thought that counts? -GrayWolf
Elite Fight Club - Proudly promoting common sense and safe riding since 2024
http://1199s.wordpress.com
1. You can start from 2nd/3rd if your bike has enough power, but seriously do you like climbing stairs by jumping up to the middle first, or do you simply climb up from the bottom like normal people do?
2. Throttle off, pull in clutch, shift gear. But practice until you can do it quickly and smoothly. They are not 3 separate steps. They are 3 elements strung together in harmony.
3. Any gear.
4. When learning, stick to low-mid rpm (best not to go over 5k-6k) so it's easy to learn downshifting without having to blip. Once you are good, then you can learn to blip.
And yeah, find an instructor. Shifting is only a small part of learning to ride.
For a post written on a phone, it's actually quite well written. Capitalised, punctuated, and all.
Elite Fight Club - Proudly promoting common sense and safe riding since 2024
http://1199s.wordpress.com
Everybody rides different pal....get some training and find your own method.
The speed of light is faster than the speed of sound. That's why so many people appear bright...until they speak.
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