Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
how you can you slow to a slower speed than what the sign says if there is no sign in the first place? sorry, but if you're going to start some kind of war here you should at least make proper sense...
riding pillion can be kind of scary full stop, and the first time i rode pillion i thought we were going to crash and die too.
You are dead right Headbanger, that's exactly how these recommended corner speeds were calculated. I had a friend who worked for the old LTSA and he was explaining it to me some time ago. Seeing as how the argumentative prick on this thread rides an old 82 model bike he probably has problems staying upright, let alone going around corners whereas the original post was about a Speed Triple which would be one of the best and most nimble bikes for handling and cornering.![]()
Well, it'd make I.A.M training more interesting..."and you want to accelerate right up to a late apex, at which point you smoothly transition through engine braking to hard braking in order to reduce speed from around 160kmhr to 100 before the speed limit sets in"
Mind you the way cassina is carrying on you'd almost think she reckons that is what they do teach![]()
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
If i based my speed on the traffic ahead of me I would die of old age before I got home. Not only that my fuel consumption would double, my brake pads burst into flames & I would be putting new tires on every 5 minutes. No tahnks, will stick wid Iams, the pet food of champions, guaranteed to make you cat go faster.
After the previous posts on how the suggested speed for corners came about, why would you slow to a slower than suggested speed if you were looking ahead through the bend?
Manopausal.
its the akaroa gp for God sakes everyone get a life![]()
i was just pulling your leg, I knew what ya meant
now that I ride, I feel that riding pillion isn't as enjoyable. There's something about being perched on the back with no control and a reduced feeling for the physics of the bike that makes for a scarier experience, and I have more moments where I think 'oh, I wouldn't have done that, or that', in response to the rider.
No, the question I was stating, was that the signs do not exist (quite common). Therefore, there is no recommendation, but your answer seems to be to put your life in someone elses hands, relying on them to read the road? Remember the countless experiences of a lot of people coming across drivers that struggle to maintain 60-70kph on the open road... and you're trusting these drivers? Let's also assume on the other hand, that because these are back roads, there is no traffic (quite common). You seem to have no answer to this, which in my mind, is quite frankly scary. I'd suggest some riding training, but's that probably another thread (and year).
Unless you actually have some first hand experience it's probably best you stop guessing. Riders can make good pillions, but generally the lack of control makes them very uncomfortable. They also have other ideas about leaning for corners and when, when to brake etc. A non bike riding pillion is much easier to calm, as the lack of knowledge is actually a good thing and they simply don't know what is and isn't, impossible. I've carried a lot of pillions in various situations. Best you probably read up the pillioning thread (all been merged into one thread).
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
IAMS is cat food!
Cat food.
Cat food.
Cat foo
Cat f
Bored...
If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?
Exactly right, my choice. Given the opportunity to safely & efficiently make progress past traffic, I do so. What was it you said about fast, safe & overtaking?
I would rather not sit in a queue of traffic with no chance of anticipating what the drivers in front will do next or the tail gaters behind me. I do not want to be the motorcycle in a car sandwich. If this is your preferred position on the road buy a lotto ticket. Your a definite lucky bugger.
You can only see as far as your vanishing point & your speed should be tempered by that distance as it changes.
Goodness, that's almost agreement.
Manopausal.
It's ok, I think he's gone for a short ride. He won't be back for aaaages.
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