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Thread: Nobody likes the wind

  1. #16
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    17th July 2003 - 23:37
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    Wee tip I would have killed to know 14 years ago, Point your windward knee out. Don't know why or how. Do it really care either.
    It does thats all I need to know.
    Both knees in a gusting headwind is good too except for cold balls.

  2. #17
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    21st May 2005 - 21:12
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    riding a gn250 along the foxton strait with a side wind is fun...freaked me out to begin with but i knew there was no way around it so i just knuckled in and let the bike tell me what was needed. she decided where we went, all i had to do was keep her within the lane.
    as someone else said, we are entitled to use the whole lane, i use the wind as an "excuse" to play....also, by veering with the wind currents, it keeps cars from passing dangerously, looks like im about to blow out of my lane.
    worst bit of wind ive encoutered was coming around a sharpish corner at the bottom of a hill in a 100k zone....swept around the corner, kinda in the middle of my lane and got blown hard left....damn near into the ditch. managed to haul her back into line somehow.

    careful on corners too...you can sometimes come out going faster than anticipated, specially if the sidewind turns into a tailwind as you change direction. i went in once doing about 80 and came out at 120

    like anything, the more you do, the easier it is.
    my blog: http://sunsthomasandfriends.weebly.com/index.html

    the really happy person is one who can enjoy the scenery when on a detour.

  3. #18
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    18th July 2005 - 21:19
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    Wear a pointy hat !!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Genesismatrix
    I was riding this evening in some fairy heavy cross winds. Are there any good techniques out there to be more stable and not get blown all over the road.

    Keeping in mind Big Guy (105kg) Small Bike (130kg)
    :

    Wear a pointy hat with wizzard written on it !!! and leave the luggage behind it'll catch up on it's own !!!

  4. #19
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    9th June 2005 - 13:22
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    Wind.

    One thing we do get down here, WIND, copious quantities of WIND!
    Yes there is plenty of wind here and it comes from every direction and you never know just when it's going to give you a nudge.
    Thank god I learned to sail a yacht!
    Sailing gives you a good insight on how to handle wind.
    On a bike just relax, don't fight it, use it and learn to let the wind in and out of your fairing and frame work.
    Always watch for little gullies or obstacles and places where wind will come from unexpectedly and give yourself room to "wash it off".
    Relax, it will just shove you about a bit, if you try to fight it, it will toss you off the road.
    It's like most other things on bikes you have to constantly be on the watch and plan your way around the expected outcomes and try to outwit the unexpected.
    Can't emphasise enough, RELAX don't fight it, use it.
    I am like everyone else with wind, I prefer not to have it but I refuse to be intimidated by it.
    No one said it is easy but that's biking. Love it! Cheers, John.

    Edit:This is not intended to sound like a smart arse, I am trying to be helpfull!

  5. #20
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    11th December 2005 - 12:11
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    Quote Originally Posted by oldrider
    One thing we do get down here, WIND, copious quantities of WIND!
    Yes there is plenty of wind here and it comes from every direction and you never know just when it's going to give you a nudge.
    Thank god I learned to sail a yacht!
    Sailing gives you a good insight on how to handle wind.
    On a bike just relax, don't fight it, use it and learn to let the wind in and out of your fairing and frame work.
    Always watch for little gullies or obstacles and places where wind will come from unexpectedly and give yourself room to "wash it off".
    Relax, it will just shove you about a bit, if you try to fight it, it will toss you off the road.
    It's like most other things on bikes you have to constantly be on the watch and plan your way around the expected outcomes and try to outwit the unexpected.
    Can't emphasise enough, RELAX don't fight it, use it.
    I am like everyone else with wind, I prefer not to have it but I refuse to be intimidated by it.
    No one said it is easy but that's biking. Love it! Cheers, John.

    Edit:This is not intended to sound like a smart arse, I am trying to be helpfull!

    Thankd for the advice mate
    Check out my website for great stock photograph images www.clarityonline.net

  6. #21
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    12th July 2003 - 01:10
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    Spend more time watching for wind-blown obstacles and less time on how it affects your riding and before it you won't even think about the wind.

    The only wind that worries me is the stuff from double vindaloo curries - now THAT you do have to think about.
    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"

  7. #22
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    21st May 2005 - 21:12
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    thats a point, windblown objects...never thought of that before! though i have been told to watch tall vehicles as they may blow over.
    my blog: http://sunsthomasandfriends.weebly.com/index.html

    the really happy person is one who can enjoy the scenery when on a detour.

  8. #23
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    25th February 2006 - 20:14
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    tip i got today was to watch the vegetation (if there is any that is) and you can see the wind coming,if you know what i mean, its the unexpected big gusts that cause me the most trouble

  9. #24
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    20th June 2005 - 14:27
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    I keep an eye on the surrounding trees.

    but I've been doing that for years . ..works when hauling arse in a car too

  10. #25
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    13th June 2006 - 09:37
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    When I was in Taiwan I was riding in a hurricane, just a little one really, trying to find the eye of the storm which was apparently passing only 20ks or so away. I decided to turn back after I had been blown off for the second time (smashed up my fairings good), and after roofing-iron started to blow across the road. And I wasn't even going faster than about 30kph, it was just impossible. That's my 2 cents.

  11. #26
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    3rd May 2005 - 10:28
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    Welcome commuterjim, with experience like that our Wgtn "wind" must be more like a breeze for you...
    "Some people are like clouds, once they fuck off, it's a great day!"

  12. #27
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    7th July 2005 - 12:00
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    In fairly extreme cases I just find something the block the wind for me.

    On a windy day crossing the harbour bridge I'll get next to a bus / lorry and let them block the majority of it for me

  13. #28
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    17th July 2003 - 23:37
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    Quote Originally Posted by Commuter Jim
    When I was in Taiwan I was riding in a hurricane, just a little one really, trying to find the eye of the storm which was apparently passing only 20ks or so away. I decided to turn back after I had been blown off for the second time (smashed up my fairings good), and after roofing-iron started to blow across the road. And I wasn't even going faster than about 30kph, it was just impossible. That's my 2 cents.
    So not a candidate for a scholarship then?

  14. #29
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    17th July 2003 - 23:37
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    Quote Originally Posted by Weasel
    In fairly extreme cases I just find something the block the wind for me.

    On a windy day crossing the harbour bridge I'll get next to a bus / lorry and let them block the majority of it for me
    Doesn't help much when your jacket to bike ratio is close to that of spinnaker to yaught....... hover it is a jolly riot when you hit the gap between trailers lol

  15. #30
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    21st May 2005 - 21:12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Weasel
    In fairly extreme cases I just find something the block the wind for me.

    On a windy day crossing the harbour bridge I'll get next to a bus / lorry and let them block the majority of it for me
    tricky on a 2 lane highway....lol. only time i get alongside a truck is when they are either overtaking/coming from the other direction, lol.
    like others, i watch the trees/little hills etc alongside the open road...not so much for movement, but to see when the shrubby barrier is coming to an end. foxton strait has a fair bit of that, so i know when thats gone, ill be hit pretty hard.
    my blog: http://sunsthomasandfriends.weebly.com/index.html

    the really happy person is one who can enjoy the scenery when on a detour.

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