View Poll Results: What revs do you take into a corner and why? Pick best option....

Voters
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  • Lower revs because it feels better.

    6 15.00%
  • Hi revs because it's faster.

    5 12.50%
  • Lower gear cause its safer - less chance of spinning rear which could end with high or low-siding.

    3 7.50%
  • High revs because safer - more chance of losing rear but better chance of controlling if it does go.

    13 32.50%
  • You're talking shit theres another option.

    10 25.00%
  • Bibble.

    3 7.50%
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Thread: Cornering - which gear, opinion poll.

  1. #1
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    23rd February 2006 - 14:28
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    Cornering - which gear, opinion poll.

    Kolmar Burton poll:

    Spent 1300km on the Z in 2 days this w/e, and had some time to consider gear selection for cornering.

    When riding at a decent pace on the road, do you prefer to corner in a gear giving high revs or low, and why?

    I try to go high / med-high, but often find myself shorting but that might be cause my current bike has a decent midrange (or more likely I get lazy or I can't ride for poo )

  2. #2
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    20th October 2005 - 17:09
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    You have come to the right place.....
    Lower gear/higher rev's, or you may find you drift wider than you should and hitting the picks mid corner (not good)...go in hard come out harder, make of that what you will....

  3. #3
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    24th September 2004 - 06:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by Squeak the Rat View Post
    Kolmar Burton poll:

    Spent 1300km on the Z in 2 days this w/e, and had some time to consider gear selection for cornering.

    When riding at a decent pace on the road, do you prefer to corner in a gear giving high revs or low, and why?

    I try to go med-high, but often find myself shorting but that might be cause my current bike has a decent midrange
    Higher revs in lower gears.

    Why- because I ride over weight, underpowered shitters.

  4. #4
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    16th November 2005 - 07:48
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    With my 600 bandit I had no option but to keep the revs high. With the SV I still tend to keep my revs high, more of a riding habit than anything else, but being a V twin it has the low end if I happen to have low revs at corner time.

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

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  5. #5
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    18th February 2005 - 10:16
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    Lower gear, decent revs. Just a product of changing down before the corner and the getting correspondingy higher revs. Also allows good drive out of the corner.
    I quite often find myself changing down again half way through a corner to keep the revs up but it's never caused me any problems (it's a slow deliberate release of the clutch to re-engage drive gently)
    Grow older but never grow up

  6. #6
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    14th February 2004 - 12:00
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    Low gear mid range of revs so i can get on the throttle through the corner and not have to change up too early.
    Those who dont learn from history, are doomed to repeat it.

  7. #7
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    5th April 2006 - 23:17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Squeak the Rat View Post
    Kolmar Burton poll:

    Spent 1300km on the Z in 2 days this w/e, and had some time to consider gear selection for cornering.

    When riding at a decent pace on the road, do you prefer to corner in a gear giving high revs or low, and why?

    I try to go med-high, but often find myself shorting but that might be cause my current bike has a decent midrange
    Depends on the bike, (torque largely I suppose), corner and the conditions for me Squeak.

  8. #8
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    26th February 2005 - 15:10
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    Depends on thde bike. On a two smoker you MUST stay in the power band. whereas on something like ffwabbitt with soft long travel suspension, I need to have power on and pulling as I exit the corner to extend the forks. And a upchange is unwise, so high gear and low revs is best.
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
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    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

  9. #9
    Is there an option for the correct gear for the corner....
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  10. #10
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    10th February 2005 - 21:49
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    you're talking sh1t

    depends on corner and speed you come in and curve the corner presents, revs (and power i presume you mean) don't mean **** if the throttle is barely open...

    it's hard to run outta revs on the 10 around corners, on the 250 i have rooted my boots trying to shift with standard shift pattern, the toes ripped apart from soles :\ i shoulda run race shift pattern. often i'd run outta revs on long corners cus you need to ride it at 15-16k at max power to beat/stick with the bigger bikes.

  11. #11
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    10th June 2006 - 18:35
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    I go into the corner while the engine is spooling down from say, 10-12k's, then I can flip it back open when I exit the corner...

  12. #12
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    8th November 2004 - 11:00
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    Obviously depends on the corner, but in general - change down during approach and ensure higher revs throughout
    Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?

  13. #13
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    25th August 2006 - 11:39
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ixion View Post
    Depends on thde bike. On a two smoker you MUST stay in the power band. whereas on something like ffwabbitt with soft long travel suspension, I need to have power on and pulling as I exit the corner to extend the forks. And a upchange is unwise, so high gear and low revs is best.
    Im gonna me too Ixion cause the X11 has such fat torque that anything above 3K rpm is game on, plenty of power for the exit, and good engine braking with closed throttle on approach, usually reserve the stoppers for the really tight stuff....mind you I ride on the conservative side of balls out

  14. #14
    As Ixion says,each bike is different,and you adapt your riding style to suit.When I first got the XLV750 it had new Avon's,so pretty good I thought - but it used to step out big time on corner entry.I tend to change down a gear and lay it into a corner at the same time,but the engine braking of the V twin was breaking traction.So I changed my method on this bike - entering the corner a gear up,and changing down power on for the exit.With bikes with a powerband like 2 strokes or early Tridents you would adjust engine and road speed so you had the power come in just as you started to pick the bike up on the exit.....get it wrong and you'd still be picking the bike up....from out of the ditch.
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  15. #15
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    17th April 2006 - 10:14
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    all i can say is wat feels best for you, and wat your doing, best be in a gear that u can hold revs to keep some power to road as grip, then enough rpm range to power out without having to change gears,

    thena gain wat do i know.....
    zzzzzZZZ

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