Trail braking usually refers to using the front brakes until almost at the apex.
You climb on the brakes and once you've scrubbed enough speed instead of just releasing them (which causes the front suspension to fully rebound) you keep the front brakes on a little to keep the forks compressed. Keeping the forks compressed makes turning the bike easier and quicker. It also keeps weight on the front so you've got the grip to make the turn.
Once the bike is turned you ease off the brakes until you're at the point where you throttle on (all vehicles corner better if you settle them on the throttle). If you do it all smoothly and get the timiing right the forks won't fully rebound. Instead they'll stay partially compressed because once you start to throttle on centrifugal force compresses the forks a little.
So the wrong way is: fully compress forks (braking), fully decompress forks (off brakes), partially compress forks (on throttle)
Whereas the correct way is: fully compress forks (braking), partially compressed forks (trailing brakes), partially compressed forks (on throttle).
Please note that while that may technically be the best way it doesn't suit all riders. Some peoples style actually suits fully releasing the brakes. Do what suits you cos everybody is different.
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