I fear the day technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots! ALBERT EINSTEIN
Going to have to agree to disagree. Learning is also learning about bike setup BASICS and such skills need to be introduced as early as possible in a riders career. We are in 2008, not 1978. I think also it needs to be considered that a hell of a lot of people put a lot into this sport in NZ through sheer goodwill. In real terms it is probably a lot cheaper to race here than in other countries. In the fullness of time we shall see if this class prospers or falters.
Incidentally I was consulted on the rules and recommended standard forks and that emulators and springs were the only allowable rods for machines with damper rod forks. So its an $800 job rather than an up to $3k cartridge job. So costs being kept within a reasonable level were part of the brief.
The exact point I was trying to make. In the last few years I can't think of anyone who has made the jump into 600s from F3 and had any decent. There is a small handful of 125 riders that have. People are too quick to dismiss 125's for being "high maintenance" but none of these people have actually had any experience with them.
That Charlott chap had a go on a 125 once, and a bucket, and that whippersnapper Shirriff has been seen on a bucket as well. Not that I'm suggesting buckets are a good feeder for the "real" classes.
125's are awesome!!! the more I race them the mroe I like them!
my (biased) opinion is that 125GP would teach at least as much race craft as any other class, therefor has to be good for future pursuits right?
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Thats a very good question. If I may be permitted to be cynical I must be careful how I reply because the ''budget police'' will be analysing my every word!!!!
Its a little hard to quantify, Glen Williams has been able to punt his machine around at very high corner speeds with the chassis being very stable and not looking as if its right on the edge. Like Terry Fitz ( who also runs one ) hes not getting any younger and perhaps has an age induced sense of self preservation. Look at young Steve Wood ( have I got his name right? ) Hes prepared to hang it right on the edge with his more standard spec Ohlins rear and can periodically hang with these guys. And may I say what a talent and very polite and likable to boot. A model of attitude in that he aspires to improve and I wish him the very best re same.
It would therefore be interesting to do a subjective test with such a rider, ''standard'' spec against TTX36, ditto for cartridges. Around Manfield? Maybe a second, maybe 1.5 seconds. The sad reality is that the relativity between dollars spent and lap time reduction is a prabolic curve. No argument with that.
This just happened when Glen asked if there was a TTX36 listed for SV650 and the answer is of course no. What we do is to modify a GSXR1000 TTX36 to fit and we spent a good part of the winter series revalving and respringing to Glens satisfaction. I may add that Glen paid the standard retail price and there were no further charges for ongoing trackside development. It is evident that his feedback was excellent and he should really be collecting royalties on the subsequent ones I have built to order.
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Oops, second answer. The stuff inside the Supersport 600 bikes is very very new but the teams using them are very happy even though it is in the early stages and a ''work in progress'' Probably available later in 09, I guess.
But the current FGK stuff is working very well and I would attribute 50% of the effort in smashing lap records being that we seem to have arrived at an excellent generic spec with these cartridges. I think Bugden, Stroud, Jones, Shirriffs, Cudlin, Charlett, Smart, Williams, Sadowski x 2, Smith, Cole, Lawrence and a few others will happily testify that they are delighted with the settings and performance. The very same spec we ''exported'' to Australia, check out Sean Giles result in the first round of Aussie Superbike champs over the weekend.
I agree about the dirtbikes.
But the trackday comparison isnt really apples for apples. In general riders at a trackday are not going to hang it out right to the edge so they wont load the chassis anywhere near as much and therefore expose the deficiencies of the suspension as readily.
You know, the pursuit of cheapness has perversely affected all of our lives. I made a derisory statement in a previous post stating that its 2008 and not 1978. But there were certain advantages in 1978. Back then when you walked into a ( locally owned ) hardware store to purchase a humble plastic bucket you bought something that was suitably thick and durable. Now you buy it at a big chain store that pays its staff mediocre wages, the thing is wafer thin, floppy and made in a country that would be best left to only making rice and firecrackers. Sure its cheap but youve got to handle it with kid gloves even as you are transporting it home, and dont put anything heavy in it!
Maybe thats a poor comparison but if we keep convincing ourselves that everything must be cheap cheap and cheap then everything is going to be mediocre, aspiration will be suppressed and we wont rise above it all. Our failure at the Yachting and Rugby are ( arguably ) in part a reflection of the mediocre path this nation has been treading.
You'll have to excuse my ignorance on this topic... but is it not feasable that a class is set up where riders lease their rides, all of which are the same type of machine, suspension, brakes, wheels tyres etc? Like the Porsche Cup.
Surely a manufacturer would get behind this along with other distributors to ensure the success of the class along with the ongoing development of the machine and most importantly the racer?
Maybe this has been tried before?
Seems like the fairest way of getting a control class, I know there are always those that 'bend' the rules and manage to find loopholes, that's never going to change, and to some degree nor should it, as that can sometimes be where a lot of the development comes from!
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