I would class any sort of skill in operating a motorcycle as advanced. We are always learning, to think we have mastered something is to let our guard down. That is when the shit hits the fan.
To think I can take this corner, cos I am experienced and have mastered cornering is when you go wide and hit a catseye![]()
Well hitting the catseye is always going to be dangeous, hitting anything witha bike is dangerous.
Why are we not concentrating on the message of not running wide on corners. Mistakes are made, lets look back upon this incident and figure out where along the chain the mistake was made leading to running wide. I think it is when DB got on the bike and turned it on. haha I is just messin with ya DB, glad you are ok.
The more you write the harder I laugh at your ignorance...
& yes there is FAAAARRRR more to riding than that VERY basic description I gave..
I suggest you do some research & find out just what is involved in getting an "I endorsement" from NZTA.. coz you're blowing out your arse.. again...![]()
GET ON
SIT DOWN
SHUT UP
HANG ON
Lots of multiple-choice tests, I expect. Maybe an essay question or two?
Feel free to enlighten us; failing to refute my points with actual information about what your 'I' endorsement involves will result in people assuming that I'm right about its lack of substance, y'know.
And I don't think you want people to assume that I'm right about its lack of substance, do you?
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
Lets put this in perspective.
I have noticed particularly in summer that as the roads heat up, large vehicles can and do shift the catseyes so they are no longer on the centreline.
I have come across this a lot and if they aren't sorted out they are left for sometimes years.
It just so happens that they move to where the best apex line is and if you are moving fast and leaned right over they do give your tyres a good whack and if the front wheel contacts them leaned over you will alter your line by as much as several hundred millimetres.
I've had my front wheel pop off one which was right on my apex line and well away from the centreline and it threw my front quite a distance left.
I now have a healthy respect for those little shiny things especially when they have been moved offline.
Catsyes are best avoided when leaned over.
If the destination is more important than the journey you aint a biker.
Sci-Fi and Non-Fiction Author
http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/pcfris
Ah, so it is mostly multiple choice questions, eh?
My point remains; getting an 'I' endorsement does not require an above-average level of actual motorcycle control ability.
And, as we all know, 'average' is pretty poor around these parts, unfortunately.
If I'm wrong, feel free to describe what you did have to prove to get that 'I' endorsement.
(Aside from getting all those multiple-choice questions right.)
Hinting that I'm wrong about your mediocre motorcycle control skills without actually saying how or why... doesn't really do much to make up for you proudly pointing me to a website that lists hill starts and countersteering as 'advanced' topics, y'know.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
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