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Thread: North Auckland Street Skills - NASS

  1. #5071
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    Quote Originally Posted by rickstv View Post
    OK, listen up people. It would be wise to avoid OLD North Rd. there is new seal laid today between the one way bridge and just before the bottom of the nice S bends that wind up to Peak Rd intersection.

    AND there is pea gravel all the way up the S bends hill almost to Peak Rd.

    I don't think this would be a good time to test the newbies on gravel.

    Rick.
    Been waiting for that to be resealed!
    Rest in peace Tony - you will be missed.

  2. #5072
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    Hey guys special guest appearance tonight. me. 6.30 at westgagate shell? black yammy 250.

  3. #5073
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    Quote Originally Posted by JustNick View Post
    Hey guys special guest appearance tonight. me. 6.30 at westgagate shell? black yammy 250.
    Yep that's the one mate. Good to have Taupoian with us!
    Rest in peace Tony - you will be missed.

  4. #5074
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    Quote Originally Posted by JustNick View Post
    Hey guys special guest appearance tonight. me. 6.30 at westgagate shell? black yammy 250.
    Good to meet ya Nick. Hope you had a good ride.
    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    but once again you proved me wrong.
    Quote Originally Posted by cassina View Post
    I was hit by one such driver while remaining in the view of their mirror.

  5. #5075
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    Quote Originally Posted by nzspokes View Post
    Good to meet ya Nick. Hope you had a good ride.
    cheers mate and you too. It was good to see the extremely custom cibby in the flesh. and thanks for the warm welcome tonight guys it was fun.

  6. #5076
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    Quote Originally Posted by JustNick View Post
    cheers mate and you too. It was good to see the extremely custom cibby in the flesh. and thanks for the warm welcome tonight guys it was fun.
    Was a nice wee pootle.

    Sorry for holding you up guys on the longer ride.
    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    but once again you proved me wrong.
    Quote Originally Posted by cassina View Post
    I was hit by one such driver while remaining in the view of their mirror.

  7. #5077
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    Hey fellow NASSians.

    Since it's the New Year I thought that we could take a more structured approach to our weekly sessions, so that we can plan out a course that enables us to work on our base range of skills and improve on harder areas as we progress through the year.

    We would incorporate our lessons with theory which would be printed off each week that would go alongside our lessons and you can keep as a reference to each lesson.

    A brief idea that I wrote up earlier goes like this.


    Week 1: Emergency Braking (theory - Braking)

    Week 2: Stop and Go, Gymkhana

    Week 3: Slow speed control (Theory - Throttle, clutch, brake control.)

    Week4: Slow and Fast Gymkhana with Emergency Braking.

    Week 5 : Weight Balance - Cornering and steering whilst the weight balance on the bike is upset, Ie.. standing on one side of the bike etc...

    Week 6: Braking in corners to a stop

    Week 7: Controlling rear wheel skids

    Week 8: G's square, Full lock turns.

    Week 9: Slow speed control.

    Week 10: Lines

    Week 11: Bike maintenance night

    Week 12: Group Ride

    Week 13: Line and Bike control - Tight line with balls with a curve in it, keep inside the line whilst looking up.

    Week 14: Using peripheral vision - Course 13 ^ and have 3 people standing around with numbers that whilst doing the course they have to look around and memorise the numbers.

    Week 15: Changing your line - Weighting pegs and trailing brake to tighten the line.

    Week 16: Emergency braking, Stop and go, Gymkhana.

    Week 17: Decreasing radius practice

    Week 18: Braking in corners, Lines.

    Week 19: How you sit on your bike - touch points, relaxed position?

    What are your guys ideas and how do you feel about that approach to NASS, we can also incorporate lessons that you all feel you need to work on or would like to learn so that we are keeping everybody happy.

    Ideas please.

    Regards,

    Matt
    Rest in peace Tony - you will be missed.

  8. #5078
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    You have forgotten....

    Burnouts -Standing still and rolling
    Stoppies
    Wheelies
    & how to do mean drifts and skids that impress the ladies!


  9. #5079
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant` View Post
    You have forgotten....

    Burnouts -Standing still and rolling
    Stoppies
    Wheelies
    & how to do mean drifts and skids that impress the ladies!

    Oh I thought I had forgotten something!
    Rest in peace Tony - you will be missed.

  10. #5080
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    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 13: Line and Bike control - Tight line with balls with a curve in it, keep inside the line whilst looking up.
    I had to read this twice.........thought you just wanted to get your gear out
    "All people have the right to stupidity but some abuse the privilege."

    "Loooordi Looooordi Loooooordi......another round of L's Angel's naughty corner"

  11. #5081
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    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Since it's the New Year I thought that we could take a more structured approach to our weekly sessions, so that we can plan out a course that enables us to work on our base range of skills and improve on harder areas as we progress through the year.
    It sounds good. We have started on slow riding, so I'd like to spend the next two weeks finishing that off if we can. We did straight lines last week. Next week I'd like to move onto a Gymkhana, and the week after that the Police style motorcycle riders test, which is an ultra hard Gymkhana

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    We would incorporate our lessons with theory which would be printed off each week that would go alongside our lessons and you can keep as a reference to each lesson.
    I'm not sure you'll going to get people dedicated enough to print out some theory material to study in advance ...

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 1: Emergency Braking (theory - Braking)
    Make that theory and practical on the night.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 2: Stop and Go, Gymkhana

    Week 3: Slow speed control (Theory - Throttle, clutch, brake control.)
    You need to do slow speed control before you can do the Gymkhana.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week4: Slow and Fast Gymkhana with Emergency Braking.
    Since emergency braking has been done once, it might be an idea to change it to brake and escape. Remember we only have a car park available to us as well ...

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 5 : Weight Balance - Cornering and steering whilst the weight balance on the bike is upset, Ie.. standing on one side of the bike etc...
    I'm not sure I get this one. So weighting one peg, and practice cornering either way while doing that?
    Weighting the inside peg, leaning the bike into a corner, and leaning the other way at low speed is the skill for ultra tight low speed turning. I'm not sure we can do any other skills apart from this in a car park. Anything else involving peg weighting I can think of is done at pace.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 6: Braking in corners to a stop
    I have no idea how to teach that. I would have told you not to do it ... don't brake mid corner from road pace in a corner to a halt. Normally if your in a corner and you see a problem you have to avoid the object, not try and stop short of it.


    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 7: Controlling rear wheel skids
    That is probably quite a bit above the level of NASS (meant for beginners).

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 8: G's square, Full lock turns.
    This is good to do around the Gymkhana training sessions as it is highly related.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 9: Slow speed control.

    Week 10: Lines
    Sounds great.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 11: Bike maintenance night
    I can show simple chain lubing and brake bleeding (only need a small amount of stuff that I can carry in my jacket). We can talk about chain tension, tyre pressures, and checking fluids.
    But this would only take 10 mins. Anything else you can think off that can be done easily in a car park?

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 12: Group Ride
    We do a group ride every week. Do you mean a longer ride?

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 13: Line and Bike control - Tight line with balls with a curve in it, keep inside the line whilst looking up.
    We tried that before and it didn't work so well. It seems to work better using just two balls. One to be on the outside of before starting the turn, and one to be on the inside of at the "apex".

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 14: Using peripheral vision - Course 13 ^ and have 3 people standing around with numbers that whilst doing the course they have to look around and memorise the numbers.

    Week 15: Changing your line - Weighting pegs and trailing brake to tighten the line.
    That is quite advanced. Not sure it is NASS level. I'm not confident that routine use of trail braking for road use is the way to go either. It's more of a get out of jail card when you are too hot in a corner.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 16: Emergency braking, Stop and go, Gymkhana.

    Week 17: Decreasing radius practice
    Sounds good.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 18: Braking in corners, Lines.
    Same comment as above.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    Week 19: How you sit on your bike - touch points, relaxed position?
    This is quite advanced as well. I would personally like to do it if Greg is available for my own interest. My personal thoughts are you need to have quite a few other skills "down pat" before being concerned with touch points.

  12. #5082
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    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    It sounds good. We have started on slow riding, so I'd like to spend the next two weeks finishing that off if we can. We did straight lines last week. Next week I'd like to move onto a Gymkhana, and the week after that the Police style motorcycle riders test, which is an ultra hard Gymkhana
    Yea that sounds good too, wouldn't want this to come in till it is all sorted.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    I'm not sure you'll going to get people dedicated enough to print out some theory material to study in advance ...
    I can print them off at work, say ten copies or so and people can just share them around etc...





    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    Since emergency braking has been done once, it might be an idea to change it to brake and escape. Remember we only have a car park available to us as well ...
    It would be part of the gymkhana course, so at the end of the course have an emergency braking, or brake and escape type thing.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    I'm not sure I get this one. So weighting one peg, and practice cornering either way while doing that?
    Weighting the inside peg, leaning the bike into a corner, and leaning the other way at low speed is the skill for ultra tight low speed turning. I'm not sure we can do any other skills apart from this in a car park. Anything else involving peg weighting I can think of is done at pace.
    Yea so what Mark W had me doing one time is standing on both LH side pegs and doing an offset course going down the car park, then on RH side, pillion pegs etc. Just helps you to master the bike in odd circumstances and seeing how it feels when it is not settled and stable.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    I have no idea how to teach that. I would have told you not to do it ... don't brake mid corner from road pace in a corner to a halt. Normally if your in a corner and you see a problem you have to avoid the object, not try and stop short of it.
    Greg has agreed to help out on these ones, it was an idea that Mark W said when I asked what harder stuff could I use to improve my riding, so I would use it in the sense of you go around a corner and there is a pile up of cars leaving no escape route except into a bank or what not. It is preferable to ride around the object but I have friends that have been in the situation as mentioned above and if they had those skills there is a higher possibility they wouldn't have crashed.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    That is probably quite a bit above the level of NASS (meant for beginners).
    We could do it for the more experienced riders in the group where they could go off to the higher car park and practice. I was also thinking of doing split groups with one being for beginners and then one being advanced.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    This is good to do around the Gymkhana training sessions as it is highly related.
    Yea that could definitely be incorporated.




    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    I can show simple chain lubing and brake bleeding (only need a small amount of stuff that I can carry in my jacket). We can talk about chain tension, tyre pressures, and checking fluids.
    But this would only take 10 mins. Anything else you can think off that can be done easily in a car park?
    We could do things like they check for in scrutineering at track days, I.e. Smooth throttle cables, tightening brake and clutch levers and adjusting levers into a comfortable position, learn what to check over on your bike and what to keep lubricated and clean. Maybe if everyone has a request for something they want to learn that we are able to achieve in a carpark then we could go off that.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    We do a group ride every week. Do you mean a longer ride?
    Yea it would be a long ride and what I was thinking is doing a line formation and following the lead riders lines so as to get the best lines for corners.
    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    We tried that before and it didn't work so well. It seems to work better using just two balls. One to be on the outside of before starting the turn, and one to be on the inside of at the "apex".
    What didn't work so well about it? We have to do it for BSHT(Bullshit handling test) but just longer with a very slight curve. we could possibly try both.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    That is quite advanced. Not sure it is NASS level. I'm not confident that routine use of trail braking for road use is the way to go either. It's more of a get out of jail card when you are too hot in a corner.
    It can help to settle the bike down in a corner even at normal speeds, but yes, it is also used as an aid for being to hot in a corner. But say there is something that makes you need to change your line, then you have the ability to do so, and safely and camly, and if you do enter into a corner too hot then you also have that skill instead of grabbing the front hard and flying off. They are all essential safety skills that whilst not occurring every day, can be of some use, just like emergency braking.



    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    This is quite advanced as well. I would personally like to do it if Greg is available for my own interest. My personal thoughts are you need to have quite a few other skills "down pat" before being concerned with touch points.
    I wouldn't have thought it too advanced, it is taught in group 1 at the ART days and is relatively easy go comprehend and once learnt, makes cornering a whole lot safer and understandable, I have applied it into my own riding and have become a lot better because of it.

    They are good questions and thank you for asking them, thinking about it more I think it would be good to have 2 groups, so that people that are competent with the basic saftey skills can then go on to upskill themselves even more. Greg has said that he will help to produce a course and with training etc.. so I think it is a viable option.

    Does anybody else have any issues or comments on the above ideas?
    Rest in peace Tony - you will be missed.

  13. #5083
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    Rear Wheel Skid Training

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...&v=M2keWo5R6_Q

    Here is a video of what it includes and the speed differences they practice from.
    Rest in peace Tony - you will be missed.

  14. #5084
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    Quote Originally Posted by The Singing Chef View Post
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...&v=M2keWo5R6_Q

    Here is a video of what it includes and the speed differences they practice from.
    I see. Simple straight line rear wheel skid control. There isn't much involved in this. It doesn't start getting tricky until you are leaned over a bit or not travelling in a straight line. I must get myself some off road experience to learn that art ...

    It can be easily done with emergency braking (and we can probably deal with it there, rather than having a whole session on it) when it is common (you commonly get rear wheel skids with emergency braking since the rear tyre has diminishing traction as the front wheel loads up). A lot of people end up doing it when they practise emergency braking and come to realise it is nothing to worry about.

  15. #5085
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    So how about we do weeks "2" and "4" over the next two weeks?

    Week 2: Stop and Go, Gymkhana
    Week4: Slow and Fast Gymkhana with Emergency Braking

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