Found it yet tsmj?If you haven't I can give you a soft copy.
Found it yet tsmj?If you haven't I can give you a soft copy.
Keep the guns oiled and the temple clean
Shit,snort and blaspheme
As far as gear goes, is this usually covered under contents?
grass at 50km/h is fun eh. Mine was turn 14 when I was surprised by my pegs touching down. Just fucked my line up enough I had to straighten up and go grass. Might have made it but I didn't want to risk hitting the edge of the track while still cranked over.
Target fixation and lack of trust in the bike/tyres/brakes is a bad combo. No better way to get past that than on the track where you can screw up and it's usually no biggie.
To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and to endure the betrayal of false friends. To appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition; to know that even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded
I did the exact same thing, twice.. Once I ended up in the gravel - slid to a stop in a cloud of dust.. nasty! and once WAY too quick in a 100k corner (entered 140k, out 120k). The first one was fixating and then getting a fright as you did, the second time was just not watching/thinking and way too quick.
My self-training has been ;
a. Learn to countersteer. I MUST have absolute control over my position on the road.
b. Slow Down!
c. Practice countersteering ALL the time until it's natural - even in a straight line.
d. Slow the fuck down!
e. Trust the bike and its tyres - modern bikes will scrape pegs no probs so you have a lot of lean left.
f. Approach my comfort-zone speed in corners rehearsing c. while remembering d. and e. (in that order) Stay in my half-lane - NO APEXING! DISCIPLINE! ACCURACY!
g. CAREFULLY add speed (5 clicks only) in corners that I know well, rehearsing in my mind c. before entering, and looking where I'm going.
h. Consolidate for another 1,000km's. No being a smartass.
i. Rinse and repeat from g. Don't forget h. !!
Now I'm up to weight shifting, a little apexing, and lots and lots and lots of h. and remembering to b. and d. and having a little fun ignoring b. and d. here and there - within reason.
Also I'm a newb so you should probably ignore everything I said, and listen to the experts.
DB
hey, just a question on your advice...
It seems to me that if you're into a corner, and already worried about the lean angle... how would you have time to move into a hanging off position? And, if you attempted that, wouldn't the extra movement upset the bike (suspension, throttle etc), and cause more problems than it would potentially solve, especially as you are already in a stressed state (so more likely to do things wrong, like roll off the throttle, or countersteer without realising it...)?
In MY OPINION ;
You shouldn't be there. That is a severe and very dangerous lapse.. But since we are talking hypothetically, we'll move on..
You don't have any time at all.. So you the best thing to do is just do it anyway - REAL FAST!! Just get your shoulders and head OUT THERE, PRONTO!, and push that inside bar forward, son, and do it NOW, and forget any fear that you have because at this point that fear is about to kill you. If you are really lucky you will carve a big deep arc and end back in your lane.. If you are unlucky, well, then you will be very unlucky.
Well, if they are that far up shit creek, there is no such thing as making more mistakes - they are already fried so now we try the impossible - (seemingly to them).
If the rider did not have ANY briefing whatsoever on this, then I would say they are screwed - they will simply not have the information to apply to the problem.
If the rider was not able to manipulate their emotional state as they so chose, then I would say they are also screwed since the brain loading here as you say will be extreme.
This happened to me once, and it was forget your fears and "do it or die.. do it RIGHT NOW SON, or meet your maker!" So I just did it.
Something like that anyway.
DB
Exactly, have to stay on mean or even increasing throttle or the turn radius will go massively wide. Pitty it feels likes the worst thing to do, but it really does work.
I recall my first time on the port hills, 25w headlights on the RG150 (i'd had for a week or two) following some friends who were more experienced at 10pm at night. Barely even knew about the powerband on the 2-stroke heh.
nearly came off several corners just coming in hot enough to scare myself (not very fast in hindsight) tensing up massively shutting the throttle fixating on the edge of the road which was rapidly approaching and barely making the corner on the edge of the tarmac past the outer white line.
I slowed down pretty quick and decided rather than keep up with them and bin to just stay rubberside down. I physically cannot go at any pace at night on the RG150 still, due to the lights not having enough distance or power to look through the corner at all - its all just darkness out there so you cant really direct the bike properly at speed - have to take it on tiptoes.
Always look through the corner, and use the gas to tighten the turn radius if you must. Or so I reckon. Also learn to fight off that automatic fight or flight tense reaction, it'll do you over one day.
Oh yeah, pretty obvious but never go thrashing through an area of unknown bends - gravel or just horribly sign posted decreasing radius corners can and have caught many a person out
That was very good advice! Pushing your envelope occasionally a small bit at a time is good. It will help you to manage tricky situations you may end up in from time to time with less panic and more natural reaction.
But then slow the fuck down for the majority of your riding. This way you will be riding with far more capacity in reserve.
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