Jesus motherfucking Christ, my head asplode.
Have a read of this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moment_of_inertia, and meditate upon the examples given of divers and skaters pulling their limbs in or sticking them out to spin faster or slower.
Long story short: moving mass closer to the axis of rotation decreases the resistance of an object to a change in its rate of rotation.
So, when a bike tips over to go around a corner, if your body is up in the air, there's a bunch of mass that's further away from the axis of rotation, and the bike will tip in slower.
If your body's lying down over the tank, its mass is closer to the axis of rotation, and the bike will tip in faster.
Standing up on the pegs therefore decreases maneuverability, in the sense that the bike will respond more slowly to steering inputs. Of course, sometimes that's a good thing.
The same effect is noticeable when you balance a pole with a weight on one end in your hand. If the weight is up at the top, the pole will tip over more slowly. If the weight is at the bottom, in your hand, right on the axis of rotation when it tips, the pole will tip over more quickly.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
I think I will now go back to being depressed at the fact that the Average Motorcyclist (tm) was obviously doing something other than paying attention to their physics teacher in high school.
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kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
Good, now bend over... yeah but nah, I was confused by the wording at first, but appreciate how having more weight on the pegs makes sense sometimes. When I say 'standing up', a fly would have trouble fitting between my arse and the seat, but I had moved more weight down lower. And on further reflection, on the flat sandy bits I was definitely sitting.
I saw the mountain bikers on tv last night racing and crashing down Coronet peak, and couldn't help thinking how exposed their legs were, and what pussies they were only having to pick up a mountain bike, not a 400kg motorbike with a full tank of petrol.
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Back on a 250 and riding more than ever.
Ah um hmm, no; if you lifted your arse and torso, you moved weight higher, not lower.
I don't understand why people have difficulty grasping that the essential point is where the mass of the bike-rider system sits in space, not whether the rider is touching the bike via the seat or via the pegs.
The advantage of putting your weight on the pegs is that it allows you to use your knees as suspension, and move your body mass around with far more agility than when your bum is plopped on the seat.
But the bike-rider system's center of mass and moment of inertia depend entirely upon where in space the mass is.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
I very much doubt that your R80 weighs anything near 400kg. 300, maybe, but probably more like 250 fully wet.
Edit: bikez.com is occasionally unreliable, but says that it's 207kg wet.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
Acch , zer Herrenraden iz built for ze master race , und must be ver stronk. I'm quite sure my BMW weighs at least 500kg once I'm on it. The R80 was the lightweight model, so 400 sounds about right.
An interesting memory is that back in the day, some Briddish iron used to have the pillion pegs mounted directly on the swingarm. So, if you stood on THOSE. you transferred all your weight from sprung to unsprung weight. A useful trick in heavy going.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Really! How interesting. I learn something every day.
I did write a short paragraph at one point in my earlier ramblings in this thread, making an exception to the 'where you rest your weight' for the obvious case of putting it on the unsprung portion of the bike's chassis (I had a mental image of a rod freely rotating within a hollow rear axle and protruding from each side) but then deleted it before posting.
It seemed a safe assumption that what I'd already posted was probably quite unclear enough without further muddying of the waters via purely hypothetical exceptions.
Which now turn out to have been not so hypothetical after all.
Which bikes had their pillion pegs on the swingarm?
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
Tis a long traverse through the murky mists of time, but one I remember was the 3TA 5TA series. It wasn't uncommon. Mr Motu may remember others.
EDIT: prompted by a nagging niggle, I just walked outside and took a look at my T500 Titan. Guess where the pillion pegs are located. Duh.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
My first new bike, the first Yamaha XT500, (1977 ?) had pegs on the swingarm. I think my DT360 did too.
Mind you, I did not stand on them !
I definitely have better control of my bikes, while seated.
I guess it's a personal thing.
It was pretty freaky being a pillion with swingarm mounted pegs - specially mid corner corugations.The pillion could also weight the pegs to good effect....but you needed to be ''in tune'' with the rider to pull that off without getting an elbow in the ribs.
What seems to be missed in this dribble about standing on pegs and CoG,is the effect of the weight through the pegs - stand on the pegs,then put full weight on each peg in turn.This is how you control a bike standing on the pegs - it's about balance ,not CoG.Weight distribution...and how you control it.
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