Yep, often done once you know what you are doing. It's called trail braking and depending on the type of bike you have, either front or rear or both is fine IF you know the traction limits of your bike and tyres.
For me, I rarely use the rear brake on my bike as it's heavy and thows a lot of it's weight to the front tyre. This allows me to brake very late into corners which the 1400 is excellent for.
The same rule applies to every bike though. In a straight line you have 0 lean and can brake 100%. BUT braking into a corner you MUST trade off braking power for grip..... trail braking.
e.g You enter a corner and are at 40% lean then you cannot use more than a maximum of 60% brake under ideal conditions or it's over.
If you are at 90% lean you only have 10% braking power available.
You must constantly be aware of the grip levels available under braking and vice versa and this comes with experience and knowing your bike and tyre combination.
The same appplies to acceleration when cornering. At 60% lean through a corner, you can only use a maxiumum of 40% throttle or again you overcome the grip levels of the bike. Once you come out of the corner say at 10% lean you can apply 90% throttle etc. Once you are fully upright you have 100% throttle available without upsetting the physics.
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