Hi all,
A wet ride on the weekend had me trying to figure out the best (safest) cornering technique. I tried things like:
I was following a couple of Yamaha R1's for approx 70 kms in some tight winding road and open sweepers. Both have good tyres and are very good riders. They weren't riding hard as we were in a group, and I found the RTL VSS cutting in often, hence the experimentation. Please note: No I wasn't trying to keep up
At present the RTL has Kenda's front and an Arachnid on the rear - great tyres not I know - but a great chance to find out on poor rubber.
Your thoughts, your logic, your own testing outcomes, training undertaken would be greatly appreciated.
EDIT
To avoid the confusion seen a clarification behind the question...
Thanks for the replies.
As stated I wasn't trying to keep up but was using the opportunity to test certain scenarios. I had lunch with 3 MC highway patrolmen and 1 tintop Highway patrolman. I mentioned what the lessons from my advanced (tintop) Driver training taught me (REALLY testing ABS at least every 6 months, practicing emergency control, getting to know the capabilities of your vehicle 2 or 3 or 4 wheeled and driving with a margin for error) and was exploring what to do with the Spyder.
There were no lectures about slowing down - they saw what the aim of the question was - safer riding.
An example from the two-wheeled world you should relate to.
You are riding along a highway on a dry day - you encounter a line of water running across the road in a blind corner. A good habit is to move your deriere off the bike allowing the bike to stand more vertical - this helps the bike be more stable and more controllable (for reasons I wouldn't need to explain here). You have increased your chances of negotiating the corner safely by increasing the margin (Rider Training 101)
Comparison for the 3 wheeled world:
You are riding along highway on a dry day - you encounter a line of water running across the road in a blind corner that will see the front hoops aquaplane. You do XYZ to improve the chances of negotiating the hazard.
We spoke on the topic for about an hour and they considered methods they used to add a margin for error when riding, two offered to speak with their instructors and email me their comments. 1 of the MC HWP had actually seen the BRP Police model and likes the idea if it excluded the rubber that comes from BRP
Any input I am happy to hear your thoughts.
A wet ride on the weekend had me trying to figure out the best (safest) cornering technique. I tried things like:
- Allowing the RTL to transfer more weight on the outside wheel.
- Cornering flat and relying on the 3 points of contact having equal grip.
- Braking into the corner to place more weight on the front. (as per in a car)
- Trailing braking.
- Leaning off the bike to counterweigh the bike - this works great when I encounter rough roads at speed as it appeases the VSS from getting nervous.
I was following a couple of Yamaha R1's for approx 70 kms in some tight winding road and open sweepers. Both have good tyres and are very good riders. They weren't riding hard as we were in a group, and I found the RTL VSS cutting in often, hence the experimentation. Please note: No I wasn't trying to keep up
At present the RTL has Kenda's front and an Arachnid on the rear - great tyres not I know - but a great chance to find out on poor rubber.
Your thoughts, your logic, your own testing outcomes, training undertaken would be greatly appreciated.
EDIT
To avoid the confusion seen a clarification behind the question...
Thanks for the replies.
As stated I wasn't trying to keep up but was using the opportunity to test certain scenarios. I had lunch with 3 MC highway patrolmen and 1 tintop Highway patrolman. I mentioned what the lessons from my advanced (tintop) Driver training taught me (REALLY testing ABS at least every 6 months, practicing emergency control, getting to know the capabilities of your vehicle 2 or 3 or 4 wheeled and driving with a margin for error) and was exploring what to do with the Spyder.
There were no lectures about slowing down - they saw what the aim of the question was - safer riding.
An example from the two-wheeled world you should relate to.
You are riding along a highway on a dry day - you encounter a line of water running across the road in a blind corner. A good habit is to move your deriere off the bike allowing the bike to stand more vertical - this helps the bike be more stable and more controllable (for reasons I wouldn't need to explain here). You have increased your chances of negotiating the corner safely by increasing the margin (Rider Training 101)
Comparison for the 3 wheeled world:
You are riding along highway on a dry day - you encounter a line of water running across the road in a blind corner that will see the front hoops aquaplane. You do XYZ to improve the chances of negotiating the hazard.
We spoke on the topic for about an hour and they considered methods they used to add a margin for error when riding, two offered to speak with their instructors and email me their comments. 1 of the MC HWP had actually seen the BRP Police model and likes the idea if it excluded the rubber that comes from BRP
Any input I am happy to hear your thoughts.