the Best help i ever got in regards to a learning experience while riding can also be useful behind the wheel of an auto or truck. I’m referring to the lesson taught in a motorcycle roadracing licensing course i took at Morosso back in 1995. It was a licensing class taught by Frank Kinsey, an ex motorcycle road racer who just so happened to be the Michelin trackside vendor at Morosso motorcycle events. Frank’s class which appealed to me was titled no brake cornering. FWIW i had taken a roadracing licensing course prior at the then new Homestead race track earlier that year taught by Penguin roadracing. I wanted to obtain a roadracing license and qualified for such after taking the Penguin course yet i wanted to acquire more knowledge before buying my first roadracing license. So I enrolled in Frank’s no brake cornering course. As the name of the course implied, we were taught how to scrub off speed entering a corner w/o using the motorcycle’s brakes. This was good knowledge and made me feel comfortable in buying my first roadracing license. But back to the first licensing course Penguin taught. One of the most dynamic skills i learned from Penguin’s school at Homestead was a concept taught known as target fixation. This phenomenon was explained originally taught to world war 2 pilots. It seemed there were a number of pilots back then that were running into the plane in front of them. They were flying the new jets and their faster speed was such, so the pilots were fixated on the plane in front of them, so they ended up crashing into the backside of the plane they were following
How this bit of knowledge transferred to roadracing was such as follows- look where you want to go instead of what is happening in front of you. Take for instance, you’re riding or driving in a car on a public roadway. You approach an intersection with a traffic light and you want to turn left. As you are making your left turn, some bonehead approaching from the opposite direction runs the light. He’s about to T-bone your passenger door. What do you do to avoid this cluster f%@k? If you haven’t received the proper training, he’ll likely hit your passenger door as so happens countless times daily. Yet since you were trained how not to become target fixated, you look and drive elsewhere, precisely where that errant driver was coming from (if you’re so lucky there is no one following him), and you avoid the pending collision
Shortly after i learned t his technique i was turning left southbound at the only traffic light in Big Pine Key Fla. (yes, Jake was a big pioneer, in another life) and some fool ran the light in front of me while I was turning. Thankfully the training I learned in a roadracing school saved our lives (my wife’s Aunt was riding in my 64’ MGB at the time. I was taking her to a hair dresser appointment she had. Rather than looking at the car about to hit us, I turned my attention to where the car had been prior to running into us. There were other courses of safe escape but i focused my attention on where the car was prior to running the light
How all that applied to motorcycle roadracing, on a track there are times motorcycles in front of you go down. You dont want to focus your attention on that fallen rider. Instead, you want to look away, so as to avoid running into him/her/their crashed bike. Things happen quickly on a roadracing corse yet the same can be said about traveling on a public roadway
Anywho, that’s a my only contribution to this thread. Others may have better and different ideas
Best,
Jake
Reddick Fla.
Suicide hotline can you hold please?