So I wasn't imagining not hearing about it and no I know the reasonsHorse wrote: ↑Wed Dec 01, 2021 8:56 amYour timescale is good for this.Couchy wrote: ↑Wed Dec 01, 2021 8:03 am What I’ve always found odd is these days is instructors are obsessed with counter steering so much so it’s like you can’t learn without knowing about it.Yes we all do it as physics dictates it’s needed but I’d never heard it mentioned until some time in the early 2000’s, by then I’d been riding nearly 25 years Road, off-road and track. I still never deliberately do it turning into corners but I do use it to sit the bike up on corner exit on track, not really a technique needed on the road though as you shouldn’t be on the gas that hard
Historically, almost all rider training in the UK has been based on police techniques and ex-police riders had the influence, whether L or advanced.
The old format police manual (superseded in 1996) didn't mention it at all. DSA as was didn't agree with it even being mentioned.
All that had to change in 2010 when the Mod 1 test, with the 'swerve' exercise, was introduced.
From my perspective, I want people to:
- be aware of it (many were not when I was more active in training up, to 2008). Many of those were car drivers, for them it was totally counter intuitive.
- know a simple method: press left, go left; press harder steer quicker; press more lean more; release the pressure when you have enough lean.
- be consistent. For those non-intuitive riders, if they're not then they won't use it when they need to (swerving, changing line in a bend, etc.).
FWIW the UK's omission of steering is unusual. At an event I attended there were demos by French, Dutch, US and German (or Austrian) instructors of their own steering training. That was in 1995.
Re MTB. We had a back to biking trainee, years ago, who came back after specifically to tell us how it had improved his cycling. IIRC he did some sort of downhill racing.
My point being though it's quite possible to ride a bike fairly well having never heard of the technique, tbh I never had any instruction but still managed to get on a race podium and gain a national licence. Some instructors seem to think it's the holy grail of motorbike riding and you can't possibly ride one without it, I'm not referring to any of the instructors here and we've had this discussion before that a lot in your profession do put folk off with their attitude and techniques for instructing and looking at your post above the timescales fits well with my view (rightly or wrongly) of how instructors work. I guess it's also the view of a lot of folk my age who heard or experienced the earlier way of instructing which is why we shy away now.