Dodgy knees wrote: ↑Sat Jul 03, 2021 3:08 pm
Good thread this...
Thinking out the box, bike operation is basically the same whatever size bike. Would it be more beneficial to do 'big bike training' or part of it, on a private track, being able to explore the performance of big bike. Understanding how to get around the faster corner, greater brake power, proper acceleration.
UK training is often very different to other regimes. The one I had extensive experience of was the US 's. There, all training and testing is done off-road. There are training exceptions, but the MOST (their L test) is off road. Also, some (a few) organisations use go kart tracks for cornering skills.
The L course was 2.5 days, incredibly regimented (to time, syllabus and script) with little or no allowance for an individual's variations in speed of learning.
Content was split into key skills (starting stopping shifting turning) and advanced skills (swerving, emergency stops, etc).
'Road riding' aspects (lane changes, cornering) were all covered in off-road exercises.
As well as riding, training methods included videos, discussion and 'armchair exercises' - literally rehearsing specific aspects in the classroom. The format would be theory, then riding.
However, there's a massive problem in trying to introduce off-road training at a large scale in the uk. And that's facilities.
There are very few good off-road facilities and they are expensive, very expensive.
That said, there are some organisations that use a hybrid road / track format. Possibly Rapid for bikes, High Performance Club for cars. Even then, Rapid may be piggybacking on existing track days. i2i Academy and Hopp both do off-road too.
i2i is interesting, their off-road stuff is very different to anything else that I'm aware of.
But there's a potential hitch too with trying to arrange something hybrid. Because of the costs, you would be with an organisation that had buying clout, and you would then have to ride their preferred way. By the sounds of some comments made, they would struggle to convince people of the value.
And value is another point: what would you want to gain?
Skill? In what? Going faster on the same bit of road?
There are skills that many riders could usefully work on that can really only be done off-road: high speed braking in bends, for example. But improved skills bring the risk of riding faster because you 'know' you have those skills. But if you don't practice, they will fade, you would rely on skills that you no longer possessed.