Most people who ride off road at any speed can save a front end slide, you wouldn't save one if you were riding at 100% though, that's were people like Marquez are better than the rest.Yorick wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 1:14 pmMost decent racers can save a rear slide.Couchy wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 1:07 pmOn tarmac I've probably had 2 front end slides, both on track and both ended up as crashes. I've had a fair few rear wheel slides under power but they don't really register. If you're getting front end slides and not crashing or going fast maybe they aren't slides ?Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Tue Aug 03, 2021 10:15 pm I'm happy with the tyres sliding on dirt, happy with the rear moving a bit on tarmac, I don't like front wheel slides on tarmac, I find them a bit unnerving, thing is though I don't think I'm going that quick when I get slides.
Only folk like MM can save a front slide.
What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
no particular credit here Just straight line Empty motorway zx12r "unrestricted" well off the clock and wouldnt go any faster (Millau BRIDGE NEW MOTORWAY AT THE TIME) Had to stop in Le Mans for a new rear tyre afterwards too. had to put a 190 on it instead of a 200.
Just before ....
Just before ....
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Ah, that must have been Ruben Xaus at the Hypermotard launch I'm guessing?
Not bad - better than this old has-never-was-been's effort
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
This one is so old it was taken with a camera that saved the picture to floppy disk...
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
TBF you look like you could probably get your knee down with the bike on a paddock stand
Still better than I can manage though.
Still better than I can manage though.
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
I used to be able to get my knee down in 10ft circles in McD's carpark on my FZR400
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
LOL the bike is nowhere near the edge of the tyresKungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 3:53 pm This one is so old it was taken with a camera that saved the picture to floppy disk...
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Pah, that's me saving a front end slide with my knee!Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 4:03 pmLOL the bike is nowhere near the edge of the tyresKungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 3:53 pm This one is so old it was taken with a camera that saved the picture to floppy disk...
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Looking at you on the R6, you could probably get your knee down in a straight line on an FZR400, the seat height is very low, I've raised the seat on mine by 20mm and it's still low.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 4:03 pm I used to be able to get my knee down in 10ft circles in McD's carpark on my FZR400
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
It's even harder than that.....there've been all kinds of studies across all kind of "fast reaction" fields. Basically lot of these things are literally too fast for a human to react to. The classic example is a tennis serve, top players serve so fast that the ball gets from their racquet to past you faster than it's humanly possible to react. Doesn't matter how good you are, human anatomy simply ain't good enough for your eyes to see, pass it to your brain etc. in time for you to return it.
So how the fuck does anyone do it?
They anticipate. You have to be good enough that you can tell which way the ball is going to go just from seeing what the other player does. All of that is subconscious. It's the same with anything like that - tennis serves, front/rear slides, penalty shoot outs etc. You have to recognise the signs before it's even happened. Top racing pros are super human
So how the fuck does anyone do it?
They anticipate. You have to be good enough that you can tell which way the ball is going to go just from seeing what the other player does. All of that is subconscious. It's the same with anything like that - tennis serves, front/rear slides, penalty shoot outs etc. You have to recognise the signs before it's even happened. Top racing pros are super human
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Any front end slides I've had have been unexpected, and how I've saved them I couldn't tell you, I just reacted to it.
I remember the first time I rode on a proper MX track, I kept losing the front end and falling off, usually on the same corners, a mate advised me to practice on the much smaller flatter practice track at the same site until I could ride round without falling off and at a reasonable pace, don't know what I learned, but when I went back to the big track I no longer kept falling off through losing the front end, I found other ways to fall off at higher speeds, eventually I stopped falling off and got faster, I wasn't a quick learner.
I remember the first time I rode on a proper MX track, I kept losing the front end and falling off, usually on the same corners, a mate advised me to practice on the much smaller flatter practice track at the same site until I could ride round without falling off and at a reasonable pace, don't know what I learned, but when I went back to the big track I no longer kept falling off through losing the front end, I found other ways to fall off at higher speeds, eventually I stopped falling off and got faster, I wasn't a quick learner.
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Isn't that the whole point of 'knee down' though?Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 4:03 pmLOL the bike is nowhere near the edge of the tyresKungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 3:53 pm This one is so old it was taken with a camera that saved the picture to floppy disk...
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Losing the front end on dirt and tarmac is totally different.
I can drift the Husky at leisure.
Big no no on the Suzuki.
I can drift the Husky at leisure.
Big no no on the Suzuki.
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
That's the one! Thanks
Even bland can be a type of character
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
Does this include ones I've thrown into hedges?.. or would that fall under "limits of your talent"?
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
I won’t share the photo of me knee down giving the photographer the bird but it isn’t hard you’d easily do it
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
A fizzy in Spain when I was 18. To its limits and beyond. The fizzy ended with no pedals and I still have the gravel rash scars.
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
The beauty of motorcycles compared to virtually any other mode of transport is that the rider does not merely control the device, they are part of a complex bike-rider system. I have taken virtually every single machine I have ever owned to the red line in top wide open throttle. I will typically do that on day one.
Is that “the limit of its performance” (sic.). No. That’s just flat out. Any one of the thousands of professional racers could “get more out of it” than either I am able or willing to do. If you want to see what it is they do, try throwing your bike into Paddock Hill bend a gear higher than you like and brake 5 metres later than you dare. You’ll need to go in a LOT earlier than usual, like about 10 metres. You’ll have to bank on drifting out towards the apex because you’re aiming to hit the curb on the inside already.
Having successfully drifted the bike and hit the apex to perfection, you are now still drifting wide waiting to slide onto the curb to find that particular patch where you can start winding the throttle on. Six inches too hot and you’ll be spinning up on dirt shortly before entertaining the audience with a cartwheeling machine. You’ve just found the limit. Now do it again, and again. Six inches is no exaggeration, top riders aim for a patch of track the size of their tyre footprint (at the limit…)
I know where the limit is ( in theory!) and I am happy to keep a good 10% away from it. Give myself some wiggle room. If I am ever able to reach the theoretical maximum “limit” of my own bike-rider combination, there is still a group of my peers who will find an extra 1/10th on the same bike in the same circumstance. I don’t know how they do it and my skills aren’t even in the same ballpark as the BSB/MotoGP guys “it’s ain’t even the same sport” (Pulp Fiction). Those guys might just as well be from another planet as us mere Earthlings. They aren’t called aliens for nothing.
Is that “the limit of its performance” (sic.). No. That’s just flat out. Any one of the thousands of professional racers could “get more out of it” than either I am able or willing to do. If you want to see what it is they do, try throwing your bike into Paddock Hill bend a gear higher than you like and brake 5 metres later than you dare. You’ll need to go in a LOT earlier than usual, like about 10 metres. You’ll have to bank on drifting out towards the apex because you’re aiming to hit the curb on the inside already.
Having successfully drifted the bike and hit the apex to perfection, you are now still drifting wide waiting to slide onto the curb to find that particular patch where you can start winding the throttle on. Six inches too hot and you’ll be spinning up on dirt shortly before entertaining the audience with a cartwheeling machine. You’ve just found the limit. Now do it again, and again. Six inches is no exaggeration, top riders aim for a patch of track the size of their tyre footprint (at the limit…)
I know where the limit is ( in theory!) and I am happy to keep a good 10% away from it. Give myself some wiggle room. If I am ever able to reach the theoretical maximum “limit” of my own bike-rider combination, there is still a group of my peers who will find an extra 1/10th on the same bike in the same circumstance. I don’t know how they do it and my skills aren’t even in the same ballpark as the BSB/MotoGP guys “it’s ain’t even the same sport” (Pulp Fiction). Those guys might just as well be from another planet as us mere Earthlings. They aren’t called aliens for nothing.
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
When you think you're 10% and realise you're not even remotely close.
Canepa, he's no alien. But watching this video destroying a fast group, well, it's just daft
Canepa, he's no alien. But watching this video destroying a fast group, well, it's just daft
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Re: What bike have you ridden to the limit of it's performance?
10% my arse. You wouldn't get within 10% of a decent club racer.Screwdriver wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 8:28 pm The beauty of motorcycles compared to virtually any other mode of transport is that the rider does not merely control the device, they are part of a complex bike-rider system. I have taken virtually every single machine I have ever owned to the red line in top wide open throttle. I will typically do that on day one.
Is that “the limit of its performance” (sic.). No. That’s just flat out. Any one of the thousands of professional racers could “get more out of it” than either I am able or willing to do. If you want to see what it is they do, try throwing your bike into Paddock Hill bend a gear higher than you like and brake 5 metres later than you dare. You’ll need to go in a LOT earlier than usual, like about 10 metres. You’ll have to bank on drifting out towards the apex because you’re aiming to hit the curb on the inside already.
Having successfully drifted the bike and hit the apex to perfection, you are now still drifting wide waiting to slide onto the curb to find that particular patch where you can start winding the throttle on. Six inches too hot and you’ll be spinning up on dirt shortly before entertaining the audience with a cartwheeling machine. You’ve just found the limit. Now do it again, and again. Six inches is no exaggeration, top riders aim for a patch of track the size of their tyre footprint (at the limit…)
I know where the limit is ( in theory!) and I am happy to keep a good 10% away from it. Give myself some wiggle room. If I am ever able to reach the theoretical maximum “limit” of my own bike-rider combination, there is still a group of my peers who will find an extra 1/10th on the same bike in the same circumstance. I don’t know how they do it and my skills aren’t even in the same ballpark as the BSB/MotoGP guys “it’s ain’t even the same sport” (Pulp Fiction). Those guys might just as well be from another planet as us mere Earthlings. They aren’t called aliens for nothing.