Twin engine docking
On Thu, 31 May 2007 07:37:28 -0500, John H.
wrote:
On Thu, 31 May 2007 11:02:11 -0000, thunder wrote:
On Wed, 30 May 2007 20:29:19 -0400, Eisboch wrote:
No. On a moving motorcycle, (and I assume a bicycle, although I
haven't tried it) pushing the left handle away from you will cause the
motorcycle to turn towards the left ... same side that you are pushing.
Push on the right ... bike will turn towards the right.
I can see several people are having trouble with this. Don't feel bad.
So did I until I tried it.
It might help to explain, pushing left *initiates* a left turn. I think
everyone understands motorcycles turn by leaning, and pushing left is the
quickest way to get that left-hand lean. If you kept pushing left, you
wouldn't be turning, you would be on the ground, on the left hand side of
the motorcycle of course.
I found this one paragraph from one of your links quite clarifying.
"If we intentionally move the contact patch line from vertically beneath
the Center of Gravity, the bike will start to lean. For example, if while
riding the bike straight ahead, we press on the left bar the front wheel
points to the right. The front wheel tracks to the right (sometimes
called “out tracking”). So the weight of bike and rider is now to the
LEFT of it’s “support” on the ground, the tire contact patches. Because
the weight is to the left, the bike leans to the left. It is important to
note, for a LEFT turn, we initiate a lean to the left by pressing on the
left bar, turning the front wheel to the RIGHT. This is often referred to
as COUNTERSTEERING: a turn to the left initiated by turning the front
wheel to the right."
Yeah, countersteering. Push left - go left. Push right - go right.
Thank you.
Not the same thing. You don't puch left to go left - you push left
to maintain stability in the turn.
Not the same thing.
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