On Fri, 14 Feb 2014 07:50:10 -0600, amdx wrote:
On 2/14/2014 6:59 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
OK, here's the real poop. Steering a motorcycle at more that 'parking lot' speeds is done using a
technique called counter steering. The technique is called 'counter steering' because it is
'counter' to the way we learned how to turn a tricycle. On a motorcycle, we push left to go left,
and push right to go right, as was explained in numerous videos, Wikipedia, and over a million hits
in Google if you plug in 'counter steering a motorcycle'.
Here are some nice pictures explaining the technique:
http://www.motorcycletraining.com/wo...eering-pic.jpg
http://xbhp.com/ridesafe/images/coun...ersteering.jpg
The process through a curve::
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...cornerbike.gif
To really see what counter steering is doing, use the technique *without* letting your body lean.
Just keep your upper body vertical, push the left bar, and the bike will lean left and turn
*without* a body lean. Getting good at this will let you quickly swerve to miss an obstacle in your
lane, and swerve back so you stay in your lane.
Interesting, I see it, I understand it, but I don't recall from forty
years ago when I had a dirt bike if I did that instinctively.
I sure had a lot of fun back in the gravel pits near my house!
btw, before my dirt bike, I had a 3 wheel Honda with the balloon tires.
This was early 70s, it was a trick turning that, you leaned right to
turn left. I think that's why you don't see them anymore.
Mikek
Dirt bikes are somewhat different in that you're sliding a lot. But for normal turns, the operations
are the same.
Scotty posted a picture yesterday that he called 'countersteering' in which the operator had the
handlebar cranked hard left while making some type of turn. I think the operator in that case had a
slide going on and was turning into the slide to stay upright.