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KC February 12th 14 10:41 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/2014 5:14 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn. So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?


Just so you don't think I'm lying to you:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Countersteering

Countersteering is the technique used by single-track vehicle operators, such as cyclists and
motorcyclists, to initiate a turn toward a given direction by momentarily steering counter to the
desired direction ("steer left to turn right"). A more accurate term is deliberate countersteering
when employed by a rider, though it is often shortened to just countersteering. To negotiate a turn
successfully, the combined center of mass of the rider and the single-track vehicle must first be
leaned in the direction of the turn, and steering briefly in the opposite direction causes that
lean.[1] This technique does not apply to conventional multiple-tracked vehicles such as trikes or
sidecar-equipped bicycles and motorcycles.

How it works[edit]

A single-track vehicle such as a bicycle or a motorcycle is an inverted pendulum—it will fall over
unless balanced.
The technique used by cyclists and motorcyclists to initiate turning in a given direction is to
first apply a steering torque in the opposite direction. For example, if a turn to the left is
desired, it is started by applying a torque on the handlebars to the right. This causes the front
wheel to rotate about the steering axis to the right and the front tire will generate forces in the
contact patch to the right. The machine as a whole steers to the right briefly, and because the
forces in the contact patch are at ground level, this pulls the wheels "out from under" the bike to
the right and causes it to lean to the left. Then the rider, or in most cases, the inherent
stability of the bike provides the steering torque necessary to rotate the front wheel back to the
left and in the direction of the desired turn. Finally, the bike begins a turn to the left.[11] It
is often boiled down to "push left to go left".
While this appears to be a complex sequence of motions, it is performed by every child who rides a
bicycle. The entire sequence goes largely unnoticed by most riders, which is why some assert that
they do not do it.
It is often claimed that two-wheeled vehicles can be steered using only weight shifts. While this is
true for small "trim" inputs to direction, complex maneuvers are not possible using weightshifting
alone because even for a light machine there is insufficient control authority.[12] Although on a
sufficiently light bike (especially a bicycle), the rider can initiate a lean and turn by shifting
body weight,[6] there is no evidence that complex maneuvers can be performed by bodyweight alone.[9]
It is also important to distinguish the steering torque necessary to initiate the lean required for
a given turn from the sustained steering torque and steering angle necessary to maintain a constant
radius and lean angle until it is time to exit the turn. The initial steer torque and angle are both
opposite the desired turn direction. The sustained steer angle is in the same direction as the turn.
The sustained steer torque required to maintain that steer angle is either with or opposite the turn
direction depending on forward speed, bike geometry, and combined bike and rider mass distribution.
Deliberate countersteering is necessary to adjust the angle of lean of a bike and works in the
opposite sense to the handlebar input while conventional steering in the direction of the turn is
used to negotiate the turn.
Need to lean to turn[edit]
A bike can negotiate a curve only when the combined center of mass of bike and rider leans toward
the inside of the turn at an angle appropriate for the velocity and the radius of the turn:
\theta =\arctan \left({\frac {v^{2}}{gr}}\right)
where v is the forward speed, r is the radius of the turn and g is the acceleration of gravity.[6]
Higher speeds and tighter turns require greater lean angles. If the mass is not first leaned into
the turn, the inertia of the rider and bike will cause them to continue in a straight line as the
tires track out from under them along the curve. The transition of riding in a straight line to
negotiating a turn is a process of leaning the bike into the turn, and the most practical way to
cause that lean (of the combined center of mass of bike and rider) is to move the support points in
the opposite direction first.[13] The rider can shift his weight of course, but any force used to
move one way laterally pushes the bike laterally the opposite direction with equal force. That makes
the bike lean (and can affect the steering), but it does not change the combined center of mass of
bike and rider.
Lean by countersteering[edit]
When riding a bicycle or a motorcycle, deliberate countersteering is a method of initiating a turn
by a small, momentary turn of the front wheel, usually via the handlebars, in the opposite (counter)
direction. This moves the pivot point (the wheels' contact patches) out from under the center of
mass to establish the lean angle for a turn. While exploitable at all speeds, the need to
deliberately countersteer becomes more noticeable as speed increases.
Hence, to turn to the right, the rider first throws the bike off balance by momentarily pointing the
front wheel slightly to the left. The center of mass of the bike plus rider will continue in a
straight line, but the contact patches of the tires move to the left with respect to this straight
line.
Once lean is achieved[edit]
As the desired angle is approached, the front wheel must usually be steered into the turn to
maintain that angle or the bike will continue to lean with gravity, increasing in rate, until the
side contacts the ground. This process often requires little or no physical effort, because the
geometry of the steering system of most bikes is designed in such a way that the front wheel has a
strong tendency to steer in the direction of a lean.
The actual torque the rider must apply to the handlebars to maintain a steady-state turn is a
complex function of bike geometry, mass distribution, rider position, tire properties, turn radius,
and forward speed. At low speeds, the steering torque necessary from the rider is usually negative,
that is opposite the direction of the turn, even when the steering angle is in the direction of the
turn. At higher speeds, the direction of the necessary input torque often becomes positive, that is
in the same direction as the turn.[14]
Adjusting or exiting a turn[edit]
Once in a turn, deliberate countersteering is again required to make changes to its shape. The only
way to decrease the radius at the same speed is to increase the lean angle, and the most effective
way to increase the lean angle, is again to momentarily steer opposite to the direction of the
curve. To the untrained, this can be extremely counter-intuitive.
To exit a turn, a deliberate countersteer by momentarily steering further in the direction of the
turn will tilt the bike back upright.
At low speeds[edit]
At low speeds countersteering is equally necessary, but the countersteering is then so subtle that
it is hidden by the continuous corrections that are made in balancing the bike, often falling below
a just noticeable difference or threshold of perception of the rider. Countersteering at low speed
may be further concealed by the ensuing much larger steering angle possible in the direction of the
turn.
Unthinking behavior[edit]
Countersteering is indispensable for bike steering. Most people are not aware that they employ
countersteering when riding their bike any more than they are aware of the physics of walking. They
have learned to apply the required countersteering without thinking.
As is well known in bicycle racing, the countersteering phenomenon becomes evident when there is an
obstacle preventing the wheel from countersteering (e.g., when closely overlapping wheels or riding
very close to a curb). In these situations, the way to initiate a turn with the handlebars away from
the obstacle is to countersteer towards obstacle to avoid crashing into it.[13] Lack of
understanding of this principle leads to accidents in novice bicycle races.
Gyroscopic effects[edit]
One effect of turning the front wheel is a roll moment caused by gyroscopic precession. The
magnitude of this moment is proportional to the moment of inertia of the front wheel, its spin rate
(forward motion), the rate that the rider turns the front wheel by applying a torque to the
handlebars, and the cosine of the angle between the steering axis and the vertical.[14]
For a sample motorcycle moving at 22 m/s (50 mph) that has a front wheel with a moment of inertia of
0.6 kgm2, turning the front wheel one degree in half a second generates a roll moment of 3.5 Nm. In
comparison, the lateral force on the front tire as it tracks out from under the motorcycle reaches a
maximum of 50 N. This, acting on the 0.6 m (2 ft) height of the center of mass, generates a roll
moment of 30 Nm.[14]
While the moment from gyroscopic forces is only 12% of this, it can play a significant part because
it begins to act as soon as the rider applies the torque, instead of building up more slowly as the
wheel out-tracks. This can be especially helpful in motorcycle racing.[14]
No hands[edit]


Oh, so it's something you do once in a while.. I get it.. So, I can push
my right bar to turn left if I want to... got it...

KC February 12th 14 10:41 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/2014 5:23 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:07:52 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 4:57 PM, Bill McKee wrote:
On 2/12/14, 1:46 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:10 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:05 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__

wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H.
wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6,
F.O.A.D.
wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/



















Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but
this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great
tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi
*could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating
content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html








No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating
'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't
look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor
wouldn't
move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one
side
or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just
sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever
try
this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar
forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right*
handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add in
breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun
however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of
forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the
suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way around
the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners. If
you
are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too high,
and
the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the
corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have
that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it
back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?



Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the
other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Geeze. I'll never enjoy a warm summer evening cruise down to the Cape
again. :-)





Sure you will. Like you said you are not racing... I said before I get
the whole thing about getting into a corner and even counter steering.
The looser you are, the more you do it too.... but it's still not the
most efficient way to make a corner...

You guys are all supposed to be sailors.. Draw the thing out and draw
out the thrust and resistance lines... you will see what I am talking
about...

Anyway, I have a good drawing that I can put up later. For now I will
say there are a couple other things we do to make the bike corner
better. One in particular is to gently pull the front brake in and dip
the front end which shortens the turning radius and increases the angle
of the front suspension more upright to turn.. (more like a
tricycle)...
Even dipping the front end a couple inches reduces the bike length
by as
much as an inch and can change the rake of the front end 8-10
degrees...

But again, you are not racing. If I was you I would be countersteering
all the way to the beach. I know how good it feels and I wouldn't be
"racing" on the street anyway:)


Phew. I was getting worried there. It's sorta hard to steer a 850lb
Harley with the back tire. Even if I could, it would probably be the
last turn I ever made.



Yup... Imagine so. I had times where I slid my Honda into a countersteer
slide when I was younger. Never intentionally though:) It was half the
weight of your bike too...
Hell, no wonder I did not win every race with my Vette. I was drifting
corners at times. The old Laguna Course, turn 2 was always able to go
faster than you figured as the apex of the corner started up hill.
Loading the suspension and increasing traction. Turn 3 was a very
highspeed turn and you drifted it at about 130 mph.


Here's my point... You drifted that corner at 130, scrubbing forward
speed off in the drift... How about I come behind you in a formula racer
that can take the corner without countersteering and breaking traction..
how fast do you think that car might make that corner with all the hp
pushing it forward??


There's no such thing as 'countersteering' an automobile.


Sure, it's called "drifting"...

KC February 12th 14 10:43 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/2014 5:27 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 5:16 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:57:17 -0800, Bill McKee
wrote:

On 2/12/14, 1:46 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:10 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:05 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK
wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__

wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H.
wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6,
F.O.A.D.
wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/



















Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but
this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great
tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi
*could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating
content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html








No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating
'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't
look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a
little 3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor
wouldn't
move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards
one side
or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply
lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just
sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever
try
this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar
forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right*
handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer.
Add in
breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun
however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of
forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the
suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way
around
the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners.
If you
are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too
high, and
the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the
corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have
that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it
back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?



Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the
other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of
thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you
are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Geeze. I'll never enjoy a warm summer evening cruise down to the
Cape
again. :-)





Sure you will. Like you said you are not racing... I said before I
get
the whole thing about getting into a corner and even counter
steering.
The looser you are, the more you do it too.... but it's still not the
most efficient way to make a corner...

You guys are all supposed to be sailors.. Draw the thing out and draw
out the thrust and resistance lines... you will see what I am talking
about...

Anyway, I have a good drawing that I can put up later. For now I will
say there are a couple other things we do to make the bike corner
better. One in particular is to gently pull the front brake in and
dip
the front end which shortens the turning radius and increases the
angle
of the front suspension more upright to turn.. (more like a
tricycle)...
Even dipping the front end a couple inches reduces the bike length
by as
much as an inch and can change the rake of the front end 8-10
degrees...

But again, you are not racing. If I was you I would be
countersteering
all the way to the beach. I know how good it feels and I wouldn't be
"racing" on the street anyway:)


Phew. I was getting worried there. It's sorta hard to steer a 850lb
Harley with the back tire. Even if I could, it would probably be the
last turn I ever made.



Yup... Imagine so. I had times where I slid my Honda into a
countersteer
slide when I was younger. Never intentionally though:) It was half the
weight of your bike too...
Hell, no wonder I did not win every race with my Vette. I was drifting
corners at times. The old Laguna Course, turn 2 was always able to go
faster than you figured as the apex of the corner started up hill.
Loading the suspension and increasing traction. Turn 3 was a very
highspeed turn and you drifted it at about 130 mph.


This countersteering applies only to two wheel, single track vehicles!



This discussion is heading back to the debate we had a while back about
traction and what can take a corner faster ... a four wheeled car or a
motorcycle.

The "rolling cone" analogy Bill brought up applies to four wheeled
vehicles where the outside wheels have to turn faster than the inside
wheels in a turn. Really doesn't apply to a two wheeled motorcycle.

The other thing is that Scott's style and techniques used in moto-cross
racing has little to do with riding a street bike down a winding country
road.


Yes, but as with the google link I posted. You can turn a motorcycle,
without countersteering. Street, or track...

Bill McKee[_2_] February 12th 14 11:00 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/14, 2:07 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:57 PM, Bill McKee wrote:
On 2/12/14, 1:46 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:10 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:05 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK
wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__

wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H.
wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6,
F.O.A.D.
wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/




















Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but
this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great
tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi
*could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating
content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html









No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating
'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't
look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little
3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor
wouldn't
move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one
side
or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply
lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just
sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever
try
this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar
forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right*
handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add in
breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun
however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of
forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the
suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way around
the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners. If
you
are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too high,
and
the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the
corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have
that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it
back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?



Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the
other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Geeze. I'll never enjoy a warm summer evening cruise down to the
Cape
again. :-)





Sure you will. Like you said you are not racing... I said before I get
the whole thing about getting into a corner and even counter steering.
The looser you are, the more you do it too.... but it's still not the
most efficient way to make a corner...

You guys are all supposed to be sailors.. Draw the thing out and draw
out the thrust and resistance lines... you will see what I am talking
about...

Anyway, I have a good drawing that I can put up later. For now I will
say there are a couple other things we do to make the bike corner
better. One in particular is to gently pull the front brake in and dip
the front end which shortens the turning radius and increases the
angle
of the front suspension more upright to turn.. (more like a
tricycle)...
Even dipping the front end a couple inches reduces the bike length
by as
much as an inch and can change the rake of the front end 8-10
degrees...

But again, you are not racing. If I was you I would be countersteering
all the way to the beach. I know how good it feels and I wouldn't be
"racing" on the street anyway:)


Phew. I was getting worried there. It's sorta hard to steer a 850lb
Harley with the back tire. Even if I could, it would probably be the
last turn I ever made.



Yup... Imagine so. I had times where I slid my Honda into a countersteer
slide when I was younger. Never intentionally though:) It was half the
weight of your bike too...

Hell, no wonder I did not win every race with my Vette. I was drifting
corners at times. The old Laguna Course, turn 2 was always able to go
faster than you figured as the apex of the corner started up hill.
Loading the suspension and increasing traction. Turn 3 was a very
highspeed turn and you drifted it at about 130 mph.


Here's my point... You drifted that corner at 130, scrubbing forward
speed off in the drift... How about I come behind you in a formula racer
that can take the corner without countersteering and breaking traction..
how fast do you think that car might make that corner with all the hp
pushing it forward??

Different vehicle. it would be drifting at a much higher speed.
Coefficient of friction for an F1 car is probably 1.75 to 2 all the down
force adding to the apparent weight of the car, without a Mass increase,
adding to the traction. Is a major reason F1 racing is not as exciting
as a lot of other racing. No passing really. If another car gets close
enough to a good running car, the airflow is corrupted and the car loses
down force. Not being able to make the turn. And the Horsepower is
close enough that you can not pass on a straightaway. How fast could
the same car make the turn without drifting is the real question.
Slower than the drifting car normally. And horsepower is not the
answer. Only so much of the horsepower is usable at any time. A long
straightaway is the only place where the excess HP can actually be used.
When you hit the red line on a Straightaway, you are maxing out HP
usefulness. Why do you always see Sprint Cars on a dirt track on
straight to the track? Because they are drifting and putting the drive
force at the best angle to drive the the fastest around the corner. If
your bike had enough HP spin the wheels anytime, you would have tires
with a very aggressive grip trying to drive that bike at the best angle
to the turn to go faster around the turn. Not just trying the perfect
non slip line through the turn.

Bill McKee[_2_] February 12th 14 11:02 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/14, 2:09 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn. So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?


When I am on the street, I do everything in my power *not* to slide!

When I still had my bike, I slid both tires. Recovered before the
incidence went into disaster. Problem with need for speed and backroads.

Poco Loco February 13th 14 01:00 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:27:26 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 2/12/2014 5:16 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:57:17 -0800, Bill McKee wrote:

On 2/12/14, 1:46 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:10 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:05 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__

wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H.
wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D.
wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/


















Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but
this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great
tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi
*could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating
content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html







No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't
look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't
move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side
or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just
sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever
try
this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar
forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right*
handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add in
breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun
however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of
forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the
suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way around
the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners. If you
are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too high, and
the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the
corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have
that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it
back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?



Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Geeze. I'll never enjoy a warm summer evening cruise down to the Cape
again. :-)





Sure you will. Like you said you are not racing... I said before I get
the whole thing about getting into a corner and even counter steering.
The looser you are, the more you do it too.... but it's still not the
most efficient way to make a corner...

You guys are all supposed to be sailors.. Draw the thing out and draw
out the thrust and resistance lines... you will see what I am talking
about...

Anyway, I have a good drawing that I can put up later. For now I will
say there are a couple other things we do to make the bike corner
better. One in particular is to gently pull the front brake in and dip
the front end which shortens the turning radius and increases the angle
of the front suspension more upright to turn.. (more like a tricycle)...
Even dipping the front end a couple inches reduces the bike length by as
much as an inch and can change the rake of the front end 8-10 degrees...

But again, you are not racing. If I was you I would be countersteering
all the way to the beach. I know how good it feels and I wouldn't be
"racing" on the street anyway:)


Phew. I was getting worried there. It's sorta hard to steer a 850lb
Harley with the back tire. Even if I could, it would probably be the
last turn I ever made.



Yup... Imagine so. I had times where I slid my Honda into a countersteer
slide when I was younger. Never intentionally though:) It was half the
weight of your bike too...
Hell, no wonder I did not win every race with my Vette. I was drifting
corners at times. The old Laguna Course, turn 2 was always able to go
faster than you figured as the apex of the corner started up hill.
Loading the suspension and increasing traction. Turn 3 was a very
highspeed turn and you drifted it at about 130 mph.


This countersteering applies only to two wheel, single track vehicles!



This discussion is heading back to the debate we had a while back about
traction and what can take a corner faster ... a four wheeled car or a
motorcycle.

The "rolling cone" analogy Bill brought up applies to four wheeled
vehicles where the outside wheels have to turn faster than the inside
wheels in a turn. Really doesn't apply to a two wheeled motorcycle.

The other thing is that Scott's style and techniques used in moto-cross
racing has little to do with riding a street bike down a winding country
road.


Amen, to both. My brother, Jim, a former motorcycle cop, will tell you that on city streets the car
will win - especially if someone has their sprinkler spraying the road!! He lost a Yamaha police
bike that way. But, he said the car was gaining anyway. The radio had alerted enough cops to catch
the guy though.



Poco Loco February 13th 14 01:01 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:40:16 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 5:17 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:14:00 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:49 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:05:39 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__
wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/













Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever try this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right* handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add in breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way around the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners. If you are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too high, and the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?

Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Don't countersteer. Try turning the handlebars to the right next time you want to turn right. Do it
at about 50 mph.

Make sure your insurance is paid up.


Can I start to lean first? If so, no problem.. Again, we do not lead
with the front end of the bike... we steer with the rear end. The most
efficient use of the power is for the front and rear wheel to be lined
up, and the rear wheel tracking forward, not sideways... period... draw
it out, you understand how to sail, you can get this. Again,
countersteering is a common and useful tool, just not for us...


Like I say. Get on the street, about 30 mph (so no one dies) and push the right handlebar to make a
left turn. Let me know how it works out.


How would it work out. I lean left, and push the right bar... no problem


Let me know. Make sure you're clear to the right!


Poco Loco February 13th 14 01:03 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:41:25 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 5:14 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn. So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?


Just so you don't think I'm lying to you:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Countersteering

Countersteering is the technique used by single-track vehicle operators, such as cyclists and
motorcyclists, to initiate a turn toward a given direction by momentarily steering counter to the
desired direction ("steer left to turn right"). A more accurate term is deliberate countersteering
when employed by a rider, though it is often shortened to just countersteering. To negotiate a turn
successfully, the combined center of mass of the rider and the single-track vehicle must first be
leaned in the direction of the turn, and steering briefly in the opposite direction causes that
lean.[1] This technique does not apply to conventional multiple-tracked vehicles such as trikes or
sidecar-equipped bicycles and motorcycles.

How it works[edit]

A single-track vehicle such as a bicycle or a motorcycle is an inverted pendulum—it will fall over
unless balanced.
The technique used by cyclists and motorcyclists to initiate turning in a given direction is to
first apply a steering torque in the opposite direction. For example, if a turn to the left is
desired, it is started by applying a torque on the handlebars to the right. This causes the front
wheel to rotate about the steering axis to the right and the front tire will generate forces in the
contact patch to the right. The machine as a whole steers to the right briefly, and because the
forces in the contact patch are at ground level, this pulls the wheels "out from under" the bike to
the right and causes it to lean to the left. Then the rider, or in most cases, the inherent
stability of the bike provides the steering torque necessary to rotate the front wheel back to the
left and in the direction of the desired turn. Finally, the bike begins a turn to the left.[11] It
is often boiled down to "push left to go left".
While this appears to be a complex sequence of motions, it is performed by every child who rides a
bicycle. The entire sequence goes largely unnoticed by most riders, which is why some assert that
they do not do it.
It is often claimed that two-wheeled vehicles can be steered using only weight shifts. While this is
true for small "trim" inputs to direction, complex maneuvers are not possible using weightshifting
alone because even for a light machine there is insufficient control authority.[12] Although on a
sufficiently light bike (especially a bicycle), the rider can initiate a lean and turn by shifting
body weight,[6] there is no evidence that complex maneuvers can be performed by bodyweight alone.[9]
It is also important to distinguish the steering torque necessary to initiate the lean required for
a given turn from the sustained steering torque and steering angle necessary to maintain a constant
radius and lean angle until it is time to exit the turn. The initial steer torque and angle are both
opposite the desired turn direction. The sustained steer angle is in the same direction as the turn.
The sustained steer torque required to maintain that steer angle is either with or opposite the turn
direction depending on forward speed, bike geometry, and combined bike and rider mass distribution.
Deliberate countersteering is necessary to adjust the angle of lean of a bike and works in the
opposite sense to the handlebar input while conventional steering in the direction of the turn is
used to negotiate the turn.
Need to lean to turn[edit]
A bike can negotiate a curve only when the combined center of mass of bike and rider leans toward
the inside of the turn at an angle appropriate for the velocity and the radius of the turn:
\theta =\arctan \left({\frac {v^{2}}{gr}}\right)
where v is the forward speed, r is the radius of the turn and g is the acceleration of gravity.[6]
Higher speeds and tighter turns require greater lean angles. If the mass is not first leaned into
the turn, the inertia of the rider and bike will cause them to continue in a straight line as the
tires track out from under them along the curve. The transition of riding in a straight line to
negotiating a turn is a process of leaning the bike into the turn, and the most practical way to
cause that lean (of the combined center of mass of bike and rider) is to move the support points in
the opposite direction first.[13] The rider can shift his weight of course, but any force used to
move one way laterally pushes the bike laterally the opposite direction with equal force. That makes
the bike lean (and can affect the steering), but it does not change the combined center of mass of
bike and rider.
Lean by countersteering[edit]
When riding a bicycle or a motorcycle, deliberate countersteering is a method of initiating a turn
by a small, momentary turn of the front wheel, usually via the handlebars, in the opposite (counter)
direction. This moves the pivot point (the wheels' contact patches) out from under the center of
mass to establish the lean angle for a turn. While exploitable at all speeds, the need to
deliberately countersteer becomes more noticeable as speed increases.
Hence, to turn to the right, the rider first throws the bike off balance by momentarily pointing the
front wheel slightly to the left. The center of mass of the bike plus rider will continue in a
straight line, but the contact patches of the tires move to the left with respect to this straight
line.
Once lean is achieved[edit]
As the desired angle is approached, the front wheel must usually be steered into the turn to
maintain that angle or the bike will continue to lean with gravity, increasing in rate, until the
side contacts the ground. This process often requires little or no physical effort, because the
geometry of the steering system of most bikes is designed in such a way that the front wheel has a
strong tendency to steer in the direction of a lean.
The actual torque the rider must apply to the handlebars to maintain a steady-state turn is a
complex function of bike geometry, mass distribution, rider position, tire properties, turn radius,
and forward speed. At low speeds, the steering torque necessary from the rider is usually negative,
that is opposite the direction of the turn, even when the steering angle is in the direction of the
turn. At higher speeds, the direction of the necessary input torque often becomes positive, that is
in the same direction as the turn.[14]
Adjusting or exiting a turn[edit]
Once in a turn, deliberate countersteering is again required to make changes to its shape. The only
way to decrease the radius at the same speed is to increase the lean angle, and the most effective
way to increase the lean angle, is again to momentarily steer opposite to the direction of the
curve. To the untrained, this can be extremely counter-intuitive.
To exit a turn, a deliberate countersteer by momentarily steering further in the direction of the
turn will tilt the bike back upright.
At low speeds[edit]
At low speeds countersteering is equally necessary, but the countersteering is then so subtle that
it is hidden by the continuous corrections that are made in balancing the bike, often falling below
a just noticeable difference or threshold of perception of the rider. Countersteering at low speed
may be further concealed by the ensuing much larger steering angle possible in the direction of the
turn.
Unthinking behavior[edit]
Countersteering is indispensable for bike steering. Most people are not aware that they employ
countersteering when riding their bike any more than they are aware of the physics of walking. They
have learned to apply the required countersteering without thinking.
As is well known in bicycle racing, the countersteering phenomenon becomes evident when there is an
obstacle preventing the wheel from countersteering (e.g., when closely overlapping wheels or riding
very close to a curb). In these situations, the way to initiate a turn with the handlebars away from
the obstacle is to countersteer towards obstacle to avoid crashing into it.[13] Lack of
understanding of this principle leads to accidents in novice bicycle races.
Gyroscopic effects[edit]
One effect of turning the front wheel is a roll moment caused by gyroscopic precession. The
magnitude of this moment is proportional to the moment of inertia of the front wheel, its spin rate
(forward motion), the rate that the rider turns the front wheel by applying a torque to the
handlebars, and the cosine of the angle between the steering axis and the vertical.[14]
For a sample motorcycle moving at 22 m/s (50 mph) that has a front wheel with a moment of inertia of
0.6 kgm2, turning the front wheel one degree in half a second generates a roll moment of 3.5 Nm. In
comparison, the lateral force on the front tire as it tracks out from under the motorcycle reaches a
maximum of 50 N. This, acting on the 0.6 m (2 ft) height of the center of mass, generates a roll
moment of 30 Nm.[14]
While the moment from gyroscopic forces is only 12% of this, it can play a significant part because
it begins to act as soon as the rider applies the torque, instead of building up more slowly as the
wheel out-tracks. This can be especially helpful in motorcycle racing.[14]
No hands[edit]


Oh, so it's something you do once in a while.. I get it.. So, I can push
my right bar to turn left if I want to... got it...


Yeah, when you want to turn. The rest of the time you don't do it.

Hey, you're cool. Try turning right by pushing right.


Poco Loco February 13th 14 01:05 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:02:44 -0800, Bill McKee wrote:

On 2/12/14, 2:09 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn. So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?


When I am on the street, I do everything in my power *not* to slide!

When I still had my bike, I slid both tires. Recovered before the
incidence went into disaster. Problem with need for speed and backroads.


I slid the front tire once. Scared the **** out of me (almost literally), but I let off the brake
quick enough to not go down. Back tire slides aren't that bad if you let it bring you to a stop.
It's when you get scared while sliding and let off the brake that you stand a good chance of 'high
siding' and going down.


Earl__ February 13th 14 01:13 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__ wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/









Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't look at women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't move, sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just sayin'.



No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever try this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar forward
gently and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right* handlebar.


That only works at higher speeds and I was taught how to ride that way.
It was difficult to do at first since it didn't make sense. BTW - VERY
gently - just a bit of pressure.

Poco Loco February 13th 14 02:51 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 20:13:42 -0500, Earl__ wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__ wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/









Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't look at women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't move, sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just sayin'.



No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever try this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar forward
gently and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right* handlebar.


That only works at higher speeds and I was taught how to ride that way.
It was difficult to do at first since it didn't make sense. BTW - VERY
gently - just a bit of pressure.


Any speed over about 15 mph should show the same result.


Califbill February 13th 14 02:56 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:02:44 -0800, Bill McKee wrote:

On 2/12/14, 2:09 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding
for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the
left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn.
So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at
the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't
ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?

When I am on the street, I do everything in my power *not* to slide!

When I still had my bike, I slid both tires. Recovered before the
incidence went into disaster. Problem with need for speed and backroads.


I slid the front tire once. Scared the **** out of me (almost literally),
but I let off the brake
quick enough to not go down. Back tire slides aren't that bad if you let
it bring you to a stop.
It's when you get scared while sliding and let off the brake that you
stand a good chance of 'high
siding' and going down.

I was going way to fast for the road! Kawasaki 350 2 stroke. rotary
Valve. Next model up was the Green streak. 90 degree turn, trees on the
outside. I had the bike over to the foot pegs and sliding. Missed the
outside edge of the road by maybe an inch. Kenny Roberts could not have
done better!

KC February 13th 14 04:24 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/2014 8:01 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:40:16 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 5:17 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:14:00 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:49 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:05:39 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__
wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/













Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever try this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right* handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add in breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way around the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners. If you are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too high, and the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?

Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Don't countersteer. Try turning the handlebars to the right next time you want to turn right. Do it
at about 50 mph.

Make sure your insurance is paid up.


Can I start to lean first? If so, no problem.. Again, we do not lead
with the front end of the bike... we steer with the rear end. The most
efficient use of the power is for the front and rear wheel to be lined
up, and the rear wheel tracking forward, not sideways... period... draw
it out, you understand how to sail, you can get this. Again,
countersteering is a common and useful tool, just not for us...

Like I say. Get on the street, about 30 mph (so no one dies) and push the right handlebar to make a
left turn. Let me know how it works out.


How would it work out. I lean left, and push the right bar... no problem


Let me know. Make sure you're clear to the right!


Oh my God....

KC February 13th 14 04:26 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/2014 8:00 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:27:26 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 2/12/2014 5:16 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:57:17 -0800, Bill McKee wrote:

On 2/12/14, 1:46 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 4:10 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 3:05 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__

wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H.
wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D.
wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/


















Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but
this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great
tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi
*could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating
content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html







No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't
look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't
move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side
or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just
sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever
try
this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar
forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right*
handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add in
breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun
however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead of
forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the
suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way around
the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners. If you
are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too high, and
the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the
corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to have
that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it
back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?



Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Geeze. I'll never enjoy a warm summer evening cruise down to the Cape
again. :-)





Sure you will. Like you said you are not racing... I said before I get
the whole thing about getting into a corner and even counter steering.
The looser you are, the more you do it too.... but it's still not the
most efficient way to make a corner...

You guys are all supposed to be sailors.. Draw the thing out and draw
out the thrust and resistance lines... you will see what I am talking
about...

Anyway, I have a good drawing that I can put up later. For now I will
say there are a couple other things we do to make the bike corner
better. One in particular is to gently pull the front brake in and dip
the front end which shortens the turning radius and increases the angle
of the front suspension more upright to turn.. (more like a tricycle)...
Even dipping the front end a couple inches reduces the bike length by as
much as an inch and can change the rake of the front end 8-10 degrees...

But again, you are not racing. If I was you I would be countersteering
all the way to the beach. I know how good it feels and I wouldn't be
"racing" on the street anyway:)


Phew. I was getting worried there. It's sorta hard to steer a 850lb
Harley with the back tire. Even if I could, it would probably be the
last turn I ever made.



Yup... Imagine so. I had times where I slid my Honda into a countersteer
slide when I was younger. Never intentionally though:) It was half the
weight of your bike too...
Hell, no wonder I did not win every race with my Vette. I was drifting
corners at times. The old Laguna Course, turn 2 was always able to go
faster than you figured as the apex of the corner started up hill.
Loading the suspension and increasing traction. Turn 3 was a very
highspeed turn and you drifted it at about 130 mph.

This countersteering applies only to two wheel, single track vehicles!



This discussion is heading back to the debate we had a while back about
traction and what can take a corner faster ... a four wheeled car or a
motorcycle.

The "rolling cone" analogy Bill brought up applies to four wheeled
vehicles where the outside wheels have to turn faster than the inside
wheels in a turn. Really doesn't apply to a two wheeled motorcycle.

The other thing is that Scott's style and techniques used in moto-cross
racing has little to do with riding a street bike down a winding country
road.


Nope, go to the link I posted and show me which street bike is
countersteering there... none of them are.. cause it's faster to track
the turn, than drift it....

Amen, to both. My brother, Jim, a former motorcycle cop, will tell you that on city streets the car
will win - especially if someone has their sprinkler spraying the road!! He lost a Yamaha police
bike that way. But, he said the car was gaining anyway. The radio had alerted enough cops to catch
the guy though.




KC February 13th 14 04:36 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
On 2/12/2014 11:24 PM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:01 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 17:40:16 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 5:17 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:14:00 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:49 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:05:39 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 2:47 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:59:51 -0500, HanK
wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:37 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 11:23 AM, HanK wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:40 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:31 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 10:04 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__

wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John
H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6,
F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/














Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but
this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great
tinkerers,
with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something
Guzzi *could*
have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains
boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html



No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating
'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says,
"Don't look at
women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.



When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little
3hp
outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor
wouldn't move,
sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one
side or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.



Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply
lean a
motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight...
Just sayin'.


No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles,
ever try this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar
forward
gently
and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right*
handlebar.



Yeah, that's how she takes every turn... Reverse steer. Add
in breaking
loose the rear tire and you are starting to have some fun
however, if
you do though, you are losing time going sideways instead
of forward:)

Just reread that... I should say she counter steers when the
suspension
or body position is off... But it's not the fastest way
around the
track...

What is the fastest way around the track?


Ok, the fastest way involves being efficient in the corners.
If you are
countersteering n a corner, you are standing the bike too
high, and the
drive wheel is not taking the shortest distance around the
corner. In
racing terms, you blew out the birm.. It's not efficient to
have that
back tire way out there cause then it takes time to bring it
back...

How can you be efficient in the corners?

Balance.. Keep both tires in as close to the same radius as the
other.
You want the front tire pointing as close to the direction of thrust
from the rear tire as possible. If you are "countersteering" you are
losing forward thrust and burning off forward thrust...

Don't countersteer. Try turning the handlebars to the right next
time you want to turn right. Do it
at about 50 mph.

Make sure your insurance is paid up.


Can I start to lean first? If so, no problem.. Again, we do not lead
with the front end of the bike... we steer with the rear end. The most
efficient use of the power is for the front and rear wheel to be lined
up, and the rear wheel tracking forward, not sideways... period...
draw
it out, you understand how to sail, you can get this. Again,
countersteering is a common and useful tool, just not for us...

Like I say. Get on the street, about 30 mph (so no one dies) and
push the right handlebar to make a
left turn. Let me know how it works out.


How would it work out. I lean left, and push the right bar... no problem


Let me know. Make sure you're clear to the right!


Oh my God....


OK, John. Try this... Go down the road... and push your right bar
down... of course make sure you are clear to the right... Then go down
the same road, lean to the left and push down that right bar, and make
sure you are clear to the left... do you get that, cause if you don't
there is no helping it...

Poco Loco February 13th 14 01:14 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 20:56:20 -0600, Califbill wrote:

Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:02:44 -0800, Bill McKee wrote:

On 2/12/14, 2:09 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding
for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the
left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn.
So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at
the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't
ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?

When I am on the street, I do everything in my power *not* to slide!

When I still had my bike, I slid both tires. Recovered before the
incidence went into disaster. Problem with need for speed and backroads.


I slid the front tire once. Scared the **** out of me (almost literally),
but I let off the brake
quick enough to not go down. Back tire slides aren't that bad if you let
it bring you to a stop.
It's when you get scared while sliding and let off the brake that you
stand a good chance of 'high
siding' and going down.

I was going way to fast for the road! Kawasaki 350 2 stroke. rotary
Valve. Next model up was the Green streak. 90 degree turn, trees on the
outside. I had the bike over to the foot pegs and sliding. Missed the
outside edge of the road by maybe an inch. Kenny Roberts could not have
done better!


You're still here, must've done something right!


Califbill February 13th 14 06:46 PM

A real dirt bike...
 
Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 20:56:20 -0600, Califbill wrote:

Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:02:44 -0800, Bill McKee wrote:

On 2/12/14, 2:09 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 16:21:26 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 3:52 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 15:15:41 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 12:35 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:44:07 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 11:20 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:33:01 -0500, KC wrote:

On 2/12/2014 10:06 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:42 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:06:41 -0500, BAR wrote:

In article ,
__ says...

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:

I'd love to have one of these...







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA





how about something like this?



http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/







Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.

"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.

Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4



Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.

Just like a motor cycle, you just lean into the turn to make it go
that way.

No, leaning doesn't make it turn. Leaning enables the motorcycle to be
kept more vertical when
turning. Pushing on the handlebar makes you turn. Push left, go left.
Push right, go right.
Countersteering.


Heh. I just mentioned to Scott about that. Those who don't ride will
think it's weird. They think it should turn like a car.



Yes, counter steering but again, it's not the fastest way around the
corner:)

It's the only way around the corner, at speed, on a motorcycle.


I am beating myself up and I can't think of any place on the track where
counter steering is faster...

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10202016412913497&set=a.10202016402 113227.1073741828.1281248494&type=3&theater

Here is Jess setting up for a corner... notice she is turning left, and
her bars are slightly left.. If she let her back tire slide out more
(blowing the corner) the bike would have to stand back up and the back
tire come back in line to get out of the corner... don't know if that
makes any sense. I have a video I could find later of two riders me and
Jess study. One came though the corner right (her mentor) and the guy
behind counter steered through and lost two seconds in the corner...

Letting the back tire 'slide out more' is not a method of riding
for anyone but dirt bikers. When
she initiated the turn to the left, she did it by pushing on the
left bar or pulling on the right
bar. Once the bike started leaning (and turning) she can slide all she wants.

I think what she is doing in the picture is coming out of a turn.
So she's pushing on the right bar
to straighten the bike up (or pulling on the left bar). Looking at
the tracks in the dirt also shows
that she's through the turn.


That picture is in the first 30 feet of the turn.. and no. She doesn't
have to push the left down to initiate the turn. Some turns she comes
into airborne and she already has the bars turned in the direction of
the turn... I see completely what you guys are talking about. I have had
a mc licence since '76 and always thought that way... Until I started
training Jess. She comes into a corner and throws her weight over the
bike.. but pushes both bars down... the outside bar further... never the
inside bar, never let that rear tire get outside of the radius of the
front tire...... Just the way it is.:) Again, if she pushes down on the
inside bar, the rear tire kicks outside the radius of the inside tire.
now you have thrust pushing askew from the direction of the bike... we
calle it "wash out" or "blowing the berm".. draw it out, put arrows for
thrust.. You will see...

Uh-huh. I just hope Jess, while on pavement going at speed, doesn't
ever push left to go right.
Something will get broke.


OK, let's go from there.. When you are countersteering on the street, by
design the thrust of the rear tire and front tire are not in sync with
the direction of the turn.. So which tire do you slide?

When I am on the street, I do everything in my power *not* to slide!

When I still had my bike, I slid both tires. Recovered before the
incidence went into disaster. Problem with need for speed and backroads.

I slid the front tire once. Scared the **** out of me (almost literally),
but I let off the brake
quick enough to not go down. Back tire slides aren't that bad if you let
it bring you to a stop.
It's when you get scared while sliding and let off the brake that you
stand a good chance of 'high
siding' and going down.

I was going way to fast for the road! Kawasaki 350 2 stroke. rotary
Valve. Next model up was the Green streak. 90 degree turn, trees on the
outside. I had the bike over to the foot pegs and sliding. Missed the
outside edge of the road by maybe an inch. Kenny Roberts could not have
done better!


You're still here, must've done something right!


Really fast guardian angel.

Earl__ February 14th 14 01:18 AM

A real dirt bike...
 
Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014 20:13:42 -0500, Earl__ wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:36 AM, KC wrote:
On 2/12/2014 9:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2014 8:09 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 11 Feb 2014 20:27:03 -0500, Earl__ wrote:

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/9/2014 6:25 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 15:03:40 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:

On Sunday, February 9, 2014 4:30:04 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2014 13:31:40 -0800 (PST), Tim

wrote:



On Sunday, February 9, 2014 7:31:31 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote:
I'd love to have one of these...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7mTwM7afQA
how about something like this?
http://thekneeslider.com/1937-front-...cle-prototype/






Looks like something Moto Guzzi made during the war.
"Goose" probably tries something like that too, but this is
French,
and the French at that time were known to be great tinkerers, with
results to match.
Yeah, I should have said it looks like something Guzzi *could* have
made during the war. Something
like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOlS_ShXf4


Here's an idea for Scott: (warning - contains boating content)

http://www.elrellano.com/videos_online/8146/barca-a-motor.html


No steering unless that rowboat has a bow thruster.
That boat is a high technology marvel incorporating 'eyeball
sensormatic rotational assist'. Where
you look is where you go. A sign on the bow says, "Don't look at women
when operating this vessel."

Sometimes the sign gets torn away.


When I was a kid I had a 12' aluminum boat with a little 3hp outboard.
I'd tighten the tension on the steering so the motor wouldn't move, sit
in the middle seat and steer just by leaning towards one side or the
other. Worked fine in large ponds.


Somebody said "like a motorcycle"... But if you simply lean a motorcycle
and don't turn the wheel, it will still go straight... Just sayin'.

No, you have to tip the boat. Speaking of motorcycles, ever try this?

Ride going straight ahead and push your *left* handlebar forward
gently and see which way you turn. Then try with the *right* handlebar.


That only works at higher speeds and I was taught how to ride that way.
It was difficult to do at first since it didn't make sense. BTW - VERY
gently - just a bit of pressure.

Any speed over about 15 mph should show the same result.

That's what I meant. When you are crawling along at bicycle speeds you
steer accordingly.


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