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| Wonko The Sane |
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 Wonko The Sane World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jan 2013 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:17 - 03 Aug 2014 Post subject: useless on country roads, what am I doing wrong? |
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Most of my time spent riding is on motorways and town / city centres along with a large industrial estate.
Due to the industrial estate being full of spilt diesel I've got in the bad habit of keeping the bike very upright and somehow, since being knocked off two months ago I'm very timid of leaning the bike especially in the wet.
Went out for a bit of a blast this afternoon after finally fitting the new rear hugger, checking tyre pressures (they were low, I'm stupid) to find some country roads and make sure my tyres aren't going square.
Big flowing A road was fine but got bored when I caught up with traffic so I turned off onto a much smaller road which would be great to drive down (I always wanted to be a rally driver) narrow and twisty in places but figured, keep the speed down if unsure and I'd be fine
After a while on a right hand corner after a dip in the road I found myself unable to avoid running wide onto the verge, hitting the brakes and rolling off the road at 20mph and coming to a stop safely (an element of target fixation going on here)
But what's causing me to think I'm not going to make it round?
Is it just confidence that the bike is going to find grip / make it round?
Is it me just not positioning myself / the bike where I need to to allow the bike to make it round?
The issue is worse in the wet, I'm convinced the bike is going to slide as it often feels as though it's about to. ____________________ Looking to pass your CBT / Bike tests in Bury Lancashire? try www.focusridertraining.co.uk Would recommend.
They're also on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Focus-Rider-Training/196832923734251 |
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| doggone |
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 doggone World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 May 2004 Karma :    
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| Wonko The Sane |
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 Wonko The Sane World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jan 2013 Karma :   
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| Skudd |
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 Skudd Super Spammer

Joined: 01 Oct 2006 Karma :   
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:56 - 03 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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Recon missions are always good, as are riding with other more experienced riders.
HOWEVER DO NOT PUSH YOUR LIMITS or play catch up with people who have much higher riding ability or are willing to take MUCH bigger risks. This is stupid.
I used to take all sorts of silly risks when I was younger.
For instance a nearby road has a limit of 50mph it can be done at 50mph in 21 minutes.
It typically takes longer because ALL corners are BLIND and people are a bit more careful.
Way back my ability, faith (and faith in your bike, your suspension, your tyres and brakes plays a big part in riding) and stupidity.
I thought I was good as I could do it in a shade over 13 minutes on a 62bhp 200kilo machine. A 109bhp 182 kilo machine shaved this to 11 minutes.
Until I met a bird on a 109bhp 240kilo XJ1300 and a bloke on a Yammy Thunder Ace, they managed a time of just over 8 minutes. Being young and stupid I went after them going way above my risk limit zone. I shaved my time to just over 9 minutes.
It was stupid and it was crazy.
Back then Skudd never came out with us because he thought we were utterly insane and tbh he was right. ____________________ Spain 2008France 2007Big one 2009 We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will. In the end, your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it is worth watching. |
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| FlightRisk |
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 FlightRisk Spanner Monkey

Joined: 08 Jul 2014 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:05 - 03 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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Are you sure your tyres aren't already squared off? I've realised that my badly squared off rear tyre is why my CB needs a firm little counter-steer nudge to fall into a turn rather than just rolling in without me thinking about it.
I find there is an element of belief. Believe you will get round the corner and you will. Start to doubt and you'll start to run wide.  ____________________ Honda CB500S |
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| woo |
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 woo World Chat Champion

Joined: 14 Feb 2005 Karma :   
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| Wonko The Sane |
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 Wonko The Sane World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jan 2013 Karma :   
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| Howling TerrorOutOfOffice |
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 Howling TerrorOutOfOffice Super Spammer

Joined: 05 Dec 2008 Karma :    
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 Posted: 22:22 - 03 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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The b roads round my way are hedge lined or walled so not often you can say for 100% there isn't anything waiting, whether that be mud or dead animal, grit and many etc's. So it's the mantra of position for safety then position for view and can I stop in the distance I can see (or at least an escape route if it all goes tits up )
Physically turning your head to the exit of the corner will start to help in reducing target fixation...trust your bike. Keep it happy by using gentle throttle through the bend, and if the back end slips a little just ignore it best you can. A benefit of being older are my reactions are slower so by the time the back end has finished slipping I've only just noticed.  ____________________ Diabolical homemade music Bandcamp and Soundcloud
Singer songwriter, Artist and allround good bloke Listen to Andrew Susan Johnston here
The Harry Turner Project |
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| Cuchulain |
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 Cuchulain Nitrous Nuisance
Joined: 14 May 2011 Karma :     
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 Posted: 22:49 - 03 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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| woo wrote: | too many variables to kill you on country lanes listen to what your survival instincts are telling when they say do not hoon it!!
horse poo on the road round bend, animals, gravel, everything, relax and live |
As someone who commutes everday on a country lane, this is so true.
99% on my way to work the blind corners will be clear but the other 1% there will be something that could kill you.
Deer, phesants, fallen branches, gravel, horses and the absolute worst one is a big fuck off oncoming vehicle (tractor, lorry etc) which takes up the entire road. ____________________ CBT 15/6/2011 Theory Test Passed 6/2/2012 Module 1 Passed 11/6/2012
Module 2 Passed!!! 19/6/2012 |
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| Wonko The Sane |
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 Wonko The Sane World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jan 2013 Karma :   
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| talkToTheHat |
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 talkToTheHat World Chat Champion

Joined: 21 Feb 2012 Karma :    
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| Old Git Racing |
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 Old Git Racing World Chat Champion
Joined: 08 Aug 2009 Karma :   
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| Dave70 |
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 Dave70 World Chat Champion

Joined: 21 Jan 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 23:47 - 03 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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I did all of my learning to ride a bike back in the IOM and small country roads are where I feel most comfortable because of this.
When I arrived back in the UK a few months back, I felt like a fish out of water. So many big multi-laned roads, complicated massive junctions with traffic coming from a multitude of different directions, ridiculously large roundabouts, speed cameras to look out for and generally so much more going on than Manx roads.
Of course, I'm now getting used to it bit by bit but to me, there's still nothing better than finding a country road that's NSL (although I've not discovered too many round here that are that long yet) I find them so much more enjoyable to ride on than bigger roads.
The thing to do though, is find a nice country road with a fair number of bends and just take it easy until you get familiar with it. Then start taking each bend a little faster each time and keep pushing yourself and the bike a little more. I don't ride as fast on country roads here yet, as I'm not familiar with them. The roads are the only thing I miss about the Isle of Man.
There are dangers though. On more than one occasion I've come round a bend and nearly ended up with my head up a horses arse from having to hit the brakes hard.
Once you get comfortable with a road like that though, I'd say there's no better feeling than chucking your bike from side to side on some good twisty country roads.
Just take it easy at first and don't rush things as you'll come unstuck, mess up a bend and come face to face with another vehicle. ____________________ There ain't no devil, there's just god when he's drunk.
2012: R125 killed by white van. 2016 R125 killed by 30,000 miles of redline. Current: 2016 Kawasaki ER6f. |
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| Llama-Farmer |
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 Llama-Farmer World Chat Champion

Joined: 23 Jan 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 01:05 - 04 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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What bike do you have?
If your tyres are already square-ish, it can be very disconcerting to lean much. When I first got my Hornet they were pretty bad, although not visibly flattened in the middle, I've seen much worse.
Anyway they were horrible to corner on, required a lot of effort to lean the bike and then when they got over the edge the bike would suddenly fall very quickly in comparison.
New tyres made it lovely in comparison.
One thing I'd do to get more confidence leaning is find a quiet roundabout. An industrial estate or business park on a sunday maybe where there is very little chance of any traffic. And just keep going round. And round. And round. Starting off at a steady pace and lean, checking the surface for any rough tarmac or pot holes, oil/diesel patches, tar banding etc, anything that could cause problems.
And just build up speed and lean angle as you get more comfortable. The more the right hand side of the tyre is used, the more it warms and the more grip it provides so should get better and better up to a point.
An industrial/business estate car park on a sunday when it's completely empty might be a good place actually, as you could then go anticlockwise too practicing leaning to the left (without having to go the wrong way round a roundabout).
Positive counter steering can make it much easier to lean over though, smoothly but firmly push on the right hand bar to lean right, left to lean left. Gentle though, no shoving on it until you get used to it.
To reduce the target fixation if you turn your head and look through the corner at your exit point or vanishing point then the bike will generally follow. You should be looking as far ahead as possible and is practical... so before you begin braking for the corner you should already be focussing on the vanishing point rather than what is just ahead of you. ____________________ Current Bike: 1999 Honda CB600 FX Hornet
Next Bike: I want a CBR-RR. And I want an F800 GS-A. And a VFR 800. Can I have all 3?
Dream Bikes: Honda VFR750R RC30, Honda NSR500, Ducati 996 R |
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| chickenstrip |
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 chickenstrip Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Dec 2013 Karma :    
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| dydey90 |
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 dydey90 World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 Oct 2013 Karma :   
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 Posted: 09:18 - 04 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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I keep thinking that I'm terrible because I don't feel like I'm trying hard enough through this bend, which is on my commute. It's a 90 degree turn on a national speed limit road, followed by a hump-back bridge and then another 90 degree turn.
After that though, other bends no longer seem so bendy. ____________________ This post is probably not serious and shouldn't be taken literally.
Past: CBR125,ER6f NINJA 650, ZZR600 Current: VFR750 |
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| Amber Phoenix |
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 Amber Phoenix Traffic Copper

Joined: 01 Feb 2013 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:24 - 04 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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I'm in a similar boat to yourself, with 90% of my riding being in suburbs and city. It's generally a case of more practice. Get out more, particularly solo runs, where comradery and high spirits may push you a bit more that you skill level (been there, don't that, thankfully just cosmetic damage). Try and go for a really long run or trip across country e.g. go camping or visit a mate a few hundred miles away, but pick a route that avoid motorways/dual carriageways as much as possible. Once you've ridden for an hour or two, you start to relax more and things get smoother.
Shake you speed off before the bends, rolling off throttle, brakes or dropping down a gear. Look at where you want to go, gradually roll back on throttle as you go through the bend and back up to speed as you come out. To counter steer, just 'push down' on the bar that's on the inside of the bend. Learning further is scary at first, but trust in your tyres and grip comes with time. After an off, it's only natural for your confidence to take a knock and it can take months to regain it, perfectly normal.
Make sure your elbows are nicely relaxed. I still keep finding myself tensing up with rigid straight arms, making corners much harder and riding more tiring as every bump goes up your arms.
As mentioned, if your tyres are very squared off already, they will make it difficult to lean at first, then all of a sudden lean loads - very disconcerting. No, getting your knee down on a bunch of bends won't even them up!
Also, it might be worth double checking you head race bearings, in case it's notchy, which will make it tougher to corner. Lift front wheel of ground, look away from bars, then swing bars full lock and back with one finger - should be totally smooth, with no resistance. If you feel it get stuck or clunk into place at any point, and need a bit more pressure to move on, then get the head races replaced (£15-20 parts, ~1/2hrs labour). ____________________ Beginner Biker Adventures Blog
Yamaha FZ6 S2 2007 |
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| SteveSmith |
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 SteveSmith Nitrous Nuisance
Joined: 08 Nov 2012 Karma :     
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| covent.gardens |
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 covent.gardens World Clap Champion

Joined: 09 Jun 2012 Karma :     
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 Posted: 12:19 - 04 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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It's not quite clear to me, from your post - did the dip fuck you up? Would you have made it round ok if not for the dip?
It can be unnerving going round bends and finding a bumpy road, dip, pothole, rut etc, but usually you just have to keep leaning, usually they are a problem for us, more than the bike. Did you hit the dip, feel like you had to straighten up, then crash because you thought you were going too fast?
In hindsight if you took the bend again at the same speed, do you think you could make it, if you leant over more, and/or, didn't react to the dip how you did? |
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| -Monty- |
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 -Monty- World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Apr 2012 Karma :   
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| talkToTheHat |
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 talkToTheHat World Chat Champion

Joined: 21 Feb 2012 Karma :    
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| Wonko The Sane |
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 Wonko The Sane World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jan 2013 Karma :   
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 Posted: 15:03 - 04 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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| covent.gardens wrote: | It's not quite clear to me, from your post - did the dip fuck you up? Would you have made it round ok if not for the dip?
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That's part of what I'm wondering, had the dip not been there I may have been able to brake more for the corner, lean the bike over and make the corner, I think I perhaps carried too much speed to the corner as I wasn't sure about braking hard over the dip. I was trying to keep the speed up a little instead of trying to be smooth
Perhaps best to exit a corner thinking "that felt good, could have gone a little quicker" is the better approach?
Someone asked what the bike was, it's a ZZR600, not the lightest of bikes but easy enough to ride
There are a couple of things in question with the bike;
1)Tyres have been on for a year of 40 mile trips mon-fri mainly on the motorway in rush hour, they were fitted by the previous owner who did a similar commute but may well have used the bike on a weekend for fun
2)New rear shock has been fitted and done a couple of hundred miles, not sure if pre-load alters as it beds in
3)I just need to remember how to ride the bloomin' thing!
I don't know anyone around where I live with a bike so if I go out for a ride then it's just myself,
It's more turning right I have an issue with- there's a couple of sweeping left hand slip roads as I change from one motorway to another on the way home but it's roundabouts on the way to work so I don't get the same opportunity.
Bit bizzare as on a road racer I'm timid turning left as I slid out and crashed once and I'm more comfortable on country lanes in the car than city centres.
Nice sunny day today and I got in to work early so can finish early, hoping if traffic isn't too bad to get off the motorway early and do the route from yesterday in reverse and not be too late home (don't want to miss my daughter's bed time as I only get to see her on weekends otherwise) and report back  ____________________ Looking to pass your CBT / Bike tests in Bury Lancashire? try www.focusridertraining.co.uk Would recommend.
They're also on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Focus-Rider-Training/196832923734251 |
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| Aff |
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 Aff World Chat Champion

Joined: 05 May 2011 Karma :    
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| qarka |
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 qarka Spanner Monkey

Joined: 10 Mar 2009 Karma :  
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 Posted: 16:32 - 04 Aug 2014 Post subject: |
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I have the opposite problem. Love a nice country road, get terrified when I hit a city. Living in Cumbria it's to be expected though I guess. I rode down to London to visit friends last year, had more near-misses that day than I'd had in a year up here.
I'm thinking it's just what you're used to. Of course if you've been riding in the city you're gonna be awful when you hit a nice bendy road. Just like I'm awful at riding in cities. Same as I'd be terrible at the banjo even though I can play guitar.  ____________________ Previous - Sinnis Apache - Honda Bros 400 - Yamaha SR500 - Honda Transalp - Kawasaki ZX-7R - Honda CB-1 - Honda 929 Fireblade - Honda NTV650 [b]Current[\b] Honda CB500 |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 11 years, 254 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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