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| damz |
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 damz World Chat Champion

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 The Artist Super Spammer

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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

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| johnsmith222 |
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 johnsmith222 World Chat Champion
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| damz |
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 damz World Chat Champion

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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

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| Wafer_Thin_Ham |
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 Wafer_Thin_Ham Super Spammer

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 Posted: 08:02 - 03 Aug 2009 Post subject: |
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Probably not, but the process of learning to get your knee down improves your confidence vastly. ____________________ My Flickr |
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| supZ |
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 supZ World Chat Champion

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| Bofh5 |
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 Bofh5 World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 08:05 - 03 Aug 2009 Post subject: |
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Do a track day and you'll find out why using your knee helps.
When i started i was decking the pegs after a lap once the tyres were warm and the bike started to feel really unstable like it was on the limit but i was still going wide !
After a few more sessions i relaxed and just started sliding of the seat looking where i wanted to go and found my turning was a lot better with the difference in weight balance.
As a by-product so to speak i started scraping my knees on the corners and the confidence boost was incredible.
Remember the greater the lean angle the less tyre is in contact with the road / track so less grip.
If you can keep a greater contact patch by using your body to increase the turn in then all the better plus you can get on the throttle faster.
Sorry this isn't the best way to explain but hopefully you catch my drift  ____________________ (L)users...Disk space is to good for them.
Bikes: Honda 50 / CB125-TDC / 93 CBR600 F2 (Stolen & Trashed) / 2001 SP-1 (Sold) / 95 CBR600 F3 |
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| Tome |
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 Tome Borekit Bruiser
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| Luke_Retrofly |
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 Luke_Retrofly Silly Lesbian

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 Posted: 08:21 - 03 Aug 2009 Post subject: |
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Knee down in essence has nothing to do with speed. Its a process of judging how far you are leant over. Everyones styles different, so how much you GYKD differs from person to person. But its a good judge of how far your leaning/pushing the bike.
Weight distribution, ie moving your weight towards the inside of the corner does let go quicker, it allows the bike to go around the corner quicker without increasing lean angle, there is a maximum lean angle of a bike, after which you will lose grip, shifting your weight to the inside allows you to be on this limit but going faster around the corner than if you were sat upright on your bike, one of the ways of doing this is sticking your body/head/elbow/knee out, which eventually hit the floor
On track with decent tryes and grip levels bikes lean so far that the distance between the bike and ground is so small you can't stick anything out, yet your bum, head and elbow will be still offset to the inside.
As you can see Rossi's whole body is offset to the right of the bike, this I think it most important factor when leaning for extra speed, not just sticking your knee out.
https://www.humanartifact.com/image/proracing/20090429_67degreeLeanRossiChinaFP.png
Note heads/bodies and elbows all leaning into the corner, also note No#26 bike, his knee is sandwiched between the road and bike
https://www.superbikeplanet.com/image/2007/mgp/mugello/1/9.jpg
Obviously these are extreme examples, but the principles are the same, these techniques are best practiced on race tracks 
Last edited by Luke_Retrofly on 08:23 - 03 Aug 2009; edited 1 time in total |
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| Cptn. Awesome |
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 Cptn. Awesome Crazy Courier
Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Karma :     
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 Posted: 08:22 - 03 Aug 2009 Post subject: |
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| Bofh5 wrote: | Do a track day and you'll find out why using your knee helps.
When i started i was decking the pegs after a lap once the tyres were warm and the bike started to feel really unstable like it was on the limit but i was still going wide !
After a few more sessions i relaxed and just started sliding of the seat looking where i wanted to go and found my turning was a lot better with the difference in weight balance.
As a by-product so to speak i started scraping my knees on the corners and the confidence boost was incredible.
Remember the greater the lean angle the less tyre is in contact with the road / track so less grip.
If you can keep a greater contact patch by using your body to increase the turn in then all the better plus you can get on the throttle faster.
Sorry this isn't the best way to explain but hopefully you catch my drift  |
I thought you explained it pretty well.
My two pence: On the road you don't really need to get you knee down unless your into the realms of dangerous riding, I'm thinking hooning it round mountain roads and using both sides of the road where potentially oncoming traffic could turn you into road-jam.
I also agree with the POV that KN is a by-product of speed and shifting weight. ____________________ Rides - '60 Plate Ford Fiesta Zetec 1.25, '03 Plate Kawasaki ZX6R B1H and an '87 VFR400 NC24
Naughty Fawbish: "An eagle is but an eagle until the suns flare blinds his prey." - Fawbish, 2010. |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 16 years, 154 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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