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quick tight cornering?

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kawashima
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PostPosted: 14:07 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: quick tight cornering? Reply with quote

When I want to make a quick tight cornering, should I use a lot of half clutch or I shouldn't use half clutch??? A or B?

https://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b295/kawashima_/tightcornering-02.png

My bike is twin and has high 1st gear.
If I don't use half clutch, the rpm is nearly bottom at corner.
If I apply half clutch, I can keep around 2000rpm, but
- Is it alright using half clutch during engine braking?
- I use a lot of rear brake even after the corner but is it alright?
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JoeDougieDoug...
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PostPosted: 14:14 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't know the answer, but let me just say that they're very good paint diagrams, better than what BCF is used to Laughing
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P.
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PostPosted: 14:16 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

No clutch, drop down to 1st/2nd.

Thats what I would do.
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kawashima
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PostPosted: 14:19 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

JoeDougieDouglas wrote:
I don't know the answer, but let me just say that they're very good paint diagrams, better than what BCF is used to Laughing

Thanks. I'm still not good at doing quick tight cornering and still thinking which is better. There's a nearly no traffic road and I go there and practise.
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Apexes
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PostPosted: 14:29 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I never use clutch cornering as you've mentioned, the more revs in the bike the more stable it is going round the corner
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DrDonnyBrago
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PostPosted: 14:30 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

My bike has a very twitchy and grabby 1st gear, especially at low speed. Without slipping the clutch (using half clutch and some throttle) it jumps around and isn't smooth. At corners about 10mph I slip the clutch in 1st, or use very low revs in 2nd.

In the paint diagramI would be using clutch, throttle and rear brake. It all depends on the bike. If you need to use clutch then use it, if you don't then don't use it. Clutch parts are pretty cheap, bathed in oil and designed to be slipped, don't be afraid of using it.
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kawashima
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PostPosted: 14:43 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

DonnyBrago wrote:
My bike has a very twitchy and grabby 1st gear, especially at low speed. Without slipping the clutch (using half clutch and some throttle) it jumps around and isn't smooth. At corners about 10mph I slip the clutch in 1st, or use very low revs in 2nd.

In the paint diagramI would be using clutch, throttle and rear brake. It all depends on the bike. If you need to use clutch then use it, if you don't then don't use it. Clutch parts are pretty cheap, bathed in oil and designed to be slipped, don't be afraid of using it.

Thanks! If necesarry it's alright to slip clutch like this, and it depends on what bike it is, I'm relieved to hear this.
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iooi
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PostPosted: 14:58 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Only thing I would say about using the clutch in that situation.... Is if your fingers slip.....

I'll let you guess the rest Embarassed

Slow in, drive out Thumbs Up
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DrDonnyBrago
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PostPosted: 15:11 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

iooi wrote:
Only thing I would say about using the clutch in that situation.... Is if your fingers slip.....

I'll let you guess the rest Embarassed

Slow in, drive out Thumbs Up




Could say the same thing about pulling away with cars in front of you or riding at very low speed through traffic. Still have control of the throttle and still using the rear brake.

Thinking about it, there is a picture of an SV1000 that accidentally dumped the clutch at idle and plowed into the car in front from a standstill on BCF somewhere. I'm sure you are not worried by the thought of holding your clutch in at standstill Wink .
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The999Kid
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PostPosted: 15:45 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

personally i change down to first just before i tip in to the corner and let the clutch out to accelerate away, at no point is the clutch held at a fixed position during this method....

so just before you turn your head to look into the road, clutch in, tap down for first, set revs and clutch out just as the front wheel passes the junction lines for the sideroad.
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whitedevil
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PostPosted: 15:52 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I would use the clutch to control my speed not the throttle, i also wouldn't use the rear brake unless the bike was completely upright and doing about 5mph.
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chris-red
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PostPosted: 16:50 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I do what you show in A but without the half clutch engine engine braking.

Engine braek into the corner and as soon as you start to tip in I clutch in revs up and let the clutch out throughout the turn to control the power down.

It makes the power smoother I have found.

Have you done the airbox mod to your TDM? it makes the bike much better at low revs, adding a power commander made it pull smoothly from about 2k rpm.
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SirToU
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PostPosted: 19:29 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just a couple of questions for you?

What happened to the front brake? 80% of your braking.
Engine braking and rear brake has the same effect (mostly).
At idle, what speed is your bike doing? (in a straight line)?
How fast can YOU turn the bike on idle?
IMHO this sounds a bit daft, why are you looking at doing 90 degrees fast on the road? It will only end in tears Smile
It's all about planning and not about rear brake. If you adopt too much use of the rear brake, eventually you will loose the rear end in this scenario. Especially in wet and cold conditions.
If you want to go fast round this corner, use the front brake,(or both) til 0-25% of the turn, getting the corner speed right, get off the brakes and using the throttle (about 10%) to drive round the corner for the the next 50% of the bend. Using the last 25% of the bend on full throttle to power out of the bent (sliding the rear end and leaving a nice big darky......)

The key is - the downward shifts, are done before the turn using he clutch, to first, idle (or increasing throttle) round the corner, the clutchless shifts as you accelerate towards the next bend Smile

Sorry, just having a bit of a laugh.

Try Motogymkhana - www.motogymkhana.org and you will learn how to corner, sharply and fast, and it's cheaper than doing a School track day....

Neil

Ps. B is the answer but you need to scrub speed, the front brake is the key - not the rear.
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HD
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PostPosted: 19:36 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

SirToU wrote:
Just a couple of questions for you?

What happened to the front brake? 80% of your braking.
Engine braking and rear brake has the same effect (mostly).
At idle, what speed is your bike doing? (in a straight line)?
How fast can YOU turn the bike on idle?
IMHO this sounds a bit daft, why are you looking at doing 90 degrees fast on the road? It will only end in tears Smile
It's all about planning and not about rear brake. If you adopt too much use of the rear brake, eventually you will loose the rear end in this scenario. Especially in wet and cold conditions.
If you want to go fast round this corner, use the front brake,(or both) til 0-25% of the turn, getting the corner speed right, get off the brakes and using the throttle (about 10%) to drive round the corner for the the next 50% of the bend. Using the last 25% of the bend on full throttle to power out of the bent (sliding the rear end and leaving a nice big darky......)

The key is - the downward shifts, are done before the turn using he clutch, to first, idle (or increasing throttle) round the corner, the clutchless shifts as you accelerate towards the next bend Smile

Sorry, just having a bit of a laugh.

Try Motogymkhana - www.motogymkhana.org and you will learn how to corner, sharply and fast, and it's cheaper than doing a School track day....

Neil

Ps. B is the answer but you need to scrub speed, the front brake is the key - not the rear.


I didn't want to say anything but this guy hit the nail on the head. This is how I do it as I was always taught not to hold the clutch in when riding round corners Thumbs Up
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SirToU
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PostPosted: 21:26 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Half way between one extreme and the other? It varies between bikes.

But basically, it's just beyond the biting point. Providing some drive, but not fully released.

Slipping the clutch is the technical reference.

Neil
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Acemastr
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PostPosted: 22:03 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

er... I've never come across a corner that I can't take in 2nd? I can't imagine slipping the clutch around a corner is going to be a great idea, stand the bike up if it's that slow.
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robocog
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PostPosted: 22:17 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am not yet a riding god nor an expert- but I have read "Twist of the Wrist II" and I trust mr Code has done his research and knows his onions and whatnot

From what I have gather "Ideally"...You want to be slightly accellerating throughout cornering to maintain a stable front to rear balance so setting up your entry speed and position should be done and dusted before the bike tips in

The physics are explained quite well in the book and it is an interestng & insightful read Thumbs Up

Regards
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kawashima
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PostPosted: 22:31 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I must go work now.. Sorry I can't respond now. Thanks I read this thread again when I come home.
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 23:07 - 10 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Which is 'quicker'?

If you have time to think about it, and what level of clutch slip you are using, you obviously ENT going that quick at all!

But sod speed; go for SMOOTH.. get smooth, speed comes as a by-product.

Ideally you want the clutch engaged, and to be doing it all on the throttle. Work on smoothness, and you may find you have to use a bit of clutch slip to keep the motor out of the lumpy bit at the bottom of the rev range, at lower speeds, but as you develop that smoothness, speed ought to increase and you find you are going quick enough you aren't IN that lumpy rev region, so no need to clutch slip.
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garth
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PostPosted: 12:54 - 11 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Where's the option for locking up the rear on the way into the tight corner, and clutching it up on the way out? Laughing
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kawashima
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PostPosted: 13:43 - 11 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

iooi wrote:
Only thing I would say about using the clutch in that situation.... Is if your fingers slip.....

I'll let you guess the rest Embarassed

Slow in, drive out Thumbs Up

It happened to me today once. It was really scary!

The999Kid wrote:
personally i change down to first just before i tip in to the corner and let the clutch out to accelerate away

I tried this method but I couldn't do it well.

whitedevil wrote:
I would use the clutch to control my speed not the throttle, i also wouldn't use the rear brake unless the bike was completely upright and doing about 5mph.

I felt I am far below your level.

chris-red wrote:
Engine braek into the corner and as soon as you start to tip in I clutch in revs up and let the clutch out throughout the turn to control the power down.

It makes the power smoother I have found.

Have you done the airbox mod to your TDM? it makes the bike much better at low revs, adding a power commander made it pull smoothly from about 2k rpm.

I could do it today. I haven't tried the mod yet. I must read carpe forum. -> I found it! thanks.
https://jbx9.free.fr/tdm/index.php?page=AIR


SirToU wrote:
Just a couple of questions for you?

What happened to the front brake? 80% of your braking.
Engine braking and rear brake has the same effect (mostly).
At idle, what speed is your bike doing? (in a straight line)?
How fast can YOU turn the bike on idle?
IMHO this sounds a bit daft, why are you looking at doing 90 degrees fast on the road? It will only end in tears Smile
It's all about planning and not about rear brake. If you adopt too much use of the rear brake, eventually you will loose the rear end in this scenario. Especially in wet and cold conditions.
If you want to go fast round this corner, use the front brake,(or both) til 0-25% of the turn, getting the corner speed right, get off the brakes and using the throttle (about 10%) to drive round the corner for the the next 50% of the bend. Using the last 25% of the bend on full throttle to power out of the bent (sliding the rear end and leaving a nice big darky......)

The key is - the downward shifts, are done before the turn using he clutch, to first, idle (or increasing throttle) round the corner, the clutchless shifts as you accelerate towards the next bend Smile

Sorry, just having a bit of a laugh.

Try Motogymkhana - www.motogymkhana.org and you will learn how to corner, sharply and fast, and it's cheaper than doing a School track day....

Neil

Ps. B is the answer but you need to scrub speed, the front brake is the key - not the rear.

Thanks for your informative post. I need to use more front brake but can't yet.
Today I checked Idling speed, it was 13km/h.
I couldn't turn fast on idle. I think I can't lean enough yet.
I couldn't do what you suggested yet. I need more practice.
I want to do a smooth down shift and cornering.
I'm far below the average and I need more practice.

Babba wrote:
kawashima wrote:
When I want to make a quick tight cornering, should I use a lot of half clutch or I shouldn't use half clutch??? A or B?


What, exactly, is "half clutch" ?

Ouch I used Janglish again. It's "slipping clutch".

Acemastr wrote:
er... I've never come across a corner that I can't take in 2nd? I can't imagine slipping the clutch around a corner is going to be a great idea, stand the bike up if it's that slow.

Today I noticed it too. I found I wasn't slipping clutch well. It was not a good idea during engine braking.

Teflon-Mike wrote:
Which is 'quicker'?

If you have time to think about it, and what level of clutch slip you are using, you obviously ENT going that quick at all!

But sod speed; go for SMOOTH.. get smooth, speed comes as a by-product.

Ideally you want the clutch engaged, and to be doing it all on the throttle. Work on smoothness, and you may find you have to use a bit of clutch slip to keep the motor out of the lumpy bit at the bottom of the rev range, at lower speeds, but as you develop that smoothness, speed ought to increase and you find you are going quick enough you aren't IN that lumpy rev region, so no need to clutch slip.


I need to do downshift and corner just as you explained. Smooth one.

garth wrote:
Where's the option for locking up the rear on the way into the tight corner, and clutching it up on the way out? Laughing

Today I noticed how sh*t I am, I need to aim for smooth cornering.

I filmed it and it was awful..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EM9S-u6mQ7s
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Last edited by kawashima on 14:18 - 11 Jan 2012; edited 1 time in total
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chris-red
Have you considered a TDM?



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PostPosted: 13:52 - 11 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Teflon-Mike wrote:
Which is 'quicker'?

If you have time to think about it, and what level of clutch slip you are using, you obviously ENT going that quick at all!

But sod speed; go for SMOOTH.. get smooth, speed comes as a by-product.

Ideally you want the clutch engaged, and to be doing it all on the throttle. Work on smoothness, and you may find you have to use a bit of clutch slip to keep the motor out of the lumpy bit at the bottom of the rev range, at lower speeds, but as you develop that smoothness, speed ought to increase and you find you are going quick enough you aren't IN that lumpy rev region, so no need to clutch slip.


Slipping the clutch greatly improves smooth less especially with a bike at is lumpy low down.
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Howling TerrorOutOfOffice
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PostPosted: 14:48 - 11 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi Kawashima-san, After watching your video I think that how you actually turn the bike is good. A good line. Thumbs Up

I'd say you left your braking a bit too late and that includes the downshifts. Speaking of which you need to practice them. Takes time on the bike to get proficient at blipping the throttle whilst on the front brake. However, I do know the TDM has soft suspension so that exaggerates the fork movement on your video.(and your headlight beam dipping made it look worse than it actually was)

As for using the rear brake in the turn. Well, when I take a pillion, then yes I like to use the rear on very slow tight turns. Bike feels stable. Braking from a higher speed and into a corner I rarely use the rear brake. I like the bike to pull me through the corner

Feathering (Slip) the clutch..Oh yes it all goes on when you have a big twin with 'Interesting fuelling'. A 30mph 90 degree corner on my 944 twin will involve some light feathering. Unlike the 250 2 strokes I see racing..Those clutchplates must be sizzling in their baskets. Shocked

Theory of riding I know quite well yet I struggle with so many things with my riding, and that's why I love it. Yet some things I had issues with have gone, so must be making some progress albeit at a slow pace.
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kawashima
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PostPosted: 15:09 - 11 Jan 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Howling Terror wrote:
Hi Kawashima-san, After watching your video I think that how you actually turn the bike is good. A good line. Thumbs Up

I'd say you left your braking a bit too late and that includes the downshifts. Speaking of which you need to practice them. Takes time on the bike to get proficient at blipping the throttle whilst on the front brake. However, I do know the TDM has soft suspension so that exaggerates the fork movement on your video.(and your headlight beam dipping made it look worse than it actually was)

As for using the rear brake in the turn. Well, when I take a pillion, then yes I like to use the rear on very slow tight turns. Bike feels stable. Braking from a higher speed and into a corner I rarely use the rear brake. I like the bike to pull me through the corner

Feathering (Slip) the clutch..Oh yes it all goes on when you have a big twin with 'Interesting fuelling'. A 30mph 90 degree corner on my 944 twin will involve some light feathering. Unlike the 250 2 strokes I see racing..Those clutchplates must be sizzling in their baskets. Shocked

Theory of riding I know quite well yet I struggle with so many things with my riding, and that's why I love it. Yet some things I had issues with have gone, so must be making some progress albeit at a slow pace.

Thanks for your comment Howlling Terror, I filmed and noticed my bike was moving up and down when I was blipping. Though my thread title was Quick tight cornering, I think Smooth tight cornering was much better. For Quick cornering, my front braking is to soft I think. But I don't need Quick cornering on public road. Smooth one is better.
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