Jump to content

MSGT-R

Members
  • Posts

    20
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by MSGT-R

  1. Cobie,

     

    Had one of your assistant Head Coaches speak at our motorcycle club meeting last night (here in San Diego). He shed a lot more light on your Coach Training Syllabus than you discuss in here. Boy what a learning curve! You might as well tell your candidates what they are in for when they step up to the plate... Lots of study, lots of commitment.

     

    Pete was cool. You should be proud of him. B)

  2. The purpose of the "blip" is to raise engine rpm slightly to ease the shock of clutch engagement during downshifting. No ju-ju here. You're downshifting in the first place because you're decelerating for some reason. Downshifting can't do it all, it must be in concert with the braking. Either one can be overdone.

     

    Shifting two gears at once and letting the clutch out will certainly overspeed the engine when decelerating heavily and you will likely break traction. Your local parts man will love you for this. :rolleyes:

     

    A slipper clutch has its limitations, and double downshifting will find them quickly. Honda has known this since its V65 production in the early '80s. ;)

  3. There is a difference between science and artistry. To watch a master on the track will give life to that concept. The person that can put those observations to paper has a special gift indeed.

     

    While reading all of the above, several things come to mind:

    Judgement

    Visualization (mental)

    Visual lead (looking ahead)

    Muscle memory

    Flow of motion

    Mastery of mind and machine :ph34r:

     

    All too often, I see sensory overload. It usually comes with the novice rider trying to "do it all now" instead of in stages with practice and experience.

    While teaching people to ride, we tell them that the process is 90% mental, 10% physical. If it wasn't, Chimpanzees would be out riding the roads. :D

     

    Keep it coming, Keith!

  4. My main question is this: How do I know if I'm too much of a new rider to attend a "racing" school? I really want to attend the school to learn the limits of my bike, get rid of bad habits, become more aware of my surroundings, etc.

     

     

    You are asking the correct questions. I have heard so many say "I want to be faster, I want to race, etc, etc". You are aware of your limitations and bad habits, and are ready to do something about it.

    Let these guys take care of you; sign up for a class. Be a safer rider.

     

     

    Thank you Keith again for another inspiring article, chock full of insites (another excellent item to share with my students).

  5. If this is a learning bike, you don't want him/her riding two-up.

     

    For those who suffer from testosterone, I'm forever talking them out of buying a 1000cc extension of their overblown libido for a first bike. <_< For those who want to be "canyon racers", the 600 series of sportbike has many choices, lots of aftermarket parts, and is enough to get most into trouble and on my mishap list.

×
×
  • Create New...