counter-stear or lean?
#21
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: skratch
there was a video of a test bike where the guy had 2 sets of handlebars, one was fixed. the idea was to show folks how countersteering works, and leaning doesn't. a bunch of folks who said that they steer by leaning found out the hard way that leaning didn't get them squat..... yes, they were leaning, but countersteering got them turning. they were just leaning in response to the bike leaning into a turn. not vice versa
there was a video of a test bike where the guy had 2 sets of handlebars, one was fixed. the idea was to show folks how countersteering works, and leaning doesn't. a bunch of folks who said that they steer by leaning found out the hard way that leaning didn't get them squat..... yes, they were leaning, but countersteering got them turning. they were just leaning in response to the bike leaning into a turn. not vice versa
Bikes are built so that the front wheel turns in the direction of the turn once the bike leans. Ask anyone who cruises with their hands off the grips. Yes, I know that is stupid, unsafe, crazy, bla bla bla, but leaning is how they control the bike.
Beary
#22
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: Intrepid175
Listen to what you're asking!! You just dropped into a bunch of loose gravel. You're riding fast and you can't slow down because of all your friends tail gating you. There's a drop off on both sides of the road so you can't change your lean angle.
In that case, what difference does it make if you countersteering or use a weight shift method? Since you can't change your lean angle either way, I'd say you've already screwed the pooch and it's time to bend over, kiss your ***, and pay the piper!
I've been in loose gravel before on the Goldwing I used to own. I never actually dropped it but I sure thought I was going to until I got clear of the gravel. The point is, if you don't have enough traction to maintain balance, like on a heavily graveled road, you're probably going to drop it regardless of how you think you're steering the bike. Countersteering is and always has been the primary means of steering a motorcycle.
Steve R.
ORIGINAL: Ultra_Bob
Soooo.. Say you are riding rather fast down a paved road with lots-of twisties (counter-steering hard)... as you are going through one of the curves,the pavement ends, and there is loose gravel for the final 15 feet of the curve. You can't slow the bike down because there is several bikes on your tail, or change your lean angle cause of a drop-off on both sides of the road. Would you still counter-steer or try leaning? Which wouldkeep the bike in the track with min.slipping on the loose rocks?
Soooo.. Say you are riding rather fast down a paved road with lots-of twisties (counter-steering hard)... as you are going through one of the curves,the pavement ends, and there is loose gravel for the final 15 feet of the curve. You can't slow the bike down because there is several bikes on your tail, or change your lean angle cause of a drop-off on both sides of the road. Would you still counter-steer or try leaning? Which wouldkeep the bike in the track with min.slipping on the loose rocks?
In that case, what difference does it make if you countersteering or use a weight shift method? Since you can't change your lean angle either way, I'd say you've already screwed the pooch and it's time to bend over, kiss your ***, and pay the piper!
I've been in loose gravel before on the Goldwing I used to own. I never actually dropped it but I sure thought I was going to until I got clear of the gravel. The point is, if you don't have enough traction to maintain balance, like on a heavily graveled road, you're probably going to drop it regardless of how you think you're steering the bike. Countersteering is and always has been the primary means of steering a motorcycle.
Steve R.
I counter steer ... and let fast riders pass me on the gravel patches.
#23
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: beary
This turned out to be false. There were several riders who later got it to turn by leaning once they got used to the bike. They just needed a little time to get used to it.
Bikes are built so that the front wheel turns in the direction of the turn once the bike leans. Ask anyone who cruises with their hands off the grips. Yes, I know that is stupid, unsafe, crazy, bla bla bla, but leaning is how they control the bike.
Beary
ORIGINAL: skratch
there was a video of a test bike where the guy had 2 sets of handlebars, one was fixed. the idea was to show folks how countersteering works, and leaning doesn't. a bunch of folks who said that they steer by leaning found out the hard way that leaning didn't get them squat..... yes, they were leaning, but countersteering got them turning. they were just leaning in response to the bike leaning into a turn. not vice versa
there was a video of a test bike where the guy had 2 sets of handlebars, one was fixed. the idea was to show folks how countersteering works, and leaning doesn't. a bunch of folks who said that they steer by leaning found out the hard way that leaning didn't get them squat..... yes, they were leaning, but countersteering got them turning. they were just leaning in response to the bike leaning into a turn. not vice versa
Bikes are built so that the front wheel turns in the direction of the turn once the bike leans. Ask anyone who cruises with their hands off the grips. Yes, I know that is stupid, unsafe, crazy, bla bla bla, but leaning is how they control the bike.
Beary
The key words on your response are in the first sentense of the second paragraph. I quote you here with a slight modification for emphisis:
Bikes are built so that the front wheel turns in the direction of the turn once the bike leans.
Ride Safe,
Steve R.
#24
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: beary
This turned out to be false. There were several riders who later got it to turn by leaning once they got used to the bike. They just needed a little time to get used to it.
Bikes are built so that the front wheel turns in the direction of the turn once the bike leans. Ask anyone who cruises with their hands off the grips. Yes, I know that is stupid, unsafe, crazy, bla bla bla, but leaning is how they control the bike.
Beary
ORIGINAL: skratch
there was a video of a test bike where the guy had 2 sets of handlebars, one was fixed. the idea was to show folks how countersteering works, and leaning doesn't. a bunch of folks who said that they steer by leaning found out the hard way that leaning didn't get them squat..... yes, they were leaning, but countersteering got them turning. they were just leaning in response to the bike leaning into a turn. not vice versa
there was a video of a test bike where the guy had 2 sets of handlebars, one was fixed. the idea was to show folks how countersteering works, and leaning doesn't. a bunch of folks who said that they steer by leaning found out the hard way that leaning didn't get them squat..... yes, they were leaning, but countersteering got them turning. they were just leaning in response to the bike leaning into a turn. not vice versa
Bikes are built so that the front wheel turns in the direction of the turn once the bike leans. Ask anyone who cruises with their hands off the grips. Yes, I know that is stupid, unsafe, crazy, bla bla bla, but leaning is how they control the bike.
Beary
What does countersteering actually do???? Now think real hard, you push forward on the left grip and the bikes does what??
Oh yeah...it leans..... and it leans a whole lot faster and father than you can phyically make it by just attempting to lean it with a weight shift of your body.
On my Ultra if I shift my weightI shift 210 pounds..... and then ........850+ pounds of bike reacts to that shift.
If I countersteer, I shift 1070+ pounds all at once(Bike and me will lean all at once).
#25
RE: counter-stear or lean?
The (cross-section) smaller curvature of the side of the tire causes the bike to turn. Like rolling a cone on a flat surface. It goes in circles. Just what a tire does when it's patch is ina smaller circumference. It forces the bike to go in the direction of the pressure applied because of the increased number of revolutions on the inside versus the apex of the tire. Hard to explain without drawing pictures.
There's a great book out by David Hough called Proficient Motorcycling where he goes into the physics.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input. I'm glad I caught some interest in this subjectbecause it is fundimental to riding a motorcycle.
Ride safe this weekend.
Jim
There's a great book out by David Hough called Proficient Motorcycling where he goes into the physics.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input. I'm glad I caught some interest in this subjectbecause it is fundimental to riding a motorcycle.
Ride safe this weekend.
Jim
#26
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: Intrepid175
It's takes the countersteering input to get it to lean in the first place. "Afterwords," what you say is true. Anyone who says they can control the bike as well with "just" weight shifting and no countersteering is either riding a very light bike at relatively sedate speeds or totally full of of it!
It's takes the countersteering input to get it to lean in the first place. "Afterwords," what you say is true. Anyone who says they can control the bike as well with "just" weight shifting and no countersteering is either riding a very light bike at relatively sedate speeds or totally full of of it!
I conceed your the experts. So, why does a bike lean left when you push push left? If you agree the wheel has to turn left to turn the bike left, then how does that work by pushing the wheel right with counter pressure?
Barry
#27
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: jchico
The (cross-section) smaller curvature of the side of the tire causes the bike to turn. Like rolling a cone on a flat surface. It goes in circles. Just what a tire does when it's patch is ina smaller circumference. It forces the bike to go in the direction of the pressure applied because of the increased number of revolutions on the inside versus the apex of the tire. Hard to explain without drawing pictures.
There's a great book out by David Hough called Proficient Motorcycling where he goes into the physics.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input. I'm glad I caught some interest in this subjectbecause it is fundimental to riding a motorcycle.
Ride safe this weekend.
Jim
The (cross-section) smaller curvature of the side of the tire causes the bike to turn. Like rolling a cone on a flat surface. It goes in circles. Just what a tire does when it's patch is ina smaller circumference. It forces the bike to go in the direction of the pressure applied because of the increased number of revolutions on the inside versus the apex of the tire. Hard to explain without drawing pictures.
There's a great book out by David Hough called Proficient Motorcycling where he goes into the physics.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input. I'm glad I caught some interest in this subjectbecause it is fundimental to riding a motorcycle.
Ride safe this weekend.
Jim
#28
RE: counter-stear or lean?
ORIGINAL: RanD
BINGO...That right there is a perfect explanation of what's going on when we turn a bike. Before I began riding road bikes, I rode several dirt bikes, and all of it was self-taught.It wasn't untilmy wife took the Rider's Edge class that Ilearned what was meant by counter-steering. Now that I know, I 'consciously' use it all of the time. I suppose that I was always doing it, but now that I'm conscious of what's going on, its a lot more fun to experiment with.
ORIGINAL: jchico
The (cross-section) smaller curvature of the side of the tire causes the bike to turn. Like rolling a cone on a flat surface. It goes in circles. Just what a tire does when it's patch is ina smaller circumference. It forces the bike to go in the direction of the pressure applied because of the increased number of revolutions on the inside versus the apex of the tire. Hard to explain without drawing pictures.
There's a great book out by David Hough called Proficient Motorcycling where he goes into the physics.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input. I'm glad I caught some interest in this subjectbecause it is fundimental to riding a motorcycle.
Ride safe this weekend.
Jim
The (cross-section) smaller curvature of the side of the tire causes the bike to turn. Like rolling a cone on a flat surface. It goes in circles. Just what a tire does when it's patch is ina smaller circumference. It forces the bike to go in the direction of the pressure applied because of the increased number of revolutions on the inside versus the apex of the tire. Hard to explain without drawing pictures.
There's a great book out by David Hough called Proficient Motorcycling where he goes into the physics.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input. I'm glad I caught some interest in this subjectbecause it is fundimental to riding a motorcycle.
Ride safe this weekend.
Jim
One of the best explanations of steering dynamics in motorcycles can be found here.......... (click link)
http://www.msgroup.org/TIP048.html
#29
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