I think I agree. So what would need to be done to make intermediate safety more closely resemble advanced safety?
Honestly i think it's mostly due to experience. So i don't know how you'd fix that......
Part of being predicable is how well you're able to hit your markers every lap as well as how you set your entry, mid and exit speeds. The less experienced riders are simply unable to do it as well.. hence why they're in the intermediate group.
But by that logic, the beginner group should be even more dangerous than the intermediate group, which apparently it isn't. Compared to intermediates, beginners are either (a) more cautious, or (b) going so slowly that they can't get into as much trouble.
But by that logic, the beginner group should be even more dangerous than the intermediate group, which apparently it isn't. Compared to intermediates, beginners are either (a) more cautious, or (b) going so slowly that they can't get into as much trouble.
Honestly i think it's mostly due to experience. So i don't know how you'd fix that......
Honestly i think it's mostly due to experience. So i don't know how you'd fix that......
Part of being predicable is how well you're able to hit your markers every lap as well as how you set your entry, mid and exit speeds. The less experienced riders are simply unable to do it as well.. hence why they're in the intermediate group.
sucks, yet the guy that did the passing should have been thrown out I think, no passing during a turn in intermediate is the rule, unless it works different in the states.It is hard to weed these things out of intermediate.... it really is the danger spot typically.
At my last trackday (Jennings - I had a soccer injury, so I have barely ridden this season) there was a really bad crash the one day. Some dude decided to dive up the inside going into a VERY fast corner and when things weren't looking good he panicked, lowsided into the other rider. Anyway.... not going to say much more than everyone lived..... but I was the second rider past the scene and it didn't look good at the time.
Anyway, how do you prevent that? The rider that got taken out had 0 chance.... but there was a bit of a speed differential happening for sure..... she probably should have been in beginner, but on the same token they guy making the pass wasn't thinking either. On the final day I stepped into Advanced and had a great time riding by myself and getting passed by the odd very fast rider that would disappear after a few corners.
Dunno - I was worried I'd be too slow for advanced, but it sure felt WAAAAAY safer.
... I think a nice loud speaker phone that reminds people "it's not a race, you win nothing, you can ONLY lose today, so ride smart, ride safe, NO racing, do not weave, do not look behind you, stay on your line and do not move out of the way of riders"...
...if you have a speakerphone blaring rules in your face at 8am you're gonna listen, whether you like it or not.
...Perhaps we need a list that will get stickied.
...a one post sticky with universal rules that some more experienced riders can carefully come up with.
As the rider at that level, what are the main things I need to do to not create a risk for others, and what are the main things I need to watch for from others in that group?
If you want to manage the risk ... manage the errors that can either cause YOU to crash or to cause others to crash around you.
You can manage this risk but you can not completely eliminate it. Still ... managing that portion of the risk which is YOUR responsibility, is the best you can do.
Factors that can make YOU crash ... this is just a start ...
Riding over your head. (so DON'T - stay within your comfort limits)
Insufficient training. (Take a course - there are many available and they are ALL good)
Incorrect cornering lines. (See "training")
Being rough with the controls. First get smooth, then getting faster will come by itself because you are no longer upsetting the bike.
Equipment failures. (1. Tires. 2. Suspension. 3. Fluid levels. 4. Fluid containment and safety wiring - ALL fluids. 5. General preventive inspection and maintenance.)
Riding when tired, mentally or physically, or angry for whatever reason. (Take a break!)
Factors that can make others crash around you and possibly take you out ...
Being unpredictable, particularly on corner entrance. Pick your entrance point into the next corner at the BEGINNING of the straightaway leading up to that corner and go STRAIGHT to your entrance point. No weaving back and forth and no changing your mind at the last second that you are too far inside and that you need to suddenly go to the outside of the track as you approach the corner ... and I'm describing that situation in detail because someone did that to me, when I was the faster rider that had already committed to passing the slower one on the outside going into that corner and was already at maximum braking when the slower rider suddenly changed direction in front of me and took away the line that I was committed to ... (I made it through but it was REALLY close, FAR too close for comfort - by the way, this happened in red group, so the other rider ought to have known better)
Don't cross the blend line when entering the track. Particular importance at Shannonville and Cayuga. Hang a right across that line before you are up to speed, and you are going to get hit by someone already on the track at full speed, and there's nothing the other rider can do because they're already committed to that speed and that cornering line.
Pay attention to the meaning of red flag in rider's meeting. In some cases you are to slow down and proceed to a normal track exit, in other cases you are to slow down and stop at the next marshal station. In BOTH cases do NOT slam on the brakes in case the rider behind did not see the red flag. Best practice is to put your left hand up and close the throttle, do NOT apply the brake, and coast down. If that coasting takes you past the very first marshal station where you saw the flag ... so be it, keep on coasting and go to the next one.
If you have to slow down abnormally on the track, e.g. you are running out of gas, put a hand up and do NOT cross the normal racing line. Commit to exiting the racing surface to either left or right and don't change your mind.
And speaking of that ... don't run out of gas on the track. Put enough in.
So take this back to riding in the beginner group. Assume many are working on the basics: braking to the right speed before turn in, not starting the turn too early, coming somewhere remotely close to the apex. As the rider at that level, what are the main things I need to do to not create a risk for others, and what are the main things I need to watch for from others in that group?
When Jason ran his PIMP days, they would have marshals out wearing a high visability vest and see how everyone was doing.
Most organizers have on track marshals and/or coaches... just not all of them wear the don't-hit-me vest.
I know Calabogie well. I know Mosport less well. I know Laguna Seca not at all. I will vary my riding group according to the track I'm visiting, and the track day organiser. If in doubt begin at the bottom. It'll take 1 session to find out if you're in the right group or not. As an example, I'm looking to book a day at Mosport with Pro 6. A track I'm not very familiar with and an organisation that tends to have strong, experienced riders. I'm contemplating booking beginner to give myself time to learn and get up to speed. If I have to run the entire day in beginner then so be it. You have to be sensible in your choices even before you get to the track.
Well they didn't have to throw him out.... both of them got a ride to the ER.sucks, yet the guy that did the passing should have been thrown out I think, no passing during a turn in intermediate is the rule, unless it works different in the states.