Charlie-brm
Well-known member
First season I was feeling clumsy with left turns, running wide on open road curves. Not so much on street turns, but still....
What helped was #1 visual - picking targets to lead me through the curve because I seemed to need more concentration to do that going left.
#2 - taking my right hand almost completely off the grip so my left arm - not hand - had to be entirely controlling the steer.
While doing that on a sweeper that lasted ten seconds or longer, I could safely play with the push from my left arm and tighten or widen the steer, in effect "teaching" my left arm how much push it needed. Also thinking of the effort coming from up around the elbow and not down at the hand helped a bunch.
One of the first things I noticed was my left arm hadn't been really putting as much pressure on the bar as I thought it was when I used both hands. The right arm was picking up the slack so to speak, and not very well.
What helped was #1 visual - picking targets to lead me through the curve because I seemed to need more concentration to do that going left.
#2 - taking my right hand almost completely off the grip so my left arm - not hand - had to be entirely controlling the steer.
While doing that on a sweeper that lasted ten seconds or longer, I could safely play with the push from my left arm and tighten or widen the steer, in effect "teaching" my left arm how much push it needed. Also thinking of the effort coming from up around the elbow and not down at the hand helped a bunch.
One of the first things I noticed was my left arm hadn't been really putting as much pressure on the bar as I thought it was when I used both hands. The right arm was picking up the slack so to speak, and not very well.
Last edited: