It's almost always due to target fixation. Fixating on something irrelative and not looking where you're suppose to be going. Your bike follows your hands and your hands follow your eyes. This also applies to riding equestrian lolquick question:
when riders blow a corner and run off into the cat tails or a guard rail
what is the usual cause?
The rider, not the bike, not the tires. The bike always has more to give (assuming the rider hasn't gone in incredibly hot), the rider screws it up.quick question:
when riders blow a corner and run off into the cat tails or a guard rail
what is the usual cause?
The Harley.quick question:
when riders blow a corner and run off into the cat tails or a guard rail
what is the usual cause?
I have witnessed this first hand more than a dozen times in the last few years, in all cases I have seen it's simply a matter of rider experience. The tires were fine, the bike was fine, a capable rider would have been fine -- the rider simply exited their skill envelope then entered a learning envelope.quick question:
when riders blow a corner and run off into the cat tails or a guard rail
what is the usual cause?
........... riders blow a corner and run off into the cat tails or a guard rail. what is the usual cause?
Rider exceeded traction expectations and failed to negotiate the turn?quick question:
when riders blow a corner and run off into the cat tails or a guard rail
what is the usual cause?
I don't mean to take this too far off topic, but what do you mean by feels like riding through glue?The stock front tire on my 2004 ZX10R gave the bike head-shake when slowing down through about 70 km/h, and it was a common complaint, not just me, and the recommendation back then was "Replace that tire with anything else", and it was true. Haven't had it happen with any other front tire since. It was bad enough that I'm surprised it got through OEM validation testing.
Same bike, Bridgestone BT016 tires made it steer like riding through glue. Hated those. "Replace with anything else" problem solved.
There are certainly differences in wear patterns and longevity.
On my race bike (Yamaha R3), I had one set of Michelin Evo tires on it, and I could not solve them threatening to slide the front before the rear before I wore them out (which didn't take very long). I know someone else (on a different bike) who swears by those tires. I swore at them.
I had zero complaints about the Bridgestone slicks that I used on my previous race bike; I have zero complaints about the Dunlop slicks that I'm using on the current one.
I think he's referring to inexperienced riders that just go wide and ride off the road.Rider exceeded traction expectations and failed to negotiate the turn?
... did the front wheel slide first, the rear wheel slide first or did they both slide the same amount?
What tire slid first? If said rider failed to discover the root cause, then they failed to learn from the experience.I think he's referring to inexperienced riders that just go wide and ride off the road.
? yep, that happens.... new to me bike that seems to need a lot more countersteering effort than my other bike ...
Taller bars tends to increase leverage.What about bar risers? Would that make the bike harder to lean? (2005 Concours 1000) I'm not too worried about it. We haven't gotten to know each other yet