Uggghh.So many experts.Hurts the brain it does.Takes a long time on a forum to get to know who to listen to,and who to ignore.
45 years of racing motorcycles.
You?
The whole idea of trail braking is to increase the traction of the front wheel.
Why waste that traction with brakes that could come from the rear?
Here ya go kids, start reading
[/URL]
Spoiler: The rear wheel steers the motorcycle.
Is that rear tire intentionally in the air?Here's Marc Marquez trail braking into a turn.
Please explain how using the rear brake here is going to help traction in the front?
Then again, he doesn't have 45 years of racing motorcycles, so what does he know.
Is that rear tire intentionally in the air?
"It's done mainly with the front brake...."
Trail braking works with the front or rear.
Not that I’m terribly interested in racing, but is there any trackers that bikes have on them to see how racers use front vs rear brakes going through turns?
bitzz is right, you can trail brake using either and both. Might be a little scary using the rear if you don't know where the breaking point is for traction. Rear trailing increases a bikes stability, front trailing reduces it so the net impact of rear trailing is more than just the front.Where are you getting your information from?!?
First stop: Trail braking - WikipediaCan you please cite any reference of rear-brake-only trail braking?
I have never heard of this, and it doesn't make any sense in the context of what benefit trail-braking is supposed to provide.
Great collection of 80's era articles with not a single mention of trail braking anywhere on the site.
congratulations on your 45th first year of riding ?
Yes, by my working definition of trail braking, you are trail braking.I drag the rear for tight low speed turns. That's not the same thing is it? I'm talking very low speed.
So with the rear wheel in the air there isn't much more force he can put into that front suspension, huh?Here's Marc Marquez trail braking into a turn.
Please explain how using the rear brake here is going to help traction in the front?
Then again, he doesn't have 45 years of racing motorcycles, so what does he know.
Increase in traction happens but I think is the game changer is altering geometry — this is certainly the case on the street.Yes, by my working definition of trail braking, you are trail braking.
My definition of trail braking is using the brakes to move the vehicle's center of gravity forward to provide more cornering traction to the front wheel(s).