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5th February 2023
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XL FORUM TEAM MEMBER
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: On a farm
Posts: 7,301 Sportster/Buell Model: XL77.2R Sportster/Buell Year: 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kitabel
"Until I fully understood this principle I was having trouble with big heavy bikes"
Exactly my experience. I couldn't shift my 145 lbs. offside enough to make my Twin Cam go where I wanted it, until I decided to handle the bars as if I were in a rodeo! Approaching a curve too fast? Pull hard on that bar, the bike heels over like a ship with the rudder hard over. Problem solved.
It will feel a bit weird at first, but (if you know your mount well) if you use baby steps your confidence will grow, until you can weave in & out as if they were traffic cones instead of automobiles.
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Pull hard on that bar will have the opposite effect, you remove weight from the other side. You've to push on that handlebar side to turn the way you want in countersteer. 
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5th February 2023
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XL FORUM TEAM MEMBER
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Victoria BC
Posts: 1,623 Sportster/Buell Model: shovester project Sportster/Buell Year: 80s Other Motorcycle Model: Kawasaki kz440 Other Motorcycle Year: 1983
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rejeanprimeau
Pull hard on that bar will have the opposite effect, you remove weight from the other side. You've to push on that handlebar side to turn the way you want in countersteer. 
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Push on one side = Pull on other side, no difference. He didn’t say which side he was pulling on. So nothing to correct in what he said.
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5th February 2023
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Flat Track Racer
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Join Date: Sep 2021
Posts: 200 Sportster/Buell Model: XLH Sportster/Buell Year: 72 Sportster/Buell Model #2: XLCH Sportster/Buell Year #2: 71 Other Motorcycle Model: Five Harleys
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Pushing the bar and sliding your body into the turn should be one motion for smooth fast cornering. Add trail braking to this and it's a concert of movement that the best master and we enjoy watching in slow motion.
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5th February 2023
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XL FORUM TEAM MEMBER
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Join Date: May 2019
Location: surrey, bc
Posts: 409 Sportster/Buell Model: xlch Sportster/Buell Year: 1972 Other Motorcycle Model: homebilt fxr Other Motorcycle Year: 80+
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joe s
I agree, but it might have been sportys remained the same while the industry advanced around them?
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it was and they pretty much said so in later articles
there was some enthusiasm there [cw] when the xr came out, tho
__________________
pete
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5th February 2023
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XL FORUM TEAM MEMBER
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Sunshine Coast
Posts: 8,971 Sportster/Buell Model: XLB, XLCH, Sporton Sportster/Buell Year: 1962 Sportster/Buell Model #2: XLCH Sportster/Buell Year #2: 1966 Other Motorcycle Model: XLCH (Another one) Other Motorcycle Year: 1966
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joe s
Pushing the bar and sliding your body into the turn should be one motion for smooth fast cornering. Add trail braking to this and it's a concert of movement that the best master and we enjoy watching in slow motion.
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"Moderns" are ridden quite differently now.
You "square off" the corner. Leave the braking until the last minute and then stand on the brakes. Flick the bike through the tightest angle you can, then accelerate out of it.
The really fast guys carry the front wheel through the corner with the back wheel spinning. (Don't try that at home)
But this can cause problems when you mix the two styles. We even have this problem with sidecars when we run "mixed" periods.
When your riding with your mates it helps to know which style they are using.
__________________
"I know only too well the evil that I propose. But my inclinations get the better of me."
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6th February 2023
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Flat Track Racer
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Join Date: Sep 2021
Posts: 200 Sportster/Buell Model: XLH Sportster/Buell Year: 72 Sportster/Buell Model #2: XLCH Sportster/Buell Year #2: 71 Other Motorcycle Model: Five Harleys
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ferrous Head
"Moderns" are ridden quite differently now.
You "square off" the corner. Leave the braking until the last minute and then stand on the brakes. Flick the bike through the tightest angle you can, then accelerate out of it.
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I was taught old school, what they call vintage roadracing now, and slight 2-wheel drift is as radical as I got. I concede that watching Moto GP I can't tell what line they are taking, but they do spin that back wheel like a dirt bike. I guess it started with supercross, but they have banked corners to square off?
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6th February 2023
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XL FORUM TEAM MEMBER
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Sunshine Coast
Posts: 8,971 Sportster/Buell Model: XLB, XLCH, Sporton Sportster/Buell Year: 1962 Sportster/Buell Model #2: XLCH Sportster/Buell Year #2: 1966 Other Motorcycle Model: XLCH (Another one) Other Motorcycle Year: 1966
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Nope, no banking's.
They guys that ride like that are young, fit and have perfect balance, perfect throttle control and a lot of experience.
But your right, they are riding them like dirt bikes, but on tarmack.
Of course, I can still ride like that, I just choose not too. (Also Ducati are really pi**ed at me and won't give me a bike.)
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6th February 2023
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Flat Track Racer
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Join Date: Sep 2021
Posts: 200 Sportster/Buell Model: XLH Sportster/Buell Year: 72 Sportster/Buell Model #2: XLCH Sportster/Buell Year #2: 71 Other Motorcycle Model: Five Harleys
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ferrous Head
Nope, no banking's.
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I meant the supercross guys have high banked turns 
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6th February 2023
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XL FORUM TEAM MEMBER
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: On a farm
Posts: 7,301 Sportster/Buell Model: XL77.2R Sportster/Buell Year: 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by billeuze
Push on one side = Pull on other side, no difference. He didn’t say which side he was pulling on. So nothing to correct in what he said.
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Approaching a curve pull hard on ''that'' bar, the side of the curve go???
''That opposite'' bar will have be more easy to understand.
Ah never mind, oups wrong thread.
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