7
73dart
Guest
Wow, I didn't expect to see so many responses so fast... Thanks to all for the input! I'll include some responses below.
I took the basic MSF course to get my license - what a great class! I hope that all the instructors were as helpful as mine were. I did a wee bit of dirt biking when i was younger also, but I wouldn't really count that as experience.
I do plan to take the ERC this spring/summer to follow things up... and I definitely see some track days in my future. I've starting shopping around for racing leathers and trying to find an affordable track class.
I'm pretty confident it wasn't B - I drag the pegs/kickstand fairly regularly on the GS, so I'm pretty familiar with the feeling. I practiced figure 8's in a parking lot soon after I got the bike until I could put the pegs down on the GS - to the left, the kickstand feeler hits (sucks, cause it's rigid. I'm thinking about taking a sawsall to the little feeler), and on the right, a peg drags. It's hard work to drag the peg cause it's so high up. I didn't want to learn what dragging the bike felt like in an emergency situation, so i decided parking lot practice was in order.
This lowside was lean, lean, lean, on-the-ground... I had about enough time to think "I'm going dow..." before I was sliding. The bike did a lazy half turn as it slid away to a stop, which makes me think that the tires let go, and at pretty close to the same time (back slightly first, bike was on it's right side, rotating clockwise). ie - too fast for the turn. The road was clean and dry; happened around 2pm, so I don't think dew was a factor. no leaves or gravel. If there was liquid in the road, it wasn't visible.

What I've definately noticed is that the GS and the Ninja weigh almost the same, but the GS's center of gravity is significantly higher. Just a little bit of lean from me changes the angle of the bike in a turn a LOT. If I actually hang my butt off to the inside of a turn, I can make pretty quick turns with the bike practically straight up. Conversely, if I hang off to the outside of the turn, the bike leans waaaaay over to make the same line. So just a little bit of torso lean really changes how that one moves; I think it's the higher CG. The ninja on the other hand, doesn't seem to care as much where my torso is - if I want my body lean to significantly effect how much the bike leans, I really have to exaggerate it - hang my rear off the seat. I think it's due to a much lower CG. tight, low speed turns take me a lot more concentration on the Ninja than on the GS, for sure. But it could very well be that I'm just more familiar w/ the GS.
Phew... marathon post. Thanks again for all the responses. I'll certainly be pondering on this for a while.
Any prior riding experience or MSF class taken?
I took the basic MSF course to get my license - what a great class! I hope that all the instructors were as helpful as mine were. I did a wee bit of dirt biking when i was younger also, but I wouldn't really count that as experience.
I do plan to take the ERC this spring/summer to follow things up... and I definitely see some track days in my future. I've starting shopping around for racing leathers and trying to find an affordable track class.
The tires are Metzeler Lasertec's - PO said they're about a year old. I don't think he liked to lean a whole lot; they're more worn in the center than the edges, but still plenty of tread. Looking at the profile of the tires, I halfway wonder if I could have leaned off the tread of the rear tire.Assumming clear, clean, dry pavement, 1 of 2 things happened. Either A) traction gave out as you leaned and the tires slid out from under you. Or B) you were leaned so far over that you dragged something (foot peg?) that didn't give causing the tires to break grip with the ground.
I'm pretty confident it wasn't B - I drag the pegs/kickstand fairly regularly on the GS, so I'm pretty familiar with the feeling. I practiced figure 8's in a parking lot soon after I got the bike until I could put the pegs down on the GS - to the left, the kickstand feeler hits (sucks, cause it's rigid. I'm thinking about taking a sawsall to the little feeler), and on the right, a peg drags. It's hard work to drag the peg cause it's so high up. I didn't want to learn what dragging the bike felt like in an emergency situation, so i decided parking lot practice was in order.
This lowside was lean, lean, lean, on-the-ground... I had about enough time to think "I'm going dow..." before I was sliding. The bike did a lazy half turn as it slid away to a stop, which makes me think that the tires let go, and at pretty close to the same time (back slightly first, bike was on it's right side, rotating clockwise). ie - too fast for the turn. The road was clean and dry; happened around 2pm, so I don't think dew was a factor. no leaves or gravel. If there was liquid in the road, it wasn't visible.
I picked the standard outside-inside-outside line (in my lane) through the turn. I could see all the way through the curve, so I wasn't shooting for a late apex. I went down slightly before the apex, i believe. This turn was on-camber, and inclined.I think you're line thru the corner might reveal if you were going too fast for the curve.
I'm still not sure on the physics of that. I do it sometimes on tight left turns on the GS to keep the kickstand feeler from scraping. I thought the advantage of it was simply that it let you keep the same line, with less lean in the bike - ie, keep in the good part of the tires and keep bike parts from scraping, not that it somehow grants more g's through the turn. But I claim no expertise in the subject...Hanging off can increase the cornering speeds.
What I've definately noticed is that the GS and the Ninja weigh almost the same, but the GS's center of gravity is significantly higher. Just a little bit of lean from me changes the angle of the bike in a turn a LOT. If I actually hang my butt off to the inside of a turn, I can make pretty quick turns with the bike practically straight up. Conversely, if I hang off to the outside of the turn, the bike leans waaaaay over to make the same line. So just a little bit of torso lean really changes how that one moves; I think it's the higher CG. The ninja on the other hand, doesn't seem to care as much where my torso is - if I want my body lean to significantly effect how much the bike leans, I really have to exaggerate it - hang my rear off the seat. I think it's due to a much lower CG. tight, low speed turns take me a lot more concentration on the Ninja than on the GS, for sure. But it could very well be that I'm just more familiar w/ the GS.
These are definitely on my reading list - I'll be ordering them soon. I've been doing the auto racing thing, so I'm still finishing Carrol Smith's "<blank> To Win" books. I'm almost done with "Drive to Win".Two things I would recommend get and study David L. Hough's books "Proficient Motorcycling" (2 books), "Ride Hard Ride Smart" by Pat Hahn and "Total Control" by Lee Parks.
And you're right. I was pushing my limits when & where i shouldn't have been. I've always been pretty careful about driving on the roads and racing on the race tracks with my cars; i shouldn't have let my enthusiasm on the bike get the better of me. I definitely need to do some track days when the weather gets warmer. That curve just happened to look like The Perfect Corner, so I opened it up and pretty much committed to the point where I had to either make the turn or crash.Single vehicle crash at 50 MPH in a corner sounds like racing to me.
Phew... marathon post. Thanks again for all the responses. I'll certainly be pondering on this for a while.