Fast Bikes

It’s all about ‘feel’ this month with Mr Code!

Being able to ‘feel’ what your motorcycle is doing is rather important, nay?

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Instinctiv­ely, that moment we take to feel the bike seems like a safe, logical, and natural part of riding. The problem lies in the fact that it can last a second or two.

Time equates to distance travelled and is further compounded by our body’s reaction lag once satisfacto­ry feel is achieved.

Getting back on the gas after braking seems quick enough, but it’s actually at least half a second, or three bike lengths, at a mere 30mph, or 12 bike lengths at 120mph, on top of the ‘wait-to-feel’ time.

To convert your turn entries from reaction time into what I call action time, you’d need to be perhaps a second or more ahead of that moment you burn ‘getting the feel of it’. Bluntly put, instead of waiting for the bike to give you permission to roll on gas, you stick to your plan and do it. Running by plan, the job becomes easier.

Contrary to our instincts, there is suddenly plenty of time and attention to spend on the bike. Overcoming the urge (and the barrier) to wait for confirmati­on from the bike is a major stage in any cornering enthusiast’s developmen­t.

Converting from reaction time to action time means eliminatin­g the wait-to-feel step. Put yourself and the bike into full control by having a predetermi­ned action-time plan and an ironclad decision to, as in this example, get back to gas. My own action-time breakthrou­gh was on a 250GP bike in turn three at Willow Springs.

The turn is flat on the entry and picks up a comforting 10-degrees or so of banking as it goes uphill. I was working out quick-flicking the bike into it while increasing entry speed, but I hit one of those frustratin­g ‘walls of improvemen­t’.

My effort level and anxiety were on the up, but there was no improvemen­t in lap times. Hmmm...

Thinking it through back in the pits, I realised that I had been waiting to feel that moment of ‘traction/line/lean and speed security’ as the bike hit and settled into the banking. I was waiting for confirmati­on. It had become part of my ‘plan’. It had become a point of timing for getting back to the gas.

My action-time plan was simple: Start the roll-on the instant I had the bike snapped over, about 1.75secs sooner than ever before. I tried it and it worked.

The difference in speed, feel, and stability was startling. Setting the plan and converting to action-time opened up a brand new world of throttle and bike control to me.

Prior to this, I would have rattled off a list of benefits of waiting, like how that feeling of security the banking offered was a satisfying sensation; that I was getting a lot of feel from the bike and tires; that the positive feedback was comforting; that it gave me a point of timing, a structure, a sequence, and a plan to ride that turn – and that I knew what to expect.

It was definitely rich with satisfying perception­s but complicate­d and slow. I had a self-created reaction-time barrier. Plans based on reaction time are all as flawed as this one was.

 ??  ?? Two-strokes always gave an abundance of feel...
Two-strokes always gave an abundance of feel...
 ??  ?? Then I cheered like this!
Then I cheered like this!

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