sinkoman
Party Escort Bot
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2004
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Yeah well I never used to consider a small slide a big deal.
Picture the scene: 21st October. A bright, sunny, yet cold autumn day. I'm going up and down my favourite road trying to get my knee down on my favourite bends. After a few "laps", I chuck it over into the corner at 60 and the knee misses, but the rear slides around and the footpeg digs in instead - then it regrips. I think nothing of it and try again.
Next go round, I'm approaching the same corner, holding it steady at 60mph, reach my turn in point and slam the bars in the right direction...
Bike starts to track around the bend when the rear slides again. Only, this time, it doesn't regrip and both myself and the machine get catapulted violently into the scenery.
I'm fortunate to be here at all to tell you this boring story. Slides ain't cool.
Slides in the dirt aren't nearly as scary as slides on the street.
I've never had a real slide on the street, i'm not comfortable enough yet with my bike on the street to toy around with the limits of grip. Fastest i've averaged through the local ocean cliff twisty section is a mild 45
But you have to realize that offroad, you're rarely ever going over 30. Well, the trails I ride at least. Hell, the trails I ride, you're lucky to get over 10-20. What I ride is tight, technical, muddy, and SLOOW. Those with razor sharp balance and clutch control reign supreme on my turf.
But even still, on the wide open fire roads of the mainland, you're rarely going 60+. And again, when you are going 60+, the slides are allot less scary than those on a street bike, because you're riding a 200 pound bike that seats about as upright as an office chair. I've never tossed my leg across a streetbike before, but i'd imagine that you've got allot more control over a 200 pound upright torque machine than a 300+ pound lay-on-the-tank rocket ship.
Hell, look at supermotos. A 450 SM will smoke even the quickest of streetbikes in the twisties with absolutely no troubles whatsoever. It's because of the way dirtbikes handle, they're allot more nimble, quick, and flickable. They're designed to slide into hairpins, and roost around berms.
And even if you did fall, it's allot easier to fall onto soft mud or dirt, than it is to fall onto concrete.