- Joined
- Oct 19, 2005
- Messages
- 18,978
Hobot, with a road racer it always pays to go fast slowly, and work up to speed. Practice makes perfect.
I suspect about everyone but me picked up a Norton on purpose then worked up skills. Not me first ever Norton ride wheelied me like a flag off bars to end in perfect locked up frame side slide like a stunter bounced up right on curb infront of houses. totally expecting to die the whole time. Got ok on handling the power after that but never could learn leaning on the dragster. Then landed in Ozarks to crash every ride for days and often afterwards just making it to terra firma. No creeping up on it so finally went bezerk to tackle THE Gravel then moved on to tarmac and a corner school I found limits of normal handling then made myself do what I came to, NAIL it it knowing it was going to really break loose at high speed but not what would happen after. Similar to just tooling along safe rate on THE Gravel and front rolls up a walnut size stone the rear hits like a marble, Bingo flat tracker stunt rider clown act on surface that now acts like snot. Some energy barriers ya can't tip toe across but must freaking commit to the leap. I repeat even though I got to take on the local squids with Suvee no way can I get her powered up to set up to even practice Peel's entries let alone the higher loads the rest the way around. I repeat watching elite racers is counter productive and all I can see it how limited their cycles are and how I'd go around them this way or that as there is no perfect line on a totally neutral handling cycle as long as torque enough on tap to over come tire or bike mass reaction.
Past Peel was at least 50 lb lighter than started out but same steel rims and heavy dual purpose tires/tubes that may of added to the fork twist/rubber band connection action-reaction delays. But that resolved with RGM fork brace after turmoil to fit right was well worth it. So what would lighter wheels do for Peel? They ain't all that lighter any way compared to what's been shown and done before. Peel never slipped w/o intending nor twitched even though I tried to find a way to induce it. Could crank over sharper and sharper on more and more power till she had all mass on rear and pulled sideways wheelie out of a peg sctaching lean angle, draining blood out of vision too. Could go in even faster and trade one direction speed for another by over power rear at next to last instant from edge of road so whole bike mostly side ways to motion would hook at last instant to fling up off surface like a sling shot in the right direct to smash patch down to take even more power out of there. No more throttle cut than to snick a speed shift, which Peel would do in mid turns running out of rpm. I just ain't got much respect for cycles that scare me or hurt others attempting this.
Would Peel break free easier or take longer to hook back up with lighter wheels? Could I flick forks faster with lighter wheels? As it was I just let the bars tank slap one half cycle on their own way faster harder than I could move em myself. Would I be able to fling Peel over faster with lighter tires? As It was in some turns I was powering up so harsh where everyone else on brakes she instantly trip out on a slight tip for rear spin to a peg foul then I'd pick back up so rear'd hook up a leap forward and repeat a few times till corner cleared and solo rest of the way. Would Peel fly further or less far side ways on a phase 4 leap? Would she wind up frame tighter to fly higher than expected with lighter wheels? Will I tear the spokes out so have to go with a cast wheel? Will lighter wheel tend to spin tire or bead more on drag launches? Will lighter wheels be more scary on THE Gravel?