The One Braking MISTAKE That Could Cost You Your Life

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  • Опубліковано 17 жов 2024
  • Braking into corners is a technique only for the racetrack! Riders should NEVER brake in a corner. Do all your braking before the corner and then gently accelerate throughout the turn to stabilize the bike. Or maybe not?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 583

  • @MSM1956
    @MSM1956 3 місяці тому +105

    I was initially taught to never break in a corner. As a result, when I came in a turn too fast and ran out of lean angle. I crashed. While recuperating I discovered your channel and learned about trail breaking. After recuperating I traveled the same road and applied the trail breaking technique I learned with great success.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +13

      Sorry you crashed, but we all have a similar story, right? I'm willing to bet that corner where you fell, for the rider you are today is a mellow, boring corner.

    • @StewieTopless
      @StewieTopless 3 місяці тому +4

      This exact thing happened to me also… I forced myself to overcome that & trail braking was the safest way to brake while cornering to guarantee I’ve properly adjusted my speed

    • @eugeniustheodidactus8890
      @eugeniustheodidactus8890 3 місяці тому +2

      Also looking good through the cones on your Road King.... nice.

    • @crash86ed
      @crash86ed 3 місяці тому +5

      brake not break

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +8

      @@crash86ed Autocorrect is terrible. In the auto-captioning files I have to chase down every "Brake/Break" and every "Writer/Rider". It's exhausting and I know I miss them all the time.

  • @marksmallman4572
    @marksmallman4572 3 місяці тому +68

    I have been trial braking for over 45 years, zero throttle, gentle one finger pressure to compress the suspension slightly to push the tyre into the tarmac, never had a problem, still upright!

    • @davidcolin6519
      @davidcolin6519 2 місяці тому +4

      I've been riding a similar amount of time. I was taught never to brake in a corner, but that was with those godawful tyres of the 70s. Even as early as the early 80s, tyre technology and compounds had improved so much that braking all the way to the apex could be considered under good conditions, but it wasn't something I would do in the pretty habitual rainy, potholed and slimy conditions in the UK.
      Modern riders have no idea of how good modern tyres are.

    • @aluisious
      @aluisious 2 місяці тому +4

      Sounds like a successful trial, you can start doing it as a regular thing now.

    • @williamdabbs1075
      @williamdabbs1075 2 місяці тому

      Nice one.

    • @Ukmongoose3
      @Ukmongoose3 2 місяці тому

      @@aluisioushahahahahahaha I get this

    • @vicinvesta8349
      @vicinvesta8349 Місяць тому

      On my bike if I rolled off the throttle with clutch in I would stop almost on a dime unless I am like in 6th gear.

  • @mitchrichardson744
    @mitchrichardson744 3 місяці тому +46

    "Don't be afraid of corners, be afraid of doing something abrupt in corners!" I had a big accident on track in 2018. Just about lost my foot. I became really slow after that. I was terrified of corners for like 3 years. Focusing my fear on being abrupt, instead of generically on the corner made all the difference for me. I'm fast again. I'm safer and corners are fun again. Thanks Dave!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +2

      I love it! And you are indeed fast again!

  • @Roll_and_Rock
    @Roll_and_Rock 3 місяці тому +13

    For years, I rode where my right hand was either gripping the throttle or gripping the front brake. This meant having to reposition my fingers between these two, reducing my response time. It was either throttle or brake, with a gap of time as my hand changed grip.
    When I learned to trail break, I first needed to learn how to have two fingers over the brake while also gripping the throttle. Street riders are never taught this technique but it has dramatically changed my riding for the better. The transition from rolling off the throttle to braking is so much smoother and allows more nuanced control.
    Thank you for the great video, I'd love to see one that is on this grip technique.

  • @Anderzander
    @Anderzander 3 місяці тому +8

    Great video - as always. A lot of my corners go like this though:
    1. Roll off the throttle
    2. Reach to the front brake
    3. Sneak/Squeeze the front brake
    4. Feel the weight transfer
    5. Realise I’ve over slowed as a kid on a push bike nearly runs into the back of me.
    6. Have to get back onto a neutral throttle to go through the corner
    7. Think CanyonChasers would be so disappointed in me.
    8. Repeat on the next corner.
    Rolling off the throttle completely, and loading the front, I think only works if you are going into the corner faster than you are in fact comfortable travelling through it at ..

  • @rockettman2025
    @rockettman2025 3 місяці тому +32

    I was riding with a friend and his son recently. I ride a goldwing, they both were on FJRs. The son mentioned he had trouble understanding why I was braking for every corner but he was having trouble keeping up. I laughed and sent him one of your videos. He now gets it.

  • @Cake...
    @Cake... 3 місяці тому +12

    Best description of trailbraking I've heard so far. All the other videos I've watched are just too confusing, but this video pares it down to its fundamental structure. Thanks so much for posting.

  • @michaelsupple6081
    @michaelsupple6081 2 місяці тому +4

    You got me trail braking several years ago and I consider it one of the most helpful skills I've learned. I use it on every ride and I am shocked at the resistance I receive when I bring up the subject. It's saved my bacon a few times when turns have been sharper than I thought, simply by gently applying a bit more brake pressure while already trail braking.. Thanks so much.

  • @beepbop6697
    @beepbop6697 3 місяці тому +15

    6:57 I love that tire grip loading demonstration. It explains the concept perfectly. Stay smooth on the brakes!

    • @Wolfox360
      @Wolfox360 2 місяці тому

      The problem is that on normal roads the hit can come from the opposite side. If you hard turn in to corners, you are stiffening your suspensions, now you get a hole or a crack on the road, suspension can't copy the surface, there comes the hit and loose grip.

    • @alexanderjanke1538
      @alexanderjanke1538 11 днів тому

      ​@@Wolfox360You never load your suspension to the maximum, and if you do you should change it for a harder one or just loose some weight 😅 your tires can handle way more then 99% of riders. Hitting a potthole or a piece of wood mid high lean is no problem. I was at a safety training 2 times and we rode over a wood plank 2-3cm high, or around 1inch. 1inch= 2,54cm? Something like that, mid high lean of corse and it worked perfectly. Matter fact I rode over it with more lean then others did without the wooden plank. Like many many thinks when riding: most of the time you and your brain are the problem

  • @andrewmorgan81
    @andrewmorgan81 3 місяці тому +14

    Never used to call it trail braking it was just how you rode. Fascinating to see how much attention it gets today. Great video please keep it up!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +4

      Right. I kinda wish it didn't have a name. The concept in itself is the most intuivite thing in the world.

    • @colinnicols5387
      @colinnicols5387 2 місяці тому

      Ya, good riding used to be so natural. Now, seems you have to read 12 books and watch 52 videos to just get out the driveway. That said, with the power and speed capabilities and all the track hype these days, i can see how a bit more coaching could be a good thing. But it still comes down to the mindset of the rider.

  • @nathanwalters7790
    @nathanwalters7790 2 місяці тому +4

    In a sea of confusing conversation about trail breaking this was the most clear and relatable. Thanks.

  • @dutch_martyr
    @dutch_martyr 3 місяці тому +2

    New rider of 8 months here and I've been consuming your content with glee. Love these trail braking and "anti" going wide videos! Please keep them coming! Not enough people can articulate the how to drive a motorcycle adeptly!

    • @InterimExec
      @InterimExec 3 місяці тому

      Always be selective to who you listen to

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      Thank you. Running wide is not fun. Precision and control sure is, though!

  • @guitarmike4ever
    @guitarmike4ever 3 місяці тому +16

    Excellent advice. One thing I wish more coaches would teach is covering the front brake at all times with 1 or 2 fingers - thank you Andy! It only took me a week to get used to after 30+ years and > 250K miles of road riding. That ~250-500ms of reaction time has saved me from sketchy situations multiple times on the road since. Bought ChampU and so many safety techniques transfer from the track to the road it blew my mind. I use trail-braking, 100 pts of grip, load tire before working it, body position, etc. on the road nearly every day. No where near the levels on the track but that application of safe-modulation, situational awareness and prep on corner sequence is muscle memory now. Keep up the fantastic content! 👍

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +2

      Absolutely right!

    • @eugeniustheodidactus8890
      @eugeniustheodidactus8890 3 місяці тому +6

      The more I ride and the older I get.... ( 68 ) the more I cover my levers. It's hardly ever the ROAD that concerns me. It's the other drivers especially in 35-45 mph zones !

  • @tommeyer6033
    @tommeyer6033 3 місяці тому +10

    A perfect refresher course! You’re still the best riding instructor on UA-cam, Dave. Make more vids, please.
    Also, where is the Moar Coast? Good riding there? Nice beaches? 😉

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +1

      Great point. Coastal riding is fantastic!

  • @Bill0167
    @Bill0167 3 місяці тому +7

    Trail breaking is a valid technique. I was trained on this technique when I attended police motor training.
    Great video!

  • @karlbishop7481
    @karlbishop7481 3 місяці тому +2

    When I first started driving I was self taught mainly at first blasting around an empty field in an old beater and later with oversight by my father. After I got my license a friend who had done the driver's training in school was riding with me, when I applied the brakes in a corner he had a fit. He told me in school he had been taught to never use the brakes in a corner. I continued to use the brakes in a corner all be it carefully. When I started to ride a motorcycle cycle a couple of years I continued the practice and still do it to this day. I didn't know there was a term for it until recently. Excellent video as usual.

  • @MrVinceq
    @MrVinceq 2 місяці тому +1

    Great job of removing the woo woo from trail braking and encouraging commonsense use of front brakes to stay safe in corners. Simple, straightforward and confidence inspiring.

  • @sleemanman9188
    @sleemanman9188 2 місяці тому +6

    Very well explained... thanks. As a newbie in the world of motorcycles (been riding for only 2 months now), i keep my speed down in all corners so that i don't need/have to trail brake. As a former truck driver for over 20 years, i learned to reduce speeds and to anticipate potential problems and this is helping me as a new rider out there. One thing i do as a rider is what i had to do as a truck driver : respect the suggested yellow speed limit signs before corners. As i'm gaining experience, i can take some corners a little faster than before. Example : the yellow speed limit sign says 75km in a 90km zone (i'm in Canada - km not miles), i now know i can take it at 80km or 85km as 2 months ago, i would slow down to 75km. But i only take some corners faster... those that i know. Whenever i ride on a new road, i still respect the yellow speed limit signs. Better safe than sorry !! :)

    • @izzysykopth
      @izzysykopth 2 місяці тому

      @@sleemanman9188 I can usually double and add 10 mph to the yellow suggested speed sign but only on rare occasions and NEVER in blind turns…visibility and being able to stop within the distance you can see is crucial to safety be careful about increasing speed beyond the yellow sign in blind corners…sometimes the suggested speed would be too fast if there is an obstacle in the road such as a break down or accident or the idiot hanging a u turn…

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic День тому

      @@izzysykopth Try that on a mountain road and you’ll be in a ditch in no time. We have lots of switchbacks by me. The Yellow signs are there for a reason!

    • @izzysykopth
      @izzysykopth 20 годин тому

      @@pentachronic I ride the canyons of Southern California regularly and haven’t ended up in a ditch yet…

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic 11 годин тому

      @@izzysykopth Canyon carving is different to switchbacks. Try some High mountain pass tight switchies and see if you 2x +10 the yellow advisories.

    • @izzysykopth
      @izzysykopth Годину тому

      @@pentachronic ride the high mountains (San Gabriels Angeles Crest Hwy)all the time. I didn’t say it’s a regular practice. I’m not that aggressive off track. But if there’s visibility and I know the road I’m not timid either. Note that I warned the new rider that the suggested speed could even be higher than safe if there’s debris or other obstacles? Why does everyone online try to make a pissing contest out of every topic? Ffs chill Karen…

  • @ghostpepperrides4805
    @ghostpepperrides4805 13 днів тому

    Three minutes into this video I knew you knew what you were doing. Subscribed. I’m 70yo. I learned on dirt 60 years ago and have always believed dirt made me a better street rider. This is now the best video I have seen. I believe we all have to learn, refresh and train.

  • @FlesHBoX
    @FlesHBoX 3 місяці тому +16

    Man you really nailed it with the "then we were required to tell all of these new riders to ignore a lifetime of driving and bicycling experience..."
    My MSF course almost ruined riding for me. I've had to combat that msf course and remind myself that "I already know how to do this" from all those years of riding a bicycle. The only real difference is the speed and weight of the bike...

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +7

      Exactly right. The argument has often been "you can't teach this to a new rider" - You've been doing this your entire life. Slowing into corners is the most intuitive thing in the world.

  • @leberkas_adv
    @leberkas_adv 3 місяці тому +21

    what a great video! "never break in the corner" is the same bs like "hands off the front brake in situation xy"! the front brake is the most important brake in mostly every situation (even offroad!) and this bs myths only exist because instructors want to prevent beginners from hammering into the front break. instead, they should teach the right usage of the front break right from the beginning!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +4

      From your keyboard to gods ears!

    • @eugeniustheodidactus8890
      @eugeniustheodidactus8890 3 місяці тому

      instructors' dilemma... CYA !

    • @Wolfox360
      @Wolfox360 2 місяці тому

      Front brakes and shifting, but in the video he's not saying to not brake in corners, is mostly like , be in the correct speed for the corner, by braking earlier.

  • @smiller787
    @smiller787 2 місяці тому +4

    I constantly trail brake….been doing it for decades. The only thing you need to remember while taking corners at the maximum safe speed, is eyes on where you want to go, and no abrupt anything, braking, getting off the gas, getting on the gas, cranking the bike aggressively into a corner. Riding at an elevated speed is a wisdom thing, and a lesson on being patient and pick your spots. I prefer not to ride in groups, for the simple reason, that others around, take your level of concentration down, and it adds variables to safe riding. Having said that, a couple of experienced riders. Who have wisdom can enhance a ride. The advice given here is solid, and really nothing to add. The sport of riding should always involve everyone getting home safely, and there is nothing like experience, and a lifelong interest in learning just how to make the bike do what you want it to do.

  • @educaracas726
    @educaracas726 3 місяці тому +2

    Awesome video. The suspension shot after the tyre behaviour explanation closes the case. Thank you!

  • @pacobanshee5265
    @pacobanshee5265 3 місяці тому +3

    Smooth and soft = Enjoy the ride!!
    Pure gold man, thanx for the very good lesson!!
    🤘🏻👽

  • @NiftyMoto
    @NiftyMoto 4 дні тому

    I've watched hundreds of motorcycle videos. This is by far the best explanation of trail braking for public roads.

  • @gary6449
    @gary6449 3 місяці тому +2

    I've been riding for ~55yrs - both on and OFF road.. this guy knows his stuff !

  • @supresto8214
    @supresto8214 2 місяці тому

    I love your teaching style and how you take the time to make “complicated topics” easy to understand and remember. Never brake (abruptly) in corners is genius 👏👏👏

  • @Szlejer
    @Szlejer 3 місяці тому +98

    There is nothing dangerous in trail beaking on the road, it's the safest way to corner...

    • @beepbop6697
      @beepbop6697 3 місяці тому +8

      ...my bike turns fine without using the brakes. ;)
      I do trail brake if I find myself entering a corner too hot.

    • @chriscorkas
      @chriscorkas 3 місяці тому +4

      Exactly, it is an option if needed or wanted to do.
      I spent a few months exercising trail braking (and I really like it) in nearly every corner. So my front tire ended up “v” shaped very fast.
      Nice skill to have but not for every corner.

    • @kwakithailand
      @kwakithailand 3 місяці тому +3

      ​@@chriscorkasrear wheel trail braking is possible?

    • @langhamp8912
      @langhamp8912 3 місяці тому +3

      @@kwakithailand I've wondered about that; I use the rear brake consistently when not trail braking but don't touch the rear brake at all when trail braking. Dunno if that's right, but I've had sideways skids from very light trail braking.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +13

      @@kwakithailand Yes, we can trail brake with the rear brake. It's possible. It works, but the front brake works better. It's not _just_ about slowing down, its also about controlling the bikes geometry, the front tire contact patch, etc.

  • @bubbleone6526
    @bubbleone6526 2 місяці тому +2

    Smooth and steady. I really never realized what I’ve done for years was called trail breaking.

  • @mrbookends
    @mrbookends 3 місяці тому +6

    Another great video! I'll add this: I don't think a lot of people understand just how much engine braking plays into their deceleration until they pop into a false neutral and have a near-heart attack at their entry speed..... speaking from experience, of course 😅

    • @langhamp8912
      @langhamp8912 3 місяці тому +3

      The converse is also true; I rode 2-stroke street bikes and scooters for years before getting my first 4-stroke bike, and was disturbed by how much engine braking there is. I currently have a Yamaha XSR900 which does NOT have user settings for engine braking, but the newer MT09 does. I can see myself cranking that engine braking figure all the way down.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +5

      @@langhamp8912 I was listening to the Oxley Bom podcast and they were saying the best MotoGP racers come up riding two-strokes because it teaches them so much more about how to work within the physics of how motorcycles turn and whatnot. Like you, I tend to turn-down my engine braking, and it's amazing when a rider is struggling with a corner, getting them to enter it a gear (sometimes two) higher than they were and they find the corner to smoother, more controlled, etc.
      Engine braking is kinda like dragging a little bit of rear brake. A little bit is great, a whole lot can be unsettling.

  • @baggerrider8073
    @baggerrider8073 Місяць тому

    Thank you for your videos on the various aspects of trail braking. No surprise, it works! I originally started riding dirt bikes in the desert in my 20’s. Then I moved on to road bikes where I took a riding course to get my motorcycle endorsement for my license. In desert riding we always covered the front brake with two fingers. But in the street bike training our instructor said, “all you dirt bike guys get your fingers off the front brake!” Also, “never brake into a corner!” Bad advice. After watching your videos I applied the methods you taught. It took a while but I “unlearned” the bad advice I was taught in the riding course and your methods have given me more confidence, safety and control in the corners. Thank you!!

  • @Dogatemyhomework927
    @Dogatemyhomework927 2 місяці тому

    Your channel is one of the most underrated channels on UA-cam…
    Thanks for all your hard work!💯👍🏽

  • @soujrnr
    @soujrnr 3 місяці тому +3

    I always brake in corners if need be, and I always use trailbraking on public roads. It just makes sense on both counts. Those who think it's for a racetrack only don't have a clue what they're talking about, and obviously don't understand trailbraking. The key, as you said, is not to do so abruptly. I really love the "early, lighter, and longer" for brake usage. This is something that should be taught at the beginning in the MSF BRC classes, in my humble estimation.
    As always, Dave, you hit it out of the park with this phenomenal video! You're my hero of the riding world. I just told my wife that I wish I could spend like three months every single day with you and have you teach me. I've been riding a lot of years, but I'm never too proud to learn or recognize the incredible skills and knowledge of others, and you are at the top of the list, sir. I am riding a new Gold Wing and I trail brake every time I ride, but I'd love to have that close up and personal instruction where what I do can be seen and analyzed. Thing is, the nuances and handling characteristics of my new ride are much different than my old Suzuki Boulevard C90T cruiser, so I almost feel like a first-week MSF BRC rider again. LOL
    Anyway, thanks again for sharing your wisdom! I ALWAYS come away knowing more and also being challenged to get better as a rider! Ride safe, ride well, and ride often!!

    • @izzysykopth
      @izzysykopth 2 місяці тому +1

      @@soujrnr we’re all still learning…

    • @soujrnr
      @soujrnr 2 місяці тому +1

      @@izzysykopth For sure! And we should never stop learning! Ride safe!

    • @izzysykopth
      @izzysykopth 2 місяці тому

      @@soujrnr I believe once you think you know it all you’ve failed…

    • @soujrnr
      @soujrnr 2 місяці тому +1

      @@izzysykopth So very true.

    • @izzysykopth
      @izzysykopth 2 місяці тому

      @@soujrnr I’m jealous (not in a green eyed monster kinda way 🤣) of that new Gold Wing. I’ll be 62 in December and I haven’t given up sport bikes yet but if and when I do I won’t be riding a Harley. Gold Wing all the way…

  • @jace2wheel762
    @jace2wheel762 3 місяці тому +42

    Where they filmed the coyote and roadrunner cartoons eh? 😂😂😂

  • @jeffestrada6857
    @jeffestrada6857 3 місяці тому

    Your still the best on UA-cam explaining CLEARLY what good motorcycle techniques really are. There are so many variations of the meaning of trail braking from the other “UA-cam experts”
    For instance Motojitsu makes everything so complicated in his explanations that it makes the relatively easy and simple skills on motorcycles so complex. Your simple explanation s are so much more easier to understand and without the “ego” other UA-cam “experts” try to portray. Another example on other channels are explanations on cornering - making an easy skill sound So Hard. It must make new riders feel so inadequate. Even I that have been riding my whole life find the explanations so complex and hard to understand. Thank you once again for simple easy to understand, great clear and concise accurate information!! Its a real credit listening to you and it’s obvious your are very highly experienced something I really look up to. Feel very privileged to watch your videos
    Thank you so much
    Cheers from “downunder Australia 🇦🇺 👍

  • @chrisdowney9888
    @chrisdowney9888 2 місяці тому

    You explained this so well I've been riding just like this for over 45 years. People are afraid to use the front brake when cornering for fear of it sliding out but if loaded up when entering corner then pressure relieved and controlled with slight steady pressure you are better prepared for the unexpected variables when riding on unridden roads. plenty of time to power on when you can see where your going safely.

  • @hyeGUY25
    @hyeGUY25 3 місяці тому +3

    I was a nervous wreck new rider fresh out of msf and parking lots. I was great at slow speed stuff even better than my cousin who had been riding for 6 years, but on the streets going fast just wasn't something I was comfortable with. I signed up for champs school at Laguna Seca and took my rs660. Great experience, met a lot of nice people and was a very. fun and exciting 2 day course. I came out of that class maybe 5-10 times better rider. I am now the safer faster cousin rider, he still refuses to go to school or listen to any advice probably why we just high sided at willow springs. Trail braking completely changed my riding style, always having the front brake lever covered with my 2 fingers pointed and ready to go on the brakes has made me a very confident rider. Learn how to brake to be able to go fast!

  • @redrebel2978
    @redrebel2978 2 місяці тому +1

    Late apex, Slow in, Fast out, access the corner way before getting to it and use maintenance throttle once into the corner to stabilise the bike, l like you explanation of trail braking it really makes sense.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      We don't need to be on the throttle to stabilize the bike. Is your bike unstable on the brakes? If it is, you need to get something checked out.

  • @gerrycout7845
    @gerrycout7845 3 місяці тому +2

    I agree 100%.
    And I am really surprised that after 35 years of riding (and not watching much UA-cam until recently) I have learnt these techniques by myself. No classes attended. Like you said, it’s basic common sense. You slow down to turn. Same as a car. More finesse at the controls.
    I do use the rear brake at the same time as I find it calms the bike down but you are right in saying the rear traction is limited when braking with the front.
    The problem with all of this when it comes to beginners (my girlfriend started riding last year) is to make them understand that they have to be gentle with the controls.
    I rode in the winter up north on ice on a river when I was young. 2 wheels. No studs. Just rubber. 5 winters.
    You learn how to be smooth with the controls.
    Beginners don’t have that chance to learn what slipping and sliding feels like.
    You have to listen to what your front tire is trying to tell you. Feel is the name of the game. Hard to explain to someone just starting.
    Stay safe out there.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      Right. The concept is actually extremely intuitive. It's a tragedy that so many new rider programs teach it's "dangerous"

  • @wrkings
    @wrkings 2 місяці тому

    Great video mate, makes so much sense, when I first got my license, instructors told us never brake in a corner, but in actual fact they should have told us don't brake abruptly in corner, thx

  • @diyeveryday67
    @diyeveryday67 3 місяці тому +1

    Great video!
    I just made a trip from LV to Utah to ride these rides on Father’s Day! They are FANTASTIC roads and I cannot wait to get back to them!!

  • @MD-MC
    @MD-MC 2 місяці тому

    Always great advice. No doubt, you've saved many individuals from disastrous riding issues. Thanks for caring!

  • @garrysimmons111
    @garrysimmons111 2 місяці тому +2

    I just finished a YCRS ChampSchool at NJMP and it's heavy on trail braking / progressive control inputs. Great stuff. Back home, riding hundreds of miles of twisties a day, I realized how few corners require any braking (beside engine braking on my big KTM V-twin). Unless I'm confronted with a 15 or 20 MPH hairpin, rolling off the throttle is all the braking I need because I didn't pin the throttle on the previous corner exit. Roll on. Roll off. Repeat. FWIW, I'm rolling along 10 to 20 over the speed limit (65 - 75 ish) and at least doubling the suggested corner speeds, so I'm not dawdling. Trail brake when needed, but the fingers are always covering the lever (just in case). If you ride public roads like a track day, that's different. But I ride "The Pace (2.0)" and it's just another tool in the toolbox. Apply when needed.

  • @AZGeek520
    @AZGeek520 3 місяці тому +1

    Good stuff, Dave. While not the ideal way to learn about front braking, I was on a trip in Mexico when my rear brake failed and all I had was the front. I quickly found out that it wasn't the scary, "never do" scenario that had been drilled into me in my MSF course years ago. I've since have put front braking into my riding technique in the public road twisties. Your asterisk on "abruptly" is key. Thank you for that emphasis. You picked some great roads for this video. UT 72 and UT 12 are fantastic roads, with UT 72 being much less traveled (and with less deer than I've experienced on that aspen section of UT 12 between Boulder and Torrey).

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +2

      I love it! The black cows on 12 totally keep you on your toes!

    • @AZGeek520
      @AZGeek520 3 місяці тому +1

      @@CanyonChasers And the same goes tor the ones on 72. Plus you can add cow pies to the list of road hazards when braking in a corner. 😂

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +1

      @@AZGeek520 The ultimate "slippery thing" in a corner right!

  • @JoeGoeMotorcycleAdventures
    @JoeGoeMotorcycleAdventures 2 місяці тому

    This has completely transformed the way I ride. Going through the twisties has become even more enjoyable. Let’s be honest, at some point we all have been nervous riding on super twisty roads. Trail braking has put the fun back into it! Great video brother. Taking champ street in August!

  • @WJRobbins125
    @WJRobbins125 3 місяці тому +6

    Totally unrelated...man those cattle grates/guards in UT were not what I was expecting...nor cattle just out roaming around. :) But man, was the scenery gorgeous!

  • @I_am_archie
    @I_am_archie 3 місяці тому +1

    Thanks. I've been working on this with my Vision for a while now. After watching one of your previous vids about trail braking.

  • @Dogatemyhomework927
    @Dogatemyhomework927 3 місяці тому +3

    Fine tuning methods! Thank you so much!🤙🏽🤙🏽💯

  • @charlesstoddard736
    @charlesstoddard736 3 місяці тому +1

    Hello from Newfoundland.
    Before I heard practice than implemented trail braking I don't know how safe and in control I was !!!!
    It has changed and improved my riding ten folds easy the best tool I got throughout reading and taking advice from different outlets in my 25 years riding career .
    Try it implement it right and reap the rewards.
    Chuck

  • @StratfordWingRider
    @StratfordWingRider 2 місяці тому

    I’m really inspired by these videos about trail braking. I have practiced a little.
    It’s reassuring that the uncertainty about the corners is normal.
    I do worry about my bike at times as it has CBS - but this doesn’t seem to affect my trail braking efforts.

  • @cesaralejandrohernandez4840
    @cesaralejandrohernandez4840 3 місяці тому +5

    I'm a new rider (less than a year) and was about to go wide in a corner the first time I went in faster than usual. Breaking gently in the turn saved me from an accident.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +2

      Yes! Thats great to hear! Crashing sucks!

    • @eugeniustheodidactus8890
      @eugeniustheodidactus8890 3 місяці тому +2

      BINGO! I started using trailbraking in my first year of riding and it contributes massively to safety and enjoyment. Glad you are OK and learning!

  • @TheZaxx
    @TheZaxx 2 місяці тому

    Great video. I have come to these same conclusions after years of riding, and having been taught not to brake in corners.

  • @sammemrys8195
    @sammemrys8195 3 місяці тому

    Straightforward, concise, informative. I've gained so much from this channel.

  • @dougfreeman3229
    @dougfreeman3229 2 місяці тому +1

    The concept you are missing is "turn-in point", which differs greatly depending on the corner. It's the point where the apex and exit can be identified, and the rider commits to the lean angle to steer through the corner, in one steering motion (theoretically one). An initial slighter lean is needed until the rider can see through the corner - this is where braking to set speed is done. In a DRB (decreasing radius bastard) that point is late into the corner. Speed should be set prior to turn-in initiation, brakes released prior to turn-in, and throttle applied after the bike is at the desired lean angle. Therefor, the throttle is NOT used to accelerate all the way through the corner. It is used after commitment to turn-in. The term "acceleration" is used lightly in the context as well. Initially only enough to take up driveline lash and settle the suspension, and gradually rolled on as the circumstance allows. Keith Code covered it well in 1993 with "twist of the Wrist ll", and years later commented to trail brake only when it's required.

  • @cartwrightUKNW
    @cartwrightUKNW 2 місяці тому

    Thanks for making and sharing this! Hands down the best advice video I’ve seen on trail braking!

  • @waltershim55
    @waltershim55 3 місяці тому

    You always have the best and easy definition for trailbreaking.

  • @Tracer9GTRider8
    @Tracer9GTRider8 3 місяці тому +16

    "You come around a corner and there's a car driving slowly" voiceover of video of a dude on a Goldwing waving you past. 😂😂😂

    • @elgringoec
      @elgringoec 3 місяці тому +1

      My friend rides a goldwing; it's very unlikely you'd ever come up behind him much less be able to get by.

  • @OldManEnduro
    @OldManEnduro 3 місяці тому +1

    It amazes me how many riders dont know about counter steering or trail braking. On a side note, ive ridden both of those roads numerous times. Hurricane, UT to Torrey, UT. Theyre awsome rides, but im back in Oregon now and there are some of the best roads in the country here... hidden gems. Love your content, every rider should be subscribed!!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +1

      I agree. Oregon has the best riding I know of in the lower 48 and Canadia!

  • @Danny-ux1il
    @Danny-ux1il 17 днів тому

    Another very interesting video on cornering. But, what I am still concerned about, which I have not seen anyone address on YT, is the danger of engaging the front brake and causing the bike to go out of control. I think the term is "binding", when you rapidly slow down the "forward" motion - i.e. the component of the bike's motion that is going in the direction of the curve - and cause the momentum of the rear 3/4 of the bike to go forward - i.e. in the direction it was pointed just before you hit the front brake. That means you have to go off the road, our of control. It also means you have lost traction so the tires are not gripping the road surface. This happens because you are in a curve going too fast. Canyon makes the case that you must at that point use the front brake delicately and with control, without panicing. But if you are going too fast at that point - too fast to make the curve without crashing - and if using either front or rear brakes will cause more compression of the front and more traction on the front tire and less on the rear - then I still think the only recourse you have other than panicing and wiping out - is to use more rear brakes as best you can and maybe slow your momentum so you have a slower crash.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  16 днів тому

      It’s not addressed because the rider would have had to make a lot of mistakes to get to the point you are worried about. Going exceedingly fast and then waiting until mid corner to mash the front brake.
      This video focuses on a strategy so that never happens. Slowing into corners isn’t a reaction to bad judgement. It’s out strategy for every corner. We go to the brakes when we are nervous. We don’t wait until we are in panic mode. We go to the brakes earlier, lighter and for longer. This is how motorcycles are designed to turn so they turn better with more stability this way.

  • @nathanyt
    @nathanyt 3 місяці тому +10

    They think it's an "advanced technique" because they see professional racers use it. When in reality, we are taught to be smooth with our controls which really what trail braking is.

    • @bikegirl649
      @bikegirl649 13 днів тому

      Yes, in a private lesson, my instructor told me NOT to trail brake as it was an advanced technique for experienced riders. Yet, I did it naturally on the course.

  • @christopherabram7087
    @christopherabram7087 2 місяці тому

    Good words bud! 35 years for me and I told my kids and friends to read the corner and push the grip gently and feel the corner.

  • @Igor12822
    @Igor12822 2 місяці тому

    Great video as always, thanks and this is very needed for so many new and old riders who still live in wrong impression that you should never touch front brake in corner. PS love your Strada, actually called dealership last week and wanted to order new V2S to hear and stay surprised that model cannot be ordered anymore as apparently they are coming up with the new model, for which there is still no info about as of yet.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      Interesting. I've been considering a V4/Pikes Peak. It's kind of hard to imagine them abandoning the V2.

    • @Igor12822
      @Igor12822 2 місяці тому

      @@CanyonChasers for a new model apparently, also V2, let' see

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому +1

      @@Igor12822 I'm sure you saw the Panigale V2 final edition. Things are changing at Ducati and I don't know what to make of things. I'm going to need a new bike here - and really don't know which way to go.

  • @mariomanus3176
    @mariomanus3176 2 місяці тому +1

    @CanyonChasers after watching a lot of UA-cam videos on 'trail braking', most vloggers seem to agree that the principles of trail braking are (1)to load the front tire for more grip and (2)it may decrease the distance between the front and rear tires improving the cornering capability of the bike (forgot the better term for it). Basing from this, i practiced and applied these principles to every cornering i made at almost all moving speeds when not contraindicated and found out that the improvement in ease and control during cornering is applicable to any speed in my daily city commute making me wonder why this was not taught at all as a basic riding skill.

  • @F3udF1st
    @F3udF1st 2 місяці тому +3

    I trail brake fine on my bicycle so it should work fine on the motorcycle as well. Be smooth and anything goes.

  • @Chris.Thanopoulos
    @Chris.Thanopoulos Місяць тому

    My father was a truck driver, i have learn to drive a car from 10 years old, the only think i remember is slow down before the corner !!! Am keeping it 20 years now as rider and i have zero accidents !!!! Am using my brakes even on the corners and am enjoying the rides way more cause i have confidence cause i feel safety !!!! That was and awsome video !!!!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  Місяць тому +1

      I love it!!! Most folks do it intuitively (until they’re told it’s dangerous).

  • @kreiselkotz
    @kreiselkotz 3 місяці тому

    Great video, thumps up! One addition from my personal point of view: never ever use front brake in a close serpentine when going upwards... because that will load the front, stiffen it up and in extreme situations, like Stelvio for example, it will make you going on the opposite lane.

  • @unwrangler11
    @unwrangler11 2 місяці тому +1

    You have lots of good solid advice, thanks.

  • @catmate8358
    @catmate8358 2 місяці тому +2

    If traveling at legal speeds most often you will not need to use brakes in a corner at all. This assumes reducing your speed to legal limit before the corner. If there's an obstacle in the corner it is of course a different story and the reason why you should never open the throttle before you see the exit of the corner. When it comes to oil spills or ice and such on the road, the safest thing to do is to sit home and watch youtube rather then ride 😁 Good video, thank you.

    • @mildyproductive9726
      @mildyproductive9726 2 місяці тому

      That's because you take good lines. If you take good lines, you don't usually benefit from braking into a corner, even at more than double the speed limit.
      But go back to the speed limit and turn in too early. Now you have to brake into the corner to make it safely. If you routinely trail brake in street riding, it's mostly likely because you turn in too early.

  • @davidyaroch6622
    @davidyaroch6622 2 місяці тому

    I learned years ago from Twist of the Wrist to essentially break the corner into 3 parts. The first is the slowing down, trail braking until my fork compression from braking matches the needed compression from cornering
    Part 2 is to catch the throttle and wait for the clear exit path.
    Part 3 is rolling on throttle to give me the acceleration I want.
    I found that this strategy even works in cars.

  • @Ron-kn1fg
    @Ron-kn1fg 3 місяці тому +1

    You are correct saying we trail brake already.
    We trailbrake coming to a red light. we see a red, we apply the brakes smoothly and ease off until we come to a stop under control. This is done without thinking about it, trailbraking for a corner is the same technique, ease on the brakes, then ease off the brakes as needed to keep the motorcycle under control and not go wide.

  • @IanTed
    @IanTed 2 місяці тому

    The issue here in northern England is narrow roads with poor visibility on most corners, without this technique we wouldn’t make much progress. I’m an experienced rider but I think as usual you give some great advice to all levels of experience on the road. I use two fingers to front brake on my lovely Multistrada in nearly every corner but it’s gentle and progressive, to be honest I very seldom touch the rear brake apart from controlling front end dive in heavy traffic which is rare around here. My instructor told me slow and gentle into a bend and as the visibility reduces, and then accelerate as the ‘vanishing point’ moves away as the road straightens and the view opens up, eventually it becomes second nature.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      I absolutely love the UK - especially Scotland and the highlands. Those single track roads with passing places are amazing. But you are exactly right. Except, I'm really soft of "vanishing point." I think it's a great clue, but it's wrong an awful lot. I've been in lots of corners where the vanishing point is moving away, but the corner is actually still getting tighter. So we coach to just wait until you can see the exit before actively accelerating.

    • @IanTed
      @IanTed 2 місяці тому

      @@CanyonChasers I’ve never really trusted it, my back yard is Northumberland and the Scottish Borders, all great biking roads that lead to the stunning west coast of Scotland and the Highlands, I’m a very lucky boy, keep up the great content👍.

  • @draganpetrovic1991
    @draganpetrovic1991 2 місяці тому +2

    In a last case (really last!), it is possible to straighten the bike in a corner and brake as hard as possible (as much as there is places), then release the brakes and drop the engine through the rest of the corner. Twice in my driving career I saved myself from a crash/death that way, but I've been driving for 50 years, so it's only done when there's no other solution.

    • @Peter-Alexander
      @Peter-Alexander 2 місяці тому

      Thanks for this, I was wondering what the best technique would be if something unexpected happens in a corner. Have had a bike when I was 20 to 30 yrs old am 61 now and bought a bike recently.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      Most every motorcycle answer starts with "It depends." So, yes, you can, but thats an pretty hard, technical, and unforgiving move. If you have the grip or have no other option then yeah. For example, I had to do that move at a recent track day where a rider came up underneath me in a corner to make a pass, but couldn't make it stick and started running wide. I had no place to go as he was blocking my turn, so my only option was to straighten and hammer the brakes. But because I was going much faster than 18mph, I promptly went off track. Because I was upright I was able to save it. But that was an extreme and rare case. I think that may be only the second time I've used it in well over 30 years of riding.

    • @draganpetrovic1991
      @draganpetrovic1991 2 місяці тому

      @@CanyonChasers That it should be used only when there is a situation where we have another way out, in 50 years, I only used it two times, but it probably saved my life twice. You should know that it can, but only a good experienced rider who will judge when to stop braking and "knock down" the motorcycle again. I once had to do it twice and it worked - I was left with a thrown bike leg when they didn't have an engine lock button on it, a long left curve about 120km/h, and a precipice of 200m on the right side. I braked hard, then hit the foot again and finally stopped on the edge of the precipice meybe 0,5-1,0m . Road around Adriatik sea 1980 year.
      Sorry for bad english.

  • @trevorb2048
    @trevorb2048 Місяць тому

    I've found that covering your front break leads naturally to trail braking. And vice versa. Thanks as always for the fun, informative videos.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  Місяць тому

      Thank you!! It also leads to less abrupt braking because we tend to start braking sooner.

  • @Jeremybaland
    @Jeremybaland 2 місяці тому +1

    The MSF needs to update their outdated curriculum. There so much bureaucracy and egos the real focus on safety cant really be accomplished. Solid video thanks for sharing it!

  • @stefanhansen5882
    @stefanhansen5882 2 місяці тому +1

    2:44 Close the throttle fully? Doesn't it depend on the radius of the curve and the speed? My SV650 will engine break a lot as soon as I close the throttle. Thanks.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому +2

      Close the throttle fully. There are very few hard and fast rules in motorcycling. But one of them is we never ever ever overlap throttle and front brake. If you are getting too much engine braking try the same corner in a gear (or two) higher.

    • @stefanhansen5882
      @stefanhansen5882 2 місяці тому

      @@CanyonChasers Thanks a lot! I've tried, and it's getting better. Your content rocks!

  • @TheFirstCause
    @TheFirstCause 2 місяці тому +1

    Those coyote and roadrunner cartoons... WERE FILMED IN THE REAL WORLD?!?! Amazing! EDIT: Also... great video and subbed!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      Thanks for the sub! Welcome along for the ride!

  • @steve362ridger5
    @steve362ridger5 3 місяці тому +1

    Thanks! Your videos are always informative and very right on!

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому

      Wow! Thank you!! Glad you like them! I always look forward to your comments.

  • @christopherabram7087
    @christopherabram7087 2 місяці тому

    Great visual on the grip.

  • @ExpandingSpirits
    @ExpandingSpirits 2 місяці тому

    Hello,
    You guys have valuable, life saving info. I’ve always watched to improve my skills cornering on my 2 wheeler. I recently got a 2020 TriGlide and I’m wondering about trail braking, cornering, etc. and naturally I come to canyon chasers. Is trail braking even a thing for those? Can you perhaps provide some insights for a trike or is that not your guys forte? You insights and content are appreciated! Thanks

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      I don't have much personal experience with the TriGlide, but I have spend time on Can Am Spyders, and a few other trikes, but I have a lot of hours on old school side-hacks. There's some nuance, but for the most part; yes. Speed still equals radius, and in some cases, this is even more true for three-wheel vehicles because we can't really lean to counteract centripital force and we don't have a fourth wheel to keep us stable. So yeah - same rules. Go to the brakes when you are nervous and slow until you're happy. The big difference would be on exit. You have to wait a little longer, right. On two wheels we wait until we can see our exit and take away lean angle. On three wheels we have to wait until we can see our exit and have the bike pointed out of the corner before we can actively accelerate.
      I hope this helps.

  • @TerriSexton-h6t
    @TerriSexton-h6t 2 місяці тому +1

    Last weekend i was doing 65 around a backroad corner, four deer bolted across the road and I slammed on the brakes both front and back coming to a fast stop down to 5 mph. Luckily I have abs and came to a smooth straight in my lane position stop. My Voyager slightly straightened up as I quickly slowed to the 5 mph. The buy behind me who does not have abs smoked up his rear tire and skid sideways and past me up by a few yards. He's been riding for 65 years so he did well in preventing laying the bike down. Neither of us hit any of the deer. Me only riding for 4 years have the abs working on my behalf. So braking in corners can be done one way or the other, especially if you have no choice.

  • @jamescampolo7824
    @jamescampolo7824 Місяць тому

    Speaking of slippery corners. One time I was riding in Northern Colorado in a Natl. Forest on a windy road in the rain. I was being cautious as I went around a curve and there was a pile of cow stuff in the road. My rear tire slipped out some but I regained control and when I looked up, there was a cow napping in the road. Good thing I was going slow enough. If I would have even touched my front brake I would have gone down. I never use my front brake in the rain on a curvy road.

  • @bradcobb3418
    @bradcobb3418 Місяць тому

    good info, here in southern Spain the country roads can get very polished after 6-8 mths with no rain, in hairpins I gently trail brake and if any hazards like oil slicks or tar snakes i may reduce fronk brake and apply slightly more rear, but on my old 916 ST the 320mm front brakes are very linear and powerfull, whereas the single 245mm rear is nearly an ornament, plus Battleaxe S22 tyres have amazing grip as i do not have ABS ( nore do i want it)😂😂

  • @blipco5
    @blipco5 2 місяці тому

    I did enjoy this excellent explanation of trail braking. Home Run! 👍

  • @thomaslenzmeier183
    @thomaslenzmeier183 3 місяці тому +4

    Smooth inputs!

  • @mickrick84
    @mickrick84 3 місяці тому

    Since I apply trail braking (which I discovered for myself, I didn't know it existed and none of my biker buddies told me) my riding quality and safety before and during corners did a big jump! It's just the best (and safest) braking technique for corners and so easy to apply! Greetings from Switzerland!

    • @eugeniustheodidactus8890
      @eugeniustheodidactus8890 3 місяці тому +1

      Yes.... and so much more rewarding to ride when you have so much control! I'd love to ride in Switzerland dude.

    • @mickrick84
      @mickrick84 2 місяці тому

      @@eugeniustheodidactus8890 Yes exactly! Yes come to Switzerland if you have the opportunity! IMO we as bikers live in the best area for riding in the world! The Swiss, the French , the Italian and the Austrian Alps! It's all here!

  • @andrewdeeker3346
    @andrewdeeker3346 2 місяці тому

    great practical advise as always - thanks again for another informative video.

  • @tommynikon2283
    @tommynikon2283 2 місяці тому

    68 here/44 still riding; all sport. I was taught to SQUEEZE the front brake- NEVER EVER GRAB; Front= 80%+ of total braking available…to LOAD the front end, giving me LEAN. Also…dragging the rear brake through tight corners as needed. ***. I took a Braking Class decades ago- with the class bikes in cages- with outrigger caster wheels. We had to go 60 and lock it up. On purpose. Great lesson for stopping distances, ABS vs Non, etc.

  • @ZoltanFogarasi
    @ZoltanFogarasi 2 місяці тому

    Get a BMW GS, it has combined brakes, with clever electronics distributing the brake power between front and rear breaks on demand. And the Telelever front suspension pretty much prevents the compression of forks when breaking. And the curve ABS does it's job, when needed. These all builds up your confidence in couple of years at a high level, because you learn that you can break in curve as much as needed (dry asphalt) safely, in case you enter in a curve too fast. I guess many other modern bikes too, except the Telelever. If you got a 25 years old Harley, be careful. :)

  • @_johnm
    @_johnm 3 місяці тому +1

    Your best video! Great coverage of the myriad arguments, sayings, and outright insanity that people on all sides spout on this topic. Now we have something to confidently send to people. Thanks!

  • @zeplin4078
    @zeplin4078 3 місяці тому +2

    Great video. May I suggest another method to explain trail breaking. If you could video your ride with your brake light showing as an insert in one of the video corners and as you comment we can see when you apply and release your brakes. Watching this video, there is corners that I would not have applied brakes but unsure if you did.

    • @trumpetreneau
      @trumpetreneau 3 місяці тому

      I think there is a video like this where he has a picture-in-picture showing his front brake. Motojitsu has similar videos.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  3 місяці тому +2

      Something like this? ua-cam.com/video/dOIJFrZ6ks8/v-deo.html

    • @zeplin4078
      @zeplin4078 3 місяці тому +1

      Yes, 100%, a great video that explain it all. If one still don't understand after this video then I don't know what will.

  • @google-zoo
    @google-zoo 2 місяці тому

    Interesting and makes complete sense. I remember as a child flying down hills on my pedal bike enjoying the speed whilst gently squeezing the front brake into the bends and we never came off ! Surely a motorbike is the same …

  • @normandlariviere8957
    @normandlariviere8957 2 місяці тому

    1.28 in , I brake in corners . I downshift in corners , the worse that happens if I don t match rev enough the ass end kicks out a bit , and its fun. As a kid I rode my bmx in the canadian winter , it was a blast.

  • @davidwhite3042
    @davidwhite3042 15 днів тому

    An interesting video, and I agree with much of your emphasis. I think riders need to practice braking with the bike cranked-over, and your ideas focus on learning a feel for your front wheel grip.
    Here in the UK we have a lot of bends, usually with little forward visibility and little run-off (we call it "alternative course"). At advanced level we teach riders to 'ride' round corners rather than how to brake around them. Modern bikes are most stable when moving under sufficient power to maintain a constant speed - which means with a slight weight bias to the back wheel.
    You ask, "How do I know how fast I want to go/ what will the curve be like?"
    We teach 2 principles. The first is the 'vanishing point' (VP) - the point up the road where the nearside kerb meets the offside kerb. You probably know this - VP moving towards you = bend tightening, moving away = bend opening. So a key part of our teaching is to watch the VP, the aim being to ride under power, keeping the VP at a constant distance.
    The second principle is that the rider should be able to stop, on their side of the road, in the distance they can see to be clear. This allows you to judge the right distance from the VP and at which you track it round the corner.
    In summary, our approach is much more to do with teaching riders to read the road than with teaching specific braking techniques. In the UK, bends are the most frequent road hazard. We want riders to be in the gear and at the speed required to 'ride' the hazard as they reach it. Knowing your braking distances and watching the VP take away the guess-work you allude to in the video. It's not the fastest cornering method, but it is the safest - and I can guarantee that the majority of riders will have to work their brakes and motors a lot harder to keep up.
    (PS my background is Police-trained and formerly on the National Training Team for our national advanced riding body.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  15 днів тому

      Right. There's one flaw with RoadCrafts entire theory: "Modern bikes are most stable when moving under sufficient power to maintain a constant speed - which means with a slight weight bias to the back wheel. "
      Not true and rather misleading as it implies a bike is unstable unless on the throttle. The obsession with needing to be on the gas in bends is getting people killed. Keep in mind, its the front tire that turns the bike - not the rear. We want weight over the tire that is turning the bike, not driving the bike.
      And it ignores a fundamental law of physics. Speed equals radius. The faster we go, the bigger the radius. The slower we go, the smaller the radius. Add to that how motorcylces are designed and engineerd to turn. The front brake makes the bike slow down and turn. The throttle makes the bike accelereate and go straight. So obsessing with being on the throttle while turning is fighting physics and giving the bike conflicing instructions. Turn, but go straight.
      The primary objective is to make it to corner exit. Not to be on the gas. Not to be off the brakes. The number one cause of single vehicle motorcycle crashes is running wide in corners - and we can draw a straight line back to this coaching idea that we need to be on the gas in corners. Every vehicle in the known universe slows down to turn, yet somehow we teach that motorcycles need to be on the gas to turn. And the claim that it gives us more cornering clearance. By what? A few mm's or extra lean angle. Why on earth do we want to be anywhere near max lean angle on a public road? But if we are slowing down, we lean less. Less lean means less risk. If we are slowing down and we need to slow more, we're already on the brake - we don't need to waste precious time and space to roll off the throttle, let the weight shift back to the front tire before we can begin to actively slow.
      I love the UK (and NZ, etc) Your roads are brilliant fun, but this old method of teaching is a huge problem. Its predicated on trying to predict the future - to predict which gear and which speed is correct without having all the information. It's not the safest by any stretch of the word. It's counterintuitive and gives the rider the fewest number of options to deal with the unexpected. The safer way is to slow until we have all the information and only accelearate when we are pointed out of the corner. LIke, just read your last sentence. We don't teach braking techniques. How crazy is that?
      I doubt that you are going to be receptive to any of this as this old method has been entrenched and repeated since the '70s, but I implore you to not look at the way we've always done it, and look instead at what the best riders in the world are doing. None of them are still riding the way you describe. BTW, I've been hired by our local motor officers (taught exactly the way you have been). Within a few hours of coaching they all come up to me saying the exact same thing. "I had no idea I could have this much control in corners!"

    • @davidwhite3042
      @davidwhite3042 14 днів тому

      @CanyonChasers Thanks for your response. I suspect that given we are both experienced coaches we agree over a lot more than we disagree.
      If you have read the Roadcraft manual, then you will know you have misrepresented my position. Roadcraft is not about speed, but about "safe progress". Also, do not misunderstand me, because I am not saying don't brake in a corner. It is sometimes necessary (e.g. a tightening curve), so learning to feel for grip in a turn is important.
      You misrepresent my argument when you say I don't teach braking technique, when what I actually said was that I teach cornering as an exercise in 'reading the road' rather than an exercise in braking technique.
      Your understanding of bike physics is faulty on 3 counts.
      1. A bike is more stable under power because the moving engine parts create a gyroscopic effect.
      2. Bikes will tend to stand-up and travel in a straight line under braking, the exact degree depending on the front end geometry of a particular bike and the braking force applied. If you take away rider input bikes are designed to return to a straight line.
      3. It is not the front wheel which steers the bike - otherwise counter steering to initiate a turn would not make sense! It is the shape of the tyres which turns the bike. Any point near the centre of a tyre will have a greater diameter than a point nearer the rim, and will thus rotate faster. With the bike leaning, the lower edge of the contact patch rotates faster than the upper edge. The difference in speed turns the bike - and this applies to both the front and the rear. The front wheel only controls the degree of lean.
      The principle behind Roadcraft is the rider selects course, speed and gear prior to negotiating a hazard. If you are in a bend (i.e. in the hazard) and still braking then you are already going too fast, possibly in the wrong gear, and with less grip available for cornering.
      Roadcraft is not predicated on "predicting the future" but on "reading the road" and responding to hazards before you reach them. If a rider is taught how to observe the road, they won't need to brake in a corner because they will already be travelling at the right speed.
      The Roadcraft method gives you a little more control and a little more margin for error.

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  14 днів тому

      Right. But you are incorrect in all your physics.
      1. Speed equals radius. Try this yourself. Find an empty parking lot and ride in a big circle. Keep your lean angle consistent and then gently accelerate. The circle will get bigger.
      Get into the same circle again. Same speed. Same lean angle. Now roll off the throttle. The circle will gently get smaller. You can even take your hands off the handlebars and the circle will still get smaller.
      Now again. Same scenario. Only this time gently apply front brake. The circle will get smaller very quickly.
      We control the radius of a corner with speed inputs as much ad and even more than even steering inputs.
      What makes a bike stand up under braking is mashing the front brake mid corner because it deforms or folds the front tire over.
      The take away is. Don’t be afraid of your front brake. Be afraid of abruptness.
      Now, to all your other points. They are all also outdated and wrong. I did a very detailed video debunking all of them based on ongoing research in the Netherlands, the UK and South Africa. You should watch it.
      Coned tires don’t make the bike change direction. Countersteering doesn’t steer. It merely initiates lean to balance against centripetal force. And gyroscopic procession does not make the bike stable.
      Reading the road is very important but Roadcraft is about 50 years out of date and is locked into a position on physics that has long been debunked. So all of the cornering guidance is also incorrect. Can someone ride that way successfully. Absolutely. But again we can draw a straight line back from the leading cause of motorcycle accidents straight to these outdated concepts.
      In other words. We know more now and we have much better and safer and more controlled methods of cornering that offer greater reductions to risk and more precision than the Roadcraft way.
      I encourage you to check out the video ua-cam.com/video/j8JEgkKMrcs/v-deo.htmlsi=YBwB_mmjQLIRbWlY
      As well as the physics book Motorcycle Dynamics. amzn.to/49kfqqc
      In the description of that video I have about 30 different sources you can follow on your own.

  • @gslantis
    @gslantis 3 місяці тому

    Although my native language is not English I understand your videos and learned so much from you Thank you great man cheers from Turkiye

  • @orionswitness
    @orionswitness 2 місяці тому

    Mindfulness when riding is an amazing thing.
    Feeling the road…feeling the front tyre contacting the road surface, feeling the road surface.
    That’s how you know become one with your bike .

    • @CanyonChasers
      @CanyonChasers  2 місяці тому

      Those moments of flow state are amazing.

  • @Desmomatschi
    @Desmomatschi 2 місяці тому

    I loved to break in corners with my Ducati 900 with warm tyres on good surfaces, feeling how the bike wanted to go straight and push the inner hand to keep in lean .... great feeling of control. Took years of practice

  • @MrApplebumPS
    @MrApplebumPS 2 дні тому

    Nothing abruptly. Brakes and throttle easy off/easy on and watch your speed throughout the corner. Each corner has its own concerns and they need to be treated like that. If you want to race take it to the track. I enter a corner with the front brake to load the front tire for grip and as I trail off the front brake and see the exit I sometimes apply slight pressure on the back brake to set the rear tire before rolling on the throttle. All depends on the speed I've enter the corner.

  • @karenshoucairmcgray4902
    @karenshoucairmcgray4902 2 місяці тому

    Makes good sense to me! Enjoyed this very much! Thank you! 😊

  • @manz1960
    @manz1960 2 місяці тому

    I experienced the lack of trail breaking on my Harley low rider on a closing radius corner in May 2023 thinking I could stay on the throttle and add lean angle. Bad idea and I had 49,000 miles on top of two bikes at the time.
    Two problems. Too much speed at 37
    mph, the bracket for forward controls/floorboards. When I hit the bracket, I lost the rear tire and low sided across the lane into a ditch. Ouch. Time stands still, although you don’t…going horizontally at 37 mph BTW. Don’t try it.
    I Didn’t scratch myself due to extreme gear but broke 4 ribs (thank goodness in the front, not back). FYI, because of AGATT I went home put on a tux and went to a gala. Unreal day. Gear? Top of the line Harley leather jacket, fully armored. Kevlar jeans, leather knuckle protector gloves, Harley high ankle boots. Full face helmet.
    Lesson? Trail break, see the exit. What I saw was pavement. Embarrassing as hell and a bit painful. Informative? Incredibly.

  • @MikeKemp
    @MikeKemp 3 місяці тому

    I'll probably be re-visiting this video many times. Great info here!