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I have been a MSF instructor for 8 years and here is the scoop. Head turns are crucial. You should be able to see the rear of the bike in your peripheral vision. Counter weight by moving your upper body to the outside of the turn. Knees on the tank. Press down on the outside footrest. Control speed with the clutch and drag the rear brake slightly. Lean that bike! Do NOT touch the front brake or squeeze the clutch lever fully. Stay in the friction zone. Do not look down unless you want to go down. In or on any vehicle, the throttle controls engine speed only. Sear that into your memory. We can put 3 Ultra Classic bikes in the blue box at once. Not bragging, any one can manage it.
I think maybe what is getting lost in the whole CG discussion is that there are multiple CG's in play here. There is the rather fixed CG of the bike and then the rather fluid CG of the rider. While these do certainly interact and do to some extent combine to a resultant they are two separate dynamics.The CG of the bike changes only minimally as you lean, but the rider CG can change dramatically up down left and right if you get off the seat. If this were not the case track riders would never have to drag a knee to counter centrifugal forces. I am not as learned in physics as I would like to be, but i do know that there is a force vector that results from gravity, center of mass, acceleration, centrifugal and centripetal forces and other things. Our goal is to keep the vector pointing through the contact patch between the tyres and the road surface which ultimately lets us stay balanced and rolling. I apologize if I am stating this badly or not making myself understood,
Posted by: Two Checks� on: Today at 07:55:51 PM � So every time with ABS (standard with a Norge) when you drag the rear brake, you are also engaging the front? Is that correct? It does not feel like the front is engaging at all when I drag the rear slightly, and I think I would maybe feel that? Even at slow speeds? Help me understand this.
I didn't say ABS brakes, I said integrated-where the rear pedal operates the rear caliper and the LF. I s the Norge set up this way?
:1:I have absolutely no problem going from lock to lock on my 12 Norge. Like it says above use some rear brake........yes they are linked, but all you're doing is regulating a very slow speed with the brake and clutch and throttle.Three more important things:1. Turn your head and look2. Turn your head and look3. Turn your head and look.......I think you get my drift.Also it takes a lot of practice, and will not happen overnight, so keep practicing!!Tim
Dusty, my quote says I did NOT say ABS.ABS has nothing to do with integrated brakes.Okay, the Norge brakes aren't integrated. Thanks.Honda calls it linked because Guzzi used integrated first.
Here's another way to think about it. In my case, when I'm sitting, the seat weighs about 220+lbs. When I'm standing up, the foot pegs weigh about 220+lbs and the seat only weighs 10 pounds (guessing here). So side-by-side, the bike with the heavy seat has a higher center of gravity than the bike with the light seat and heavy footpegs.
Are you sure your brakes on the '12 Norge are linked ? Mine is an '07 an they are not ?????
You are right....not linked.......I stand , or rather sit corrected. I was thinking of the Goldwing.Tim