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Well I now know I can survive a panic stop and I have no trouble locking up the rear wheel.It was a bright, dry and sunny morning here in California. I was an hour early to a meeting so I decided to tour a section of Sacramento that I had been in for a decade or so. It was a Industrial and rough housing section of the city.I was on a divided four lane expressway doing the speed limit, 50 mph, when I went over a little railway overpass. It was a short hop of an overpass. When I was at the top and looking ahead I happened to see cars crossing in front of me. From where I was near the crest of the overpass trees had obscured the stoplights. I hit the brakes hard then saw the redlight.The Griso's tail wiggled some so I slowly increased pressure on the front brake keeping her straight and expecting the front to lock up.I stopped in the middle of the crosswalk.We always know to be careful at the crest of a hill on a two lane country road. Now I know to be careful in town at any sort of hill.
That can be a bad scenario at any intersection, but the part about stopping on the sidewalk is the scariest. Our town is shaving the road surface and embedding some sort of rubberized white panels in the pavement for crosswalks so's they don't have to paint the stripes as much. Those panels are like intentionally placed land mines. Hit one with a wheel locked up, especially when it's raining or there is loose sand on it, and you ARE going to enter the intersection on your crashbars.
Good story. I would go look at it in Google street view if you could provide more specific location ;D
A modern sports bike will put you over the handle bars before it will lock the front wheel at ANY speed in an upright max braking dry road scenario.I think the Griso would do the same.
So what you're saying is that I need to visit a clean parking lot and do some more panic stops. I don't really like doing "stoppies" on two wheels. I've done it with mountain bikes on ski runs many times and even a racing bicycle at the front of a racing pack (car pulled out). One of the reason I like the Griso is the handlebar is such that you can "brace for impact" which I don't believe you can do with ape-hangers or regular cruiser bars.