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Friday 21 October 2011

Yesterday I shared some thoughts about what it's like to ride in the rain. Today, I'd like to get into some greater detail and tips for wet weather riding. This being Southern California we don't get to practice riding in the rain too often, thankfully. But that means we have less experience in that area when it comes time to put our knowledge to the test. If we can remember a few key points that become embedded in our riding memory, then when it comes time to hit the road in the downpour we relax and can focus on the ride.

The most important thing I can impress upon new and less experienced riders, is to slow down give yourself time. Time to react smoothly to obstacles or dangerous situations. Time to smoothly navigate turns in complete control. Time for your eyes to adjust to the conditions.

When the ground is wet, grip is drastically reduced. If a bike loses traction, it's easy for a rider to lose control. Visibility is also dramatically reduced, from rainfall, road spray and our visors fogging up. We need to be extra alert to spot dangers lurking in the mist. Remember, visibility is reduced for other road users too, they may not see see you coming so give them plenty of time to notice. We have to adjust our riding style to keep ourselves and those around us safe.

Cornering, braking, accelerating, even our road positioning needs adjusting for the wet. A bike steers by leaning into a turn, using a part of the tire often with less tread pattern. And the gyroscopic forces that push down and out from a cycles rear suspension work to push the tire sideways. Obviously in the wet, with too much throttle, a tire can be pushed sideways with greater ease leading to loss of traction, slides and possibly a crash.

The key is to entering the corner smoothly and in control. Gently tip the motorcycle into the turn with neutral throttle, and gradually increase the throttle as you exit the turn and bring the bike fully upright. You want to avoid shutting the throttle completely and snapping it open. This jerky throttle action could cause the bike to lose traction as the suspension loads and unloads sending energy to the tires. Feather the clutch and be judicious with the power delivery and the bike will be in your control through the turn.

Obviously speed through the turn has to be significantly lower as we are unable to lean the bike as far as we would on a dry street. Brake earlier, and brake smoothly, avoid grabbing fistfuls of front brake that will see you on your butt in a flash. Similarly, accelerating by whacking the throttle open, even on a modest 250cc bike can cause the rear tire to lose traction. Slamming the throttle shut to compensate can lead to a snap or a jerk in the bikes posture, sending the rider on a rollercoaster ride wrestling for control. Open the throttle smoothly, changing gears with smooth, deliberate actions and you will pull away with absolute control.

Of course, having a rider stay in control is one part of the puzzle. We've all seen the sigalerts on rainy mornings thanks to car drivers incapable of driving within the limits of the conditions. As motorcycle riders, we are vulnerable at the best of times. In the wet we have to be extra diligent to pay attention to the less alert and more dangerous motorists we have to share the roads with. We have to adjust our road position to avoid manhole covers, oil slicks and overbanding in the streets. All of which are as slick as ice in the wet and need to be avoided.

I spoke to Jeff Hawkins, Director of SkillzDays a riding clinic that focuses on safety and understanding of motorcycles. I asked him what advice he has for wet weather riding, and what he teaches his students.

Jeff's SkillzDays Top Tips for Safely Riding in the Wet

1 - Awareness: It pays to heighten our awareness when riding in the rain. Whether it's your vision, or your hearing, it can give you the edge that you need to avoid that out of control driver. The further that you look ahead, the sooner you'll spot a problem and the more time you'll have to avoid getting involved with it. Advance notice of painted road surfaces, manhole covers, wet leaves, and trash on the road enable you to cross them upright and without fear. Self awareness is a part of it as well. Knowing that the cold and wet are making you hypothermic can save your life. Hypothermia makes for poor decision making.

2 - Time: Take a little more than usual to do everything. Slowing down both your bike and your hands will give you more to work with when things get a little sketchy. Taking more time to go through a curve will save some of your precious traction for any braking that might be needed.

3 - Space: Give yourself more room than you normally do. Reduced traction on wet pavement means that it will take longer to stop, so doubling your following distance will improve your chance of making it home. Staying a lane or so away from other vehicles can buy you the time that you need when things start to go sideways.

4 - Smoothness: Add gobs of it to your riding. It's easy to slide in wet conditions, but staying within the traction-limits by being smooth will help you get the most out of what your tires have to offer in the rain. Whether it's the brakes, the bars, or the throttle, moving them slowly and smoothly will make the bike a much happier machine. A gentle touch is the best way to manage traction in the wet.

5 - Corner Speeds: By cornering at lower speeds you'll give yourself a bigger margin of safety. Turning requires traction. Having less means using less. The people in the vehicles around you may not understand that you're slowing down. A few light taps on the brake lever to flash the brake lights can get their attention.

6 - Check your traction - Turning your bars as you sit at a light and feeling the amount of resistance will give you an idea of just how much traction you have. Trying it on dry pavement, wet pavement, painted and other surface will give you a pretty good idea of where the limits of traction are.

As you can see, we agree on many points, and the common theme throughout is riding smoothly to retain traction and stay in control. Every aspest of riding a motorcycle needs to be run thorogh this filter as we ride in the wet. With modern advances in wet winter riding gear now able to keep us drier than ever in the rain, we can arrive at our destination comfortably warm and dry. And by following the tips and strategies outlined here, we stand a better chance of arriving in one peice. And that, my two-wheel fanatics, is the goal of every journey.

Until next time, ride safe, whatever the weather.

6 Tips for Riding in the Wet




6 Tips for Riding in the Wet




Ninja Motorcycles




Ninja Motorcycles




Ninja Motorcycles




Ninja Motorcycles




Ninja Motorcycles





Vintage Motorcycles




Vintage Motorcycles




Vintage Motorcycles


  • The pneumatic tyre was invented by John Boyd Dunlop in 1888 for use on push-bikes. Boyd also invented the word “pneumatic”. 


  • Slick tyres offer more grip in the wet than treaded tyres up to the point at which they aquaplane. 

  • Modern sports bike tyres don’t contain any natural rubber. 

  • Front tyres disperse water at three times the rate of rear tyres. 

  • When cornering, 75 per cent of a bikes grip comes from the front tyre. 

  • The GS in GSX-R denotes four cylinders with overhead valves. The X means four valves per cylinder and the R is for race replica. 

  • Vespa means wasp. 

  • Cucciolo (the name of the first Ducati) means puppy. 

  • Hayabusa is the name of a Japanese falcon that preys on blackbirds (you gotta larf!). It was also the name of a WW2 Kamikaze fighter plane. 

  • Steve McQueen didn’t do the famous 65 ft motorcycle jump in The Great Escape. American Triumph dealer Bud Ekins did it – in one take. 

  • The first Honda motorcycles were pushbikes with generator engines for army field telephones bolted on. 

  • Kawasaki also makes spaceships. 

  • Yamaha makes swimming pools and unmanned helicopters. 

  • Ducati once made radios. 

  • BMW is the only current major manufacturer to reject the use of telescopic forks on its big bikes. Yet BMW was the first to use and patent them, on the R12 in 1935. 

  • Devil, Satan and Lucifer have all been names of motorcycle manufactures. 

  • Suzuki went from GP also-rans to world champions in 1962 after works MZ rider Emst Degner defected to the firm with all the company’s technology. 

  • Yamaha started making bikes in 1954 but didn’t produce a four-stroke motorcycle until 1970, when the firm built the XS2 650 twin. 

  • Harley-Davidson built push-bikes between 1917 and 1923. 

  • The Kawasaki motorcycle division was established in 1962 for no other reason than to publicise Kawasaki ’s heavy industries, which was huge but unknown to the general public. 

  • Evel Knievel holds the world record for breaking the most number of bones and surviving. His real name is Robert Craig Knievil. The nickname Evel is said to have been given to him by police when he was jailed alongside William (Awful) Knofel. Knievel used a double in the film Viva Knievil. During his stunt career, Knievil spent a total of three years in hospital. When Knievil came to Britain to jump 13 buses at Wembley in 1975, he refused to drive his Cadillac on the left-hand-side of the road, insisting on driving on the right. 

  • The Fonz (aka Henry Winkler) couldn’t actually ride a motorcycle. 

  • In the 1970s cop show CHiPs, Larry Wilcox and Erik Estrada, who played bike patrolmen Jon and Ponch, were so dissatisfied when their Kawasaki Z1000s were swapped for BMWs that they put the BMW fairings on the Kawasakis and continued to use them. 

  • Contrary to popular opinion, the motorcycles used in Easy Rider have not both been lost or destroyed. One of them, which was wrecked during filming, has been restored by Dan Hagerty, who played Grizzly Adams in the TV show of the same name. 

  • No one knows what became of the Triumph 6T ridden by Marlon Brando in The Wild One. its worth £500,000. Street Hawk only ran for 13 episodes. 

  • Although BMW claims it has been making Boxer twins continually since 1923, production stopped for a few months in 1986 when the company decided its future lay in triples and fours. Customer outrage persuaded the Germans to restart the twin-cylinder engine production lines. 

  • MZ invented two-stroke expansion chambers. 

  • The current owners of Bimota-Lorenzo-Ducati is a direct descendant of the original founder of Ducati. Cagiva is a shortening of the words Castiglioni - the founder - and Varese - the town where the company is based. 
  • Triumph also makes golf balls. 

  • Magnesium wheels are porous, and allow tyres to deflate if the protective paint is scraped off. The same process occurs with alloy wheels, only much more slowly. 

  • Dynos only measure torque and engine speed. Peak power is then calculated using a mathematical equation. 

  • Titanium ore is abundant. The reason its known as an expensive material is because its strength and hardness makes working with it difficult and costly. 

  • Early bike helmets were lined with cork 
  • Before becoming famous for bike helmets, ARAI made helmets for building sites. 

  • The founder of ARAI, Hirotake Arai was a stunt rider. 

  • Princess Anne and George Harrison have both owned custom-painted ARAI helmets. 

  • Barry Sheen’s King helmet was Bell Star helmet with a King sticker on it. 

  • The term ‘motorcycle’ was first coined by British inventor Edward butler when he built a twin-cylinder tricycle prototype in 1885. 

  • Some poly carbonate helmets are made from melted-down bottle crates. 
  • Helmet manufacturer FM also make bottle crates. 

  • British superbike rider Scott Smart is Barry Sheen’s nephew. Smart’s mum 42, Maggie, was the first ever MCN grid girl in 1971. 

  • Mike Duff, the Canadian rider who won the Belgian 250cc GP in 1964 and the Dutch 125cc in 1965 is now Michelle Dufff, following a sex change. 

  • Castrol Honda makes a special sticky tape that improves airflow over race bikes’ bodywork. Laid across the nose section, it allows the air to slip up and over the helmet and leathers of the rider more smoothly. 

  • Under WSB rules, acid is used to check if a component that should be aluminium or steel, say it isn’t in fact titanium. A colour change indicates the presence of exotic lightweight material. 

  • The first motorcycle ever was the SH Roper 1869 steam cycle. 

  • The first production bike to advertise a top speed of over 100mph was the Brough Superior. 

  • The first bike to ever top 200 mph was supercharged 499cc NSU in 1956. It achieved 211.4 mph 

  • The first rider to ever go over 300mph was Don Vesco in 1975, on a 1496cc Yamaha-engined streamliner. 

  • The first production motorcycle was the 1488cc, 2.5hp Hilberand & Wolfmuller Motorrad, made in Germany from 1894-97 

  • Super-fit Troy Bayliss has a resting heart rate of 36 bpm, around half the normal rate. During a race, Bayliss’ heart rate rises to 186bpm. 

  • Nobody in the 2004 GP, WSB or BSB series has the number one plate on his bike. 

  • Honda only started racing to win the TT, in 1959 with the RC142. 

  • Jean-Phillipe Ruggia was the first racer to regularly get his elbow down without crashing 

  • When Valentino Rossi was five, his dad Graziano built him a go-cart to discourage him from getting into bikes. 

  • Jim Moodie and Sean Emmett have both worn sanitary towels inside their helmets to stop sweat dripping in their eyes in hot conditions. 

  • Joey Dunlop was once a passenger on a fishing boat that sank on the way to the Isle of Man TT. 

  • Brands Hatch started life as a grass track circuit. 

  • “See God. Then back off” Kevin Schwantz on his late braking technique. 

  • “I did not come here to (make love to) spiders. Rob Phillis , when asked about his ambition of a podium finish. 

  • “You can only piss with the cock you’ve got” Neil Hodgson. 

  • “If anyone can go faster on that Aprillia, [Mod edit]" Colin Edwards. 

  • The con-rod of a sports bike engine at full chat is enduring alternate compression and tensile forces of 10 tons, 500 times a second. 

  • The foot-operated sequential gear change was invented by Velocette’s Harold Willis in 1927. 

  • Shoei helmets have been known to withstand bullets 

  • The most technically complex production motorcycle ever was the Honda NR750 of 1992, with its oval pistons, eight valves per cylinder and two con rods per piston. 

  • When torque in ft/lb. and power in bhp are plotted on the same scale, the curves always cross at 5252rpm. 

  • In 10,000 miles, the average four-cylinder bike engine will have done 100,000,000 revs. 

  • ****’s angels’ founder Sonny Barger says in his autobiography that he prefers Japanese bikes to Harley Davidson! 

  • Gatso speed cameras were invented by dutch rally driver Maurice Gatsonides.

  • The front page picture of the first ever MCN shows six tweed-suited gents drinking coffee together. 

  • After he saw Honda NR750, Massimo Tamburini tore up his design for the Ducati 916 and copied all the Honda’s main styling cues. 

  • Lawrence of Arabia was killed while riding his Brough Superior. 

  • Under its own power, Triumph’s rocket III can accelerate 0-60mph at almost exactly the same rate as it would when dropped out of a plane. 

  • Honda Super Blackbird riders crash, on average, once every 10 years. 

  • One in five ungaraged bikes in inner cities gets stolen. 

  • Insurance companies estimate that up to 25 per cent of bike theft claims are fraudulent. 

  • An average of £50 from every bike insurance premium is spent on settling a relatively small number of very expensive personal injury claims. 

  • On average, engineers are the most likely people to crash. Lecturers are the least likely. 

  • The first monkey-style bike, the excelsior welbike, was designed to be dropped from planes with paratroopers during world war 2. 

  • The highest altitude reached by a land motor vehicle under its own power is 20,065ft by two Chinese Jinlong motorcycles on Mount Everest in May 2002. 

  • The world’s smallest motorcyclist, Hungarian circus performer Pityu Toth, is only 2ft 4in tall.

Interesting motorcycle facts

The British-based Crescent Suzuki Racing team are expected to confirm their switch to WSB in 2012. As reported in MCN this week, the current BSB squad have been in on-going discussions with WSB bosses about graduating to the world championship.
The BSB runner-ups proved themselves when they competed as wild cards at this year’s Silverstone WSB round where rider John Hopkins set pole position and secured a top five finish.
Team manager Jack Valentine spent last weekend in Portimao for the final round of WSB and told MCN that his team is more than capable of making an impact on the world scene.
Valentine also confirmed that regardless of whether they race in BSB or WSB it would be a two-man team and given the team’s pedigree they would have no shortage of top riders interested in joining the squad.
Valentine has made no secret of his desire to retain the services of American John Hopkins, who has turned his career around dramatically with the team this year and has years of world championship experience.
Leon Camier is also being strongly linked with the British team. The former BSB champion has spent the last two seasons with the factory Alitalia Aprilia team in WSB. Despite securing a total of seven podiums and seventh in the overall standings this year, he has been unable to deliver the consistency and results he or the team expected. But a closer look at his performances, especially in the second half of the races, gives a clear indication of his potential to be a genuine title contender.
Another linked to the ride is newly crowned BSB champion, Tommy Hill. Hill rode for the team in 2010 and showed his pedigree by beating Hopkins to the title this season, riding a Swan Yamaha. He also has a point to prove in WSB after suffering a torrid time when he raced an Althea Honda in 2009.
An announcement on the team’s future is expected tomorrow, although there may still be some time before the rider-line-up is confirmed.

Crescent Suzuki poised to confirm WSB future

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