EXUP Worldwide was born from the ashes of the original EXUP Brotherhood – the definitive forum for all those who have interest in Yamaha FZ, FZR, and YZF motorcycles.
Hi All,
now they are some pics, real good.
The one with No 1 in background, (and that damned fine
LANCASHIRE lad Neil Hodgeson, in the foreground).
A) The people who put that bike together know exactly what
lean angle that bike can achive. WHAT IS IT......
B) The rider isn't exactly hanging off a lot, is he. That is not
meant as derogatory, but as an observasion. So is hanging-off
not that important...
yours Slip.
Slip,
Hanging off allows you to keep the bike more upright, so it helps in a turn where you need more lean angle than the bike or the tires can handle (e.g. a tight radius turn). On a sliding bike you want to be over the bike for control and balance; not hanging off. So you will see roadracers hanging off a slow tight radius turn but they stay over the bike on the fast turns (turns with a wider radius) and through the esses. You also see racers hanging off more towards the end of the race when their tires are worn and losing traction. They get more lean angle from the fresh sticky tires. They don't get the same lean angle from the tires when they are worn, so they compensate by hanging off; this lets them keep the bike more upright.