Auburn
Well-known member
Probably had to do with the rate that I applied the brakes. I did very fast but progressively and did not "grab" the brake which would tend to cause the ABS to kick in due to no wieght transfer. Definitely from my road racing background and learning how to apply the brakes smoothly but rapidly too. Once I was braking at maximum effort, I could feel the ABS pulse a few times in the front lever, but the rear was definitely in the air about 6 inches.Curious to know if you managed to stay out of the ABS during your stop. I had my first emergency stop on the FJR last week when a truck pulled out in front of me. Had the ABS activated both front and rear and didn't feel like I was ever close to lifting the rear wheel. Could be that I just jumped on the brakes too hard too quick and got into the ABS before enough weight had transferred to the front to really get a maximum effort stop. Also a possibility that I didn't have good enough traction conditions to get that much stopping power from the front. It worked out.....I can attest that even with ABS, you can get the rear tire airborne. In my case, my racing background kicked in, I applied a rapid PROGRESSIVE pressure to the front brake lever. I slowed enough fast enough to prevent getting hit by the object.
EDIT: the rear tire did not touch back down until I started letting off the brake pressure on the front.
If you apply the brakes progressively (add more pressure as the wieght transfer to the front tire increases) you can squeeze the front lever as hard as you want once the wieght transfer has happened and you will not lock the front tire up if traction does not change under the front tire (i.e. gravel or moisture, etc...). You do have a lot more traction when braking wihile the bike is stright up and down (even in the wet) than you might think or believe you have.
On my last race bike a Honda RS250 GP bike, the front brakes were a one finger brake. You could dial in as much braking power as you wanted with total feedback and feel. You had to let a little pressure off to set the rear back down so you could lean into the turn. It was the most amazing brake system I have ever used. You could brake so hard with that bike that you could make the front tire slip on the rim, even with the tires air to the correct pressures.
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