Scab
I got nothin' here...
agreed
And the argument about "what if it fails and you're not prepared" seems silly to me. I don't think optimizing your ride for 0.001% of the time is smarter than optimizing for 99.999%.
Now that's just not right :dribble:So, am I to assume you do not wear a helmet, gloves, boots, other protective riding gear, etc. when you ride?
i.e. - "There's about a 99.999% chance I won't get involved in a motorcycle crash so I might as well not wear any protective gear..."
Just curious...
Dallara
Now that's just not right :dribble:So, am I to assume you do not wear a helmet, gloves, boots, other protective riding gear, etc. when you ride?
i.e. - "There's about a 99.999% chance I won't get involved in a motorcycle crash so I might as well not wear any protective gear..."
Just curious...
Dallara
Of course the correct answer is to wear your gear, but disconnect your brakes :assassin:
Dallara, have ya noticed that we're a tough sell? :lol:
And the argument about "what if it fails and you're not prepared" seems silly to me. I don't think optimizing your ride for 0.001% of the time is smarter than optimizing for 99.999%.
...being pro-ABS, does not mean that you always just grab/stomp the brake as hard as you can. It means having an extra level of backup, not as a replacement for good braking technique.Now you gotta ask yourself, after just mashing on the rear brake trusting the ABS is going to work, is today the day the ABS warning light is going to just stay on instead of blink???
I may take you up ont that bet. I would guess that most people with ABS rarley (if ever) activate the ABS, unless they're trying to - just for fun to see if it works. That's the way it is with me, anyway.I would bet money most of the riders with ABS get pretty complacent after a short period of time, and use more back brake than they should and not enough of their front brakes. Especially if they are coming off a cruiser or hardly. Most of the sportbike guy's are more used to using the front brake. IMHO.
I may take you up on that bet. I would guess that most people with ABS rarley (if ever) activate the ABS, unless they're trying to - just for fun to see if it works. That's the way it is with me, anyway.
I don't think that people "get stupid" just because they have ABS.
(I don't forget to lock my front door at night)
Woodstock....for me as I said it's the linked brakes....guess you've never gone fast enough to have a need to trail brake in a corner...(this isn't meant as a slight on your riding skills) :huh:Perhaps I'm pointing out the obvious here, but the FJR is not a race bike. Not even close.
I would think that you're limted more by the extra 200+ lbs of bike, or by the need for ST tires, than by ABS or linked brakes.
You forgot to mention the tires were world class bias plys (still have a euro spec 83 cb1100f)Right, Hoog.
I don't like the ABS on my FJR, and as I have said multiple times, if I can find a way to disable it easily that doesn't cause any untoward side effects, I will.
Simple as that...
Woodstock,
Doesn't matter what I'm riding, I still try and extract the highest level of cornering performance I can from it with my level of skills. I never said I was a world champion, or anything even remotely close, but I did race competitively against a few who went on to become world champions. One of the reasons I ride a motorcycle is to continue to learn about how they handle and why, and to learn about myself handling them. I ride pretty intensely focused. Just being out joy-riding, sniffing daisies is not fun riding for me.
I bought the FJR because the nearest true twisty roads are 200 miles away, and riding up there and back via the only route - the superslab - on my unfaired BMW R-1150-R was simply a drag... So much so I finally took to trailering it up. It was fun once there, but not fun in transit. I started shopping for something big, fast, faired, that carried a lot of fuel... Pretty much came down to the FJR, Honda ST-1300, BMW R-1150 or R-1200-RT, or the new or old version of BMW K-12-GT's. The Honda was out. Have ridden them before and don't care for 'em, at all. Beemers are all nice, but stupid expensive and have BMW's damnable, whining, wooden-feeling servo-assisted Integral ABS, and I couldn't stand the price penalty or the brakes on 'em. That left the FJR...
And I love it. It handles well, even though it's a bit portly and too long... I just don't like the ABS.
Do the extra 200 lbs. or ST tires bother me?
Not in the slightest, but then I was road racing Honda CB-750-F's, CB-900-F's, CBX's, and Kawasaki Z-1's at Texas World Speedway, Henderson, Aqua Fest, etc. back in the late '70's and early '80's... And all of them weighed at least 550 lbs. ready to ride, and we raced on narrow rims with Dunlop K-181 or K-91 tires or the like, and with wimpy forks, shocks, and brakes...
You haven't lived until you have wobbled all the way around the banking on the old TWS road course on a Kawasaki Z-1 Superbike at over 150 MPH (fast in those days... ) and then had to dive off into the infield in turn one wide open... It was especially fun in the rain.
We would have killed to have something that handled as good as the FJR back then. It's easy to go fast on.
Dallara
I would bet money most of the riders with ABS get pretty complacent after a short period of time, and use more back brake than they should and not enough of their front brakes. Especially if they are coming off a cruiser or hardly. Most of the sportbike guy's are more used to using the front brake. IMHO.
Bike with a trailer....dude buy a car :blink:Dallara,You do realize I was kidding right?
I know I've benefitted from ABS twice in the 50 thou I've put on the LT. Once at the end of an 800 mile day (two up loaded w/trailer), and once on a rainy early morning in Duluth. Who can say what would have happened without it, I know what happened with it, and let's just say I prefer to have it. Like you say, it's a personal thing.
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