Motorcycle Mayor
Well-known member
I'm interested in learning more about the physics behind cornering. This was sparked by a potentially fatal corner I took on CA-49 coming down (eastbound) out of Yuba Pass the other day.
Here's the setup. That stretch of 49 has beautiful, sweeping curves, a joy to ride. But -- as happens occasionally -- I entered this one particular curve wrong (nothing out of the ordinary about the curve as far as I recall, no decreasing radius or anything like that). I immediately knew I'd set up wrong, and knew I was going to go wide. Clearly, I entered the curve too fast for the degree of lean I'd taken (as is nicely explained by another forum member here).
Which wouldn't have been a problem...except an oncoming car appeared.
I don't remember exactly what I did to recover. The entire event was over in a few seconds. It reminded me of a comment made by a pilot friend of mine "Flying: boredom, punctuated by occasional moments of sheer terror"
.
What I do remember, very clearly, was that it was quite a struggle to warp my curve back into my lane. I suspect I instinctively hit the brakes...which I'm positive is exactly the wrong thing to do. Too bad humans haven't evolved yet to instinctively know how to ride
.
My more experienced riding buddies (I've been riding for 9.5 years) tell me what I should've done is lean harder into the turn. One of them also said I should've, after doing so, accelerated. That's consistent with "slow to enter, speed up to exit"...but it's counterintuitive when you think you're about to hit something at 60+ MPH relative.
Besides seeking additional advice here -- and getting feedback on whether what my riding buddies suggested is correct -- I'd like to understand the physics involved (introductory mathematical physics was a favorite college class of mine, many, many moons ago).
Is this just a real-world example of V^2 / R? Where if you want R -- the cornering radius -- to be smaller, you have to increase your speed (V)? Obviously limited by eventually breaking the contact patch -- gotta maintain friction! -- and going into a slide? Or is something else going on?
Thanx in advance for feedback, links, etc.
Here's the setup. That stretch of 49 has beautiful, sweeping curves, a joy to ride. But -- as happens occasionally -- I entered this one particular curve wrong (nothing out of the ordinary about the curve as far as I recall, no decreasing radius or anything like that). I immediately knew I'd set up wrong, and knew I was going to go wide. Clearly, I entered the curve too fast for the degree of lean I'd taken (as is nicely explained by another forum member here).
Which wouldn't have been a problem...except an oncoming car appeared.
I don't remember exactly what I did to recover. The entire event was over in a few seconds. It reminded me of a comment made by a pilot friend of mine "Flying: boredom, punctuated by occasional moments of sheer terror"
What I do remember, very clearly, was that it was quite a struggle to warp my curve back into my lane. I suspect I instinctively hit the brakes...which I'm positive is exactly the wrong thing to do. Too bad humans haven't evolved yet to instinctively know how to ride
My more experienced riding buddies (I've been riding for 9.5 years) tell me what I should've done is lean harder into the turn. One of them also said I should've, after doing so, accelerated. That's consistent with "slow to enter, speed up to exit"...but it's counterintuitive when you think you're about to hit something at 60+ MPH relative.
Besides seeking additional advice here -- and getting feedback on whether what my riding buddies suggested is correct -- I'd like to understand the physics involved (introductory mathematical physics was a favorite college class of mine, many, many moons ago).
Is this just a real-world example of V^2 / R? Where if you want R -- the cornering radius -- to be smaller, you have to increase your speed (V)? Obviously limited by eventually breaking the contact patch -- gotta maintain friction! -- and going into a slide? Or is something else going on?
Thanx in advance for feedback, links, etc.