James Burleigh
Well-known member
Last weekend a number of us took the StreetMasters Cornering Workshop down in Lancaster. Let me begin here by saying two thumbs way up for StreetMasters! :clapping: They combine top-notch professionalism and a solid method with plenty of hands-on track time.
One thing not available with the StreetMasters course is any written material that summarizes what we learned, similar to, say, Keith Code’s Twist of the Wrist books that describe in detail the method he teaches at his cornering school.
So in this thread I want to archive the lessons in order to refer back to them and continue to practice and apply them, and to share with fellow forum members. I invite others who have taken the course to help clarify and amplify the method.
Definitions:
Turn-in point: Entrance to the curve, going as wide as the road and safety permit. I take this also to mean the point by which you’ve slowed the bike, dropped into the gear that will take you through the turn, and are now turning.
Tip-in (is that what they called it?): Point where, once into the curve and hugging wide, you give the bike an additional turn input to take you to the apex.
Apex: point where you ride closest to the inside of the turn.
Exit: They didn’t define this, but talked about it a lot. I take it to be just after the apex when you stand the bike up.
Tenets:
So in summary, they recommend...
Jb
One thing not available with the StreetMasters course is any written material that summarizes what we learned, similar to, say, Keith Code’s Twist of the Wrist books that describe in detail the method he teaches at his cornering school.
So in this thread I want to archive the lessons in order to refer back to them and continue to practice and apply them, and to share with fellow forum members. I invite others who have taken the course to help clarify and amplify the method.
Definitions:
Turn-in point: Entrance to the curve, going as wide as the road and safety permit. I take this also to mean the point by which you’ve slowed the bike, dropped into the gear that will take you through the turn, and are now turning.
Tip-in (is that what they called it?): Point where, once into the curve and hugging wide, you give the bike an additional turn input to take you to the apex.
Apex: point where you ride closest to the inside of the turn.
Exit: They didn’t define this, but talked about it a lot. I take it to be just after the apex when you stand the bike up.
Tenets:
So in summary, they recommend...
- As you approach the curve, stay wide till you can see through the turn to the apex and, ideally, the entry to the next corner. They call this late-apexing. It’s the cornerstone of their method. The reason is that they want you to have an out in the event the turn decreases or there is something in your path. The out is in the form of additional traction, available additional lean angle, and additional sight lines and braking.
- Brake and do any necessary shifting before you begin your turn (before you enter the turn or begin to lean your bike).
- Also begin to roll on some throttle before leaning, giving the suspension a chance to stabilize.
- Look through the turn, pointing with your nose where you want to go. Use your peripheral vision as necessary for closer-in stuff, while keeping that nose pointed through the turn. (After watching a segment about CHP training on Speed Channel Sportbikes, where they emphasize keeping your head up and looking waaaaay through a turn, I like to even point with my chin as an exaggerated way of ensuring I keep my head up).
- The line between two sequential curves is the one that connects the exit and the entry point for the next curve.
Jb
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