
How to safely prepare, detect, and deal with obstacles and hazards you encounter while riding through turns and corners on a motorcycle. From the April 2006 issue of Motorcycle Cruiser Magazine.
It could be that my favorite thing about riding motorcycles is the way they turn, leaning over to balance all the forces involved in making a single-track vehicle change directions and go right where you want it. Even after riding through corners hundreds of thousands — probably millions — of times, the process of riding a motorcycle around a turn in the road or racetrack is still exciting and challenging. I’m also sure that there haven’t been more than a handful of times in more than 40 years and a million miles of riding that I arrived at the entry to a corner and entered it just perfectly, with exactly the right amount of handlebar pressure, body English, throttle opening and lean angle to deliver me to the ideal point at the apex of the turn without minute adjustments. You virtually always have to make some sort of adjustment as you commit to a line around the turn. To keep all those forces balanced, you can’t make any violent changes or you’ll quickly find yourself flat-side-down. To avoid doing that, you need to to be sure of what lies ahead .
Photo Gallery: Motorcycle Cornering Safety Tips in Turns with Hazards – Motorcycle Cruiser
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