What happened? It almost looks like he paniced and locked up one of the brakes... but he had more then enough room to turn around that wall if he wanted too.
Another case of target fixation and lock up?
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.
I dont see why is bike started wobbling like that...he wasnt going very fast was he? Didnt seem like he was turning very much either. If he had let go of the brakes and hit the throttle and initiated a lean, he would have smoothed out and cleared the wall (am I correct?).
Putting the foot down was a huge mistake. Probably threw him off balance even more.
2002 Buell Blast 500 /¦\
[url=http://www.putfile.com][img]http://x10.putfile.com/3/8221543225.gif[/img][/url]
[url=http://www.totalmotorcycle.com/BBS/viewtopic.php?t=11790]Confessions of a Commuter[/url]
I agree. I don't think the foot helped. I am wondering as others are, what started the wobble in the first place.
A dog had his chain reduced one link at a time, every few days, until his chain was so short he could barely move. He never resisted because he was conditioned to the loss of his freedom slowly, over time. Are we in this country becoming like the dog?
He probably shifted and dropped the clutch and broke the rear wheel loose.... then couldn't recover it.
I'm betting it was the guy's brand new bike, which is why they were making the "show off" video in the first place. So he may not have been familiar with the control feel.
i couuld be wrong, but it looked to me like he slammed on the front brake, and didnt use the rear at all. thats what threw the bike out of control. his right leg was flailing but his left hand still looked gripped on the front brake.
i think he had no idea how to brake properly, resulting in the crash.
2000 Suzuki Bandit 1200s
Vespa Rally 200 in pieces