Parking Your Motorcycle on Hills

Message
Author
User avatar
Social Distortion
Legendary 300
Legendary 300
Posts: 394
Joined: Mon Nov 14, 2005 5:34 pm
Sex: Male
My Motorcycle: 2004 triumph thruxton
Location: Chicago

Parking Your Motorcycle on Hills

#1 Unread post by Social Distortion »

Hi Gang
Never really thought about it until it happened recently here in Chicago.
We dont have any rolling hills here, but i ended up in a Suburb that has some pretty good sized hills. So my questions is any rule of thumbs on how to park your MC on these scenarios

Scenario 1-Parallel to the Curb facing Up a Hill
2-Parallel to the Curb facing down a Hill
3-Angled to the Curb facing Up a hill
4-Angled to the Curb facing down a hill

*In Scenario 3 and 4, i wonder if my kick stand is stable enough to hold the MC and not have the slop complicate things or do people park thier MC differently when on a grade/hill. When is it better to back into a spot? Should the kickstand always be facing the up slope?

thanks again!
"Born to Lose and Destined to Fail"
User avatar
darsek
Elite
Elite
Posts: 150
Joined: Fri Sep 15, 2006 7:26 pm
Sex: Male
Location: San Francisco

#2 Unread post by darsek »

Hi,
I have been wondering about this too as I live in San Francisco and am bound to have to deal with this. I have been looking at how others do it and it looks like most park perpendicular to the curb(90 degrees) with the kickstand on the uphill side.
User avatar
jonnythan
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 2470
Joined: Tue Jun 20, 2006 8:08 am
Sex: Male
My Motorcycle: Year/Make/Model

#3 Unread post by jonnythan »

Depends on the geometry of your bike/stand.

My bike doesn't lean over very far, so if the kickstand is touching ground higher than the wheels, it will likely fall over. I can sometimes put the stand slightly downhill of the wheels and be fine.

When on hills, I try to get as parallel to the curb as possible while keeping the downhill wheel touching the curb. Generally, when parking uphill, I will be at a slight angle to the curb, back wheel resting against it. When parking downhill, I put the front wheel up against the curb.
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/jonnythan/sets/]Flickr.[/url]
User avatar
Sev
Site Supporter - Gold
Site Supporter - Gold
Posts: 7352
Joined: Sun Jun 06, 2004 7:52 pm
Sex: Male
Location: Sherwood Park, Alberta

#4 Unread post by Sev »

Put the bike in first gear and it won't roll around on you.
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.

[url=http://sirac-sev.blogspot.com/][img]http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a227/Sevulturus/sig.jpg[/img][/url]
oldschoolorange
Legendary
Legendary
Posts: 258
Joined: Sat Jul 15, 2006 7:55 pm
Sex: Male
Location: Hamilton Ontario

#5 Unread post by oldschoolorange »

All I do is put it in first and then make sure that the kickstand is going against the direction of the hill, I am sure you could park it perpinducular to the hill and have no problem
83 GS550, 70 Yamaha CT1 175
User avatar
Social Distortion
Legendary 300
Legendary 300
Posts: 394
Joined: Mon Nov 14, 2005 5:34 pm
Sex: Male
My Motorcycle: 2004 triumph thruxton
Location: Chicago

#6 Unread post by Social Distortion »

thanks gang.....hmmm....i still think to put more thought on this...
though the point about putting our MC in 1st was a basic MSF basic.
"Born to Lose and Destined to Fail"
qwerty
Legendary 500
Legendary 500
Posts: 623
Joined: Sun Oct 01, 2006 11:08 am
Sex: Male
Location: Texas

#7 Unread post by qwerty »

Front tire uphill and in 1st. On very steep hills, a small piece of pre-cut wood wedged between the footpeg and rear brake pedal is an easy parking brake.

Front tire downhill, any little bump plus gravity can fold the kickstand.

Sideways across hill:

Kickstand uphill, bike can be too vertical. Any little bump and the bike falls away from the kickstand.

Kickstand downhill, bike can be leaned to far. Any little bump and the bike levers over the kickstand too easily.
If at first you don't succeed, skydiving isn't for you.
Post Reply