Why do you let off the brakes before you let off the clutch? You have two hands and two feet right? Also, if you rev match and ease out the clutch slowly there will be no jerk. Easing out the clutch slowly will get rid of the jerk by itself but adding the throttle will make it fasterlunchmeat wrote:If I've got to set up for a turn and I'm going downhill, braking with the clutch in usually results in not-so-smooth timing, because there's that instant when you let off the brakes that you start accelerating, but you've got to lean and let the clutch out and roll on the throttle...I'd rather have the engine behind me keeping me at a speed I control, rather than gravity.
I guess the issue is more with downhill turns than anything else. It applies to regular turns, but downhill is where it really hurts.
Either way you should have all your breaking and shifting done BEFORE the turn. You're suspension can bounce around all it likes in a straight line but you want it to be nice and settled by the time you press to initiate your turn