Skier wrote:Dragonhawk wrote:Aggie84 wrote:Yes, I've riden a bicycle for many years. Is push steering where you push the left bar to the right to turn right?
Whoa! Stop right there!
I have ridden bicycles all my life and I had the same attitude when I began motorcycling. As a fellow bicyclist, let me tell you - I WAS DEAD WRONG!
Never, never, never, never think a motorcycle is like a bicycle!
They are NOT the same at all. The physics of moving around a 350-pound motorcycle at 40MPH does not compare to moving a 20-pound bicycle at 15MPH. They do not move the same. They are not controlled the same. Get it out of your head that it's like a bicycle.
Take it from someone who knows.
My first crash on my motorcycle was in gravel that I could have blown through like NOTHING on a BMX or mountain bike. Unfortunately, my Ninja 250 didn't have the same handling characteristics and I paid the price by flying over the handlebars at 40MPH.
I believe he meant countersteering works on both a bicycle and a motorcycle, which is true.
Yes, but it's not a bad piece of advice anyway. The only useful skills you pick up from riding a bicycle that transfer to a motorcycle are road skills - getting the confidence to ride in traffic.
But Aggie asked, "Is push steering where you push the left bar to the right to turn right?" The answer is, no it isn't, and it isn't even what you do on a bicycle - at least it isn't if the bicycle is going anything other than very slowly.
Aggie, did you mean to say this? If not, then just for info you should know that on a motorcycle (or a bicycle) which is going more than a few miles an hour, you (gently) push the right bar to the left to turn right.
If you have not been told this before then it probably sounds crazy, but it's true. People ride motorcycles and bicycles all their lives without ever realising it. It is all down to the complex forces associated with the steering geometry of the bike - the way the wheels and forks are related to the frame and the way the front wheel lies on the road.
It is called counter-steering. You don't have to concern yourself with it right now. If you've been riding a bicycle then you'll be doing it naturally and will continue to do it on a motorcycle.