Mr. Invisible wrote:
Even in the article that was presented they say that it may take a dozen or more times to figure out how to shift. What happens on during the botched upshifts while learning?
The first time I tried it, it snicked right into gear. That was about 20 years ago, lol. I personally have never had trouble with it from day one.
I suppose if you botch it, it will just not go into next gear and you will just stay in the current gear. Not really a terrible catastrophe assuming you are practicing in an isolated road at a marginal speed and rpm.
What you will notice when you do it correctly is that you are not forcing in the gear, it's almost as if the tranny will wait for the precise correct time and suck the gear in. You are not actually pushing it but the tranny is pulling it into gear on it's own. You will feel no resistance and it will feel electric(as Sports Rider described it).
Mr. Invisible wrote:
Another question, what drive do your bikes have? If they are chain drives with some play in them I can see where you can shift without doing too much damage. If they are shaft drive, What kind of damage are you doing to the driveline?
My KLX, CBR, & Hypermotard are chain drive and my R1150R is a paralever shaftie.
Once again when done correctly, it causes no damage to the tranny or the drivetrain. As a matter of fact, with the R1150R, it is the only way to shift that tranny totally seamlessly.
If you are a new rider, there are other more useful skills that you should learn before clutchless shifting. You can improve your shifting smoothness quite a bit by going only to the friction zone on your clutch when shifting rather than pulling it in all the way to the end. You can also fan the clutch and upshift simultaneously and that will also yield a very smooth shift(second only to a clutchless one). Blipping the throttle to match the rpm when downshifting is another.
Clutchless downshifts, other than by an expert rider on the track, should never be done. I certainly don't do them. Not only is it difficult to do without causing extra wear, I don't really see any benefit to doing it in the street. The shift will feel no different from a clutched one