How long will I be afraid of the Rain?
And that is traveling in a straight line at a steady speed when all the traction can be used to sticking to the ground.Skier wrote:Wet pavement gives about 80% of the traction as dry pavement.
Anything else can be slippery as ice: lane markers, manhole covers, etc...
Any input you give the bike (e.g. accelerating, decelerating, turning), will reduce the amount of traction available for staying in contact with the tarmac.
Take tire trust out of the picture, and just slooooooooow down.

[b][i]"Good girls go to heaven. Bad ones go to hell. And girls on fast bikes go anywhere they want." [/i]
2009 Triumph Sprint ST - daily commuter
2006 Triumph Daytona 675 - track bike
1999 Suzuki SV650 - track training bike[/b]
2009 Triumph Sprint ST - daily commuter
2006 Triumph Daytona 675 - track bike
1999 Suzuki SV650 - track training bike[/b]
- Johnj
- Site Supporter - Platinum
- Posts: 3806
- Joined: Fri Nov 17, 2006 7:34 am
- Real Name: Johnny Strabler
- Sex: Male
- Years Riding: 34
- My Motorcycle: A Bolt of Lightning
- Location: Kansas City KS
There is a bridge on I-35S that is south of downtown which has an expansion joint in the middle of a right hand turn. It really feels squirrely to cross that at speed while the road is wet.
People say I'm stupid and apathetic. I don't know what that means, and I don't care.

Always wear a helmet, eye protection, and protective clothing. Never ride under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

Always wear a helmet, eye protection, and protective clothing. Never ride under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
- Skier
- Site Supporter - Platinum
- Posts: 2242
- Joined: Sat Aug 07, 2004 10:44 am
- Sex: Male
- Location: Pullman, WA, USA
The bike will still require x amount of traction to turn or brake. The difference is you have 0.8y traction before the tires slip, opposed to 1.0y traction.shalihe74 wrote:And that is traveling in a straight line at a steady speed when all the traction can be used to sticking to the ground.Skier wrote:Wet pavement gives about 80% of the traction as dry pavement.
Anything else can be slippery as ice: lane markers, manhole covers, etc...
Any input you give the bike (e.g. accelerating, decelerating, turning), will reduce the amount of traction available for staying in contact with the tarmac.
Take tire trust out of the picture, and just slooooooooow down.
[url=http://www.motoblag.com/blag/]Practicing the dark and forgotten art of using turn signals since '98.[/url]
Ain't dat what I done sayed?Skier wrote:The bike will still require x amount of traction to turn or brake. The difference is you have 0.8y traction before the tires slip, opposed to 1.0y traction.shalihe74 wrote:And that is traveling in a straight line at a steady speed when all the traction can be used to sticking to the ground.Skier wrote:Wet pavement gives about 80% of the traction as dry pavement.
Anything else can be slippery as ice: lane markers, manhole covers, etc...
Any input you give the bike (e.g. accelerating, decelerating, turning), will reduce the amount of traction available for staying in contact with the tarmac.
Take tire trust out of the picture, and just slooooooooow down.

[b][i]"Good girls go to heaven. Bad ones go to hell. And girls on fast bikes go anywhere they want." [/i]
2009 Triumph Sprint ST - daily commuter
2006 Triumph Daytona 675 - track bike
1999 Suzuki SV650 - track training bike[/b]
2009 Triumph Sprint ST - daily commuter
2006 Triumph Daytona 675 - track bike
1999 Suzuki SV650 - track training bike[/b]
They don't in your world? Wowie wow wow!!Skier wrote:If tires magically floated away from the pavement when they lose traction, sure.

Fair point, however; I was having vocabulary issues that day.



[b][i]"Good girls go to heaven. Bad ones go to hell. And girls on fast bikes go anywhere they want." [/i]
2009 Triumph Sprint ST - daily commuter
2006 Triumph Daytona 675 - track bike
1999 Suzuki SV650 - track training bike[/b]
2009 Triumph Sprint ST - daily commuter
2006 Triumph Daytona 675 - track bike
1999 Suzuki SV650 - track training bike[/b]