ronboskz650sr wrote:Sorry, Zoo, but unless you ride at a walking pace all the time, physics proves this simply isn't true. This cannot be a discussion with two sides...you DO countersteer at all speeds above a walking speed (perhaps a fast walk, depending on your bike's steering geometry) regardless of whether you are aware of, or believe, it.
At all speeds <25mph (the speeds in question in this thread) you better believe I have to point my tire in the direction I want to go (requiring me to push on the opposite grip). The geometrical anomolies you're referring to do not come into play (at least on my bike) until all road speeds above 25mph. The reason for the counter-intuitive anomoly is because of the difference in tire widths from the front to the rear (the rear tire on a bike is typically ~50% wider than the front) and the steering geometry that creates at speed, especially during hard banking (also evident while changing lanes on the freeway). Problem is, the written test (at least here in Ohio) specifically asks how to turn a motorcycle, and the correct answers are always to push the grip on the opposite side of the bike from the desired turn. If our MSF centers are using the same terminology to describe counter-steering, especially by making up sayings like "look right, push right, turn right" I believe that is dangerously misleading, since most if not all low-speed navigation requires the opposite.
So, again, it's a matter of context, not semantics or defying physics (more specifically, geometry). And I'm even more glad to have not taken the MSF course than I was before.
cb360 wrote:Yeah, we kinda have two different things going on here. This thread started with a question about slow right turns from a dead stop and then we got into a countersteering discussion. Two completely different animals. I countersteer on right turns all the time but you aren't really countersteering when going reallllyyyy slow. I think I said that somewhere up above.
Granted...and that's my bad. I read just enough to post a reply to KON DEE not realizing the thread had wandered from the topic's namesake.
