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FJR Motorcycle Forums
FAQs and Common Historical Info
Ride Like a Pro
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<blockquote data-quote="Bill Lumberg" data-source="post: 1270527" data-attributes="member: 87479"><p>The basic rider course 2 and advanced rider course with MSF are great, even if you're just refreshing your skills, or finding out you had better ones than you thought you did. I'd attend a Palladino session in a heartbeat, if I hadn't stolen their techniques years ago. Would still be a good time. Once you understand that, even at almost zero mph, the dynamic tension between the drivetrain and the rear brake (bike in gear, clutch in friction zone applying moderate power to the rear wheel, rear brake applied) makes the bike want to stand up, even during stops or maneuvers so slow only a Wallenda could balance it. That's the great epiphany for someone new to the techniques taught by Jerry and Crew.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bill Lumberg, post: 1270527, member: 87479"] The basic rider course 2 and advanced rider course with MSF are great, even if you're just refreshing your skills, or finding out you had better ones than you thought you did. I'd attend a Palladino session in a heartbeat, if I hadn't stolen their techniques years ago. Would still be a good time. Once you understand that, even at almost zero mph, the dynamic tension between the drivetrain and the rear brake (bike in gear, clutch in friction zone applying moderate power to the rear wheel, rear brake applied) makes the bike want to stand up, even during stops or maneuvers so slow only a Wallenda could balance it. That's the great epiphany for someone new to the techniques taught by Jerry and Crew. [/QUOTE]
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Ride Like a Pro
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