I've ridden with Ray, Tony, Vince, etc for over 10 years now. Ridden with Tony longer than that. I've done over 80 on that road myself. There are reasons why I stopped doing so. Just because you wind up doing 80 with other riders only means you haven't had the pleasure of learning my lessons. State highways and busy roads are not good places to do 80+. Coming down the hill into the twisities outside Arcadia at 80+ leads me to believe you were doing faster speeds prior to this. The fact that you are having to ride the brakes through the first hard corner leads me to believe you were caught off guard and probably lulled to some extent by the speed. Go ahead and rationalize all you want. But you might not get away with that corner braking next time and wind up lowsiding into Joe Public on a right hander.
For the riders involved in this group, what was the motivation to ride so close?
Quote from: Jared on November 07, 2011, 12:03:44 PMFor the riders involved in this group, what was the motivation to ride so close? ... I no longer ride with them.
by the way, the math in *this discussion* is what they were trying to teach us in calculus -- and you thought you'd never use it a.s.
Even the most skilled and prepared riders take over .6 seconds to get the brakes applied and over 1.1 seconds to have them at their fulll potential (some magazine testers stats from the 90's)--these guys knew what was coming and ride allot, on alot of different bikes and likely have better skills than your "average" motorcyclist So if the bike/car truck whatever in front of you is already at their maximum braking potential when you realize it and it takes you another 1.1 seconds to get to yours (mind you, you will still be closing on them if both braking vehicles and riders abilities are somewhat equal......forever-til you both stop or the lead bike gets off the brakes---they scrubbed lots of speed before the following bike even got to maximum decelleration due to braking) If you consider the average sportbike stops from 60 in under 120 feet (60 mph is at 88 feet per second?)So the following bike closed up 88+ feet on the lead bike and would still be traveling at a speed of atleast 30 mph faster than the lead bike-simply based on that 1.1 second delay in the follower getting to maximum braking potential ( this is a rough estimate for simplicity, simply based off 88 feet second at 60 mph--it actually would be slightly less based on decreasing speed)Then you are both equally at 100% of the braking abilities, yet the lead bike is traveling about 30 mph slower than the following bike---so another 44+ feet would be ate up by the time the lead bike stopped--( again rough estimate based on the 30 mph and 44 feet per second....the actual distance would be slightly less based on the decreasing speed)Now you have the lead bike already stopped and the following bike still traveling at something less than 30 mph.......so another 30 feet before the following bike stopped.......88' + 44' + 30'= 162' So that is atleast 160 feet @ 60 mph--provided the following bike and rider are on top of their game and use the full potential of the bikes brakes and are alert and aware to spot the lead bike slowing almost immediately------------When does that ever happen, never !****--it isn't just the 1+ second delay in the follower getting on the brakes to maximum potential.......if you look at it that way only---okay 1 second delay= 88'......followers stopping distance at 60 mph= 120', leaders stopping distance at then 30mph = 30' (his speed after 1 second of braking)...........88'+ (120'-30') =88' + 90' = 178', both bikes and riders being equal****So use the numbers any way you want, 162' or 178'----in either scenario a 2 second gap at 60 mph is only 176'--it is a near miss or you hit...
i get that we are disagreeing (generally, as a group), but i'm not really clear as to what the point of contention is? is it just the math? or is ray saying that a following distance much shorter than lloyd talks about would be sufficient or the other way around?riddle me this: what's the point of staggered riding ** out on the open road ** if appropriate following distances are maintained?a.s.
Quote from: Jared on November 07, 2011, 12:03:44 PMFor the riders involved in this group, what was the motivation to ride so close? Well you had to be there. A large group, all young, all male, great piece of road and we where going to ride it twice, and every one is on a sport bike. Get the picture. This all equals what.