Ya.. What Matt said ha
Trackdays of any sort do no equate to a huge cushion on the street as you claim-on the contrary what I see all the time is people who do trackdays routinely somehow equate to thinking suddenly they are fricking an expert and that the fact they can go "fast" on a closed course racetrack that somehow now they have these awesome skills that they have all this room in reserve on the street (or as you put it "huge cushion"). It is a bunch of bullshit and anyone who has been around long enough knows it.So in the mood of not being a personal attack.........Not to pick you out-but it is an easy example and you provide almost all the evidence yourself.......Are you claiming you had some "huge cushion" following Roger in Arkansas when you rode right off the road? Why didn't all your vast skills of the trackdays save you from such a "novice" mistake? You clearly fit squarely into the typical stereotype of people that do trackdays-you think you are "fast" and therefore you think that means you are "good". Without making this personal, this is strictly for comparison---I ran Barber on a 250 Ninja years ago and ran 11 seconds a lap faster than your fastest lap and you were on a bike that makes 5 times the horsepower.-----You are not fast, despite your bragging of being fast.Yes there are examples of people who can do trackdays and take something away from them that is beneficial to street riding.Yes there are examples of people who successfully ride street and track (without riding like an idiot on the street)Yes it is possible to do both--but the vast majority are adrenaline junkies that can't discern the difference between street smarts and track "fast"Nowhere do I say it has to be street or track.....I have done plenty of both.But the vast majority of trackday junkies that I know (likely in the 90%+ range of them). Cannot or will not ride on the street in a manner that isn't mimicking "track riding"--ie. wrong lines for the street, following too close, knee down, using oncoming traffic lanes, hard braking and hard acceleration, riding at or near their limit etc........And to me that certainly isn't "safe" or "controlled" riding-it is them trying to prove they are "fast"
Not to pick you out-but it is an easy example and you provide almost all the evidence yourself.......Are you claiming you had some "huge cushion" following Roger in Arkansas when you rode right off the road? Why didn't all your vast skills of the trackdays save you from such a "novice" mistake? You clearly fit squarely into the typical stereotype of people that do trackdays-you think you are "fast" and therefore you think that means you are "good".
Without making this personal, this is strictly for comparison---I ran Barber on a 250 Ninja years ago and ran 11 seconds a lap faster than your fastest lap and you were on a bike that makes 5 times the horsepower.-----You are not fast, despite your bragging of being fast.
I've done some track days and they have let me explore the limits of my bikes in a safe manner. I feel safer on the road having pushed my bikes on the track and knowing their limitations and their idosyncracies. I've also pushed myself on the track, far more than I would on the street. I took the riding course several years ago and one thing always sticks with me, "on the track you can go 100% but on the street you have to dial that back to 75-80% so that you have room for those things you can't predict on the street." I always keep something in reserve on the street, I don't attempt to drag a knee, I don't attempt to be the fastest one out there and always try and learn from riders who are better than me. I try to stick to "the pace" and really was able to test that out riding in North Carolina this fall. I was able to from turn to turn at a decent pace without having to use the brakes much, was able to run a nice rhythm and it was a great ride. I adhere to the principal that as fast as you think you are, there's always somebody faster.
I thought this thread was Hope asking for feedback about riding schools?not chest beating and posturing, oh well.
Other than ZARS, are there any recommended riding schools/instructors in the area?
BEN; Using you as an example doesn't make it a personal attack-it is simply using you as an example, nothing personal about it except you could see it that way since it is you used as the example. Of course I could have searched youtube for a video of someone none of us know and used that example-but that would be too much like work and an example many wouldn't be able to relate to or judge speed etc by. Especially since many know Rogers pace, so they could relate.
And to answer your question of where in that post do you brag of being fast or good---it isn't in that posting---it is just how you talk, the snide comments you continually make etc.....(on rides, on facebook, at Barber, on other forums, in other postings, pretty much all the time) It isn't just me that sees you "bragging" of how fast you are. It isn't me putting those words in your mouth. I only used the Barber lap time comparison as a reference to your "being fast" comments. I don't consider myself "fast" at the track, and I have won lots of races and routinely run lap times well under most. I get smoked by the "fast" guys that are actually "fast".