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Yep!Originally posted by legalspeed
My rear brake is used to scrub momentum from the sprung weight; keeps the suspension taught; helps to keep the front end from lofting; can be used to slide the rear wheel to one side or the other.
Your motorcycle can slow down a lot faster when using the entire braking system properly.![]()
Heath Smith
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Says Vale to Colin at the end of the 2002 8 Hours of Suzuka: "Ok Colin, you better go out there and win. Because it is the ONLY way we will NEVER have to come here again!"
Use rear brake in parking lots, when roads are wet, or sandy, but mostly to hold the bike at a light to give my arms a rest. Other than that I rarely touch it.
Dang! You got shocks, pegs... lucky! You ever take it off any sweet jumps?
I use my back brake a lot.
I'll rest my foot on it when I'm rolling to a stop and just put a little pressure on it... keeps the rotor clean.
And I'll use it when I'm stopped on a hill to give me hand a rest.
2003 ZX7R
1995 916
Oh yeah, I forgot the only real reason I use my rear brake. TO BRING THE FRONT END DOWN!
Heh
But when we ride very fast motorcycles, we ride with immaculate sanity. We might abuse a substance here and there, but only when it's right. The final measure of any rider's skill is the inverse ratio of his preferred Traveling Speed to the number of bad scars on his body. It is that simple: If you ride fast and crash, you are a bad rider. If you go slow and crash, you are a bad rider. And if you are a bad rider, you should not ride motorcycles.
Originally posted by lrrs167
Of course, you do not want to use the rear brake when leaned over in a corner.
I use my rear alot ,ore then I thought also, I sometimes hit it going into a turn and stay on it and roll on the throttleI like my rear, when I wanna streach out my back and I'm coming up to a light I use it and the engine to slow down
When I started riding I rode the front brake exclusively. Now I find I'm on the rear brake a lot more. I always use it when coming to full stop and for starts on hills. I mess with it very little at high speed. I find it helps with smoothness when used appropriately.
...and of course it's fundamental use is to regulate wheel spin on powerslides (on the street?)
Oh yea, need it for balancing wheelies too.
'02 MS4
I use light pressure on the rear brake during any braking situation
I use both brakes lightly if i want to adjust my speed in a corner
straight line 85/15
turns etc. speed scub 70/30 gentle
straight panic 95/5
You can grind away some of the center of the rear pads if you think they are to grabby and make sure its hard to lock up the rear.
I certainly have avoided some bad stuff by inches was it the help of the rear brake ?
After any lay off I practice panic stops including some rear brake only so I get a kinesthetic sense of whats what.
Plus I need both hands to adjust the package when stopped
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Glen Beck is John the Baptist
This is exactly how I use the rear brake as wellOriginally posted by lrrs167
I don't use my rear brake very often. However, it does come in handy when downshifting from high speeds. When blipping the throttle between downshifts, I sometimes keep light pressure on the rear to assist in slowing down. Of course, you do not want to use the rear brake when leaned over in a corner.
Here's a good article about rear-brake usage. It's biased towards the track, but has some good info nonetheless. There's also a video of Jason Pridmore showing what it really looks like to back it in. trackjunkie
2003 Yamaha R6
1999 Yamaha YZ400
For street riding I use the rear brake all the time.
For track riding, almost never.
I use my rear brake to steer around corners![]()
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"I'll tell you what I tell my girl...Even a broken clock is right twice a day"
Well, all this stuff is really subjective.
For streeting around, I use both brakes. Starting on a hill, slowing smoothly in normal traffic conditions, adjusting entry speed, riding in the rain etc.
It would be possible on my duc to NEVER touch the brakes on the street as Randy said, but that's really unwise. You are not signalling other drivers with your brake lights and worst of all, you are not practicing braking skills! The day you need them, you'll be out of practice, rusty, or maybe you NEVER developed good skills in the first place.
On the track: The rear brake "can" tighten a line, but what if you're already near the limit of traction (that's the goal afterall) ? And aren't you still scrubbing more speed than you have to? As far as using it to back it in, is this leading to faster laptimes? Or just making you feel like Rossi?
If you are REALLY fast into the turns, you can back it in without the rear brake at all. Just the front brake plus countersteering is enough to get the ass end out regardless of shifting. The front brake can be used until the rear tire is floating, and you can turn it in with the bike in this attitude.
Bottom line: On my 125, I don't touch it on the track.
I just think there are a lot more important things to work on. If you need to tighten your line, then your entry point is wrong and you turn in is to wimpy. Those are VASTLY more important to get right than adding rear brake to the equation. "Power slides" ? well, some throttle control would be helpful as well as a single, quick steering input, and probably a bit more entry and mid corner speed/throttle.
The rear brake can be used to mask other riding flaws. The pros have worked this out and use it accordingly.
that's the wimpy way... the throttle is what you're supposed to use to steer around cornersOriginally posted by RevHappy
I use my rear brake to steer around corners![]()
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oh & Kahm..... it's there, so use it(i had to, no one else did
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exactly. my front brake probably isn't nearly as powerful as most bikes here though.Originally posted by Zorlock
70/30
hmm, thats wierd, i always use mine except when i attempt to pop a stoppie.