bris_mac
Guest
Hi All,
Apologies if this is not the right section, or if this is answered elsewhere. Please feel free to point me at it if it has. Anyway.
I've just bought myself a new F800GS. Only had it for about 10 days and 400 miles so far. My previous ( and now reserve
bike) is a 2006 Kwak Z1000 .
I ride everyday, all year, and consider myself a fairly competent rider, but all my experience has been on 'normal' road oriented machines. Standard geometry, suspension, 17" wheels, sports touring rubber etc. I've only ridden off road very briefly, and that was on small light proper off-road machines.
I've got quite happy with the feel of the GS on sweeping roads, and reasonably comfortable on twisties. The problem I'm having is with sharp corners, most typically the sort where a B road or single track road turns a dead 90 degrees, but also small mini roundabouts, and less extreme examples of the first etc.
Normally I'd just ride up to those at the appropriate speed, flop the bike on its side, smoothly round the corner then lift it back up again.
But on the GS what happens is that I approach them at the appropriate speed, start to get the fear that this'll never work, slow down some more, then limp dangerously round the corner on a jerky throttle, barely leant over at all.
There are quite a few different variables in play: The height, riding position, 21" wheel, soft long travel forks, unknown tyres, twin engine braking and low down torque. I don't know exactly what it is, but some combination of this is making me ride like a complete beginner in these situations. I'm heading for a classic newbie style, target fixation, lock the brakes, straightline the corner accident if I don't sort this out.
Obviously a lot of this problem is just due to unfamiliarity with the bike causing lack of confidence, but I was wondering if there was something I should consciously be doing differently, some secret to riding tall bikes on funny tyres
Feel a bit foolish asking this, but I've shocked myself at just how poor I am at this one particular aspect.
Any suggestions welcome.
Apologies if this is not the right section, or if this is answered elsewhere. Please feel free to point me at it if it has. Anyway.
I've just bought myself a new F800GS. Only had it for about 10 days and 400 miles so far. My previous ( and now reserve
I ride everyday, all year, and consider myself a fairly competent rider, but all my experience has been on 'normal' road oriented machines. Standard geometry, suspension, 17" wheels, sports touring rubber etc. I've only ridden off road very briefly, and that was on small light proper off-road machines.
I've got quite happy with the feel of the GS on sweeping roads, and reasonably comfortable on twisties. The problem I'm having is with sharp corners, most typically the sort where a B road or single track road turns a dead 90 degrees, but also small mini roundabouts, and less extreme examples of the first etc.
Normally I'd just ride up to those at the appropriate speed, flop the bike on its side, smoothly round the corner then lift it back up again.
But on the GS what happens is that I approach them at the appropriate speed, start to get the fear that this'll never work, slow down some more, then limp dangerously round the corner on a jerky throttle, barely leant over at all.
There are quite a few different variables in play: The height, riding position, 21" wheel, soft long travel forks, unknown tyres, twin engine braking and low down torque. I don't know exactly what it is, but some combination of this is making me ride like a complete beginner in these situations. I'm heading for a classic newbie style, target fixation, lock the brakes, straightline the corner accident if I don't sort this out.
Obviously a lot of this problem is just due to unfamiliarity with the bike causing lack of confidence, but I was wondering if there was something I should consciously be doing differently, some secret to riding tall bikes on funny tyres
Feel a bit foolish asking this, but I've shocked myself at just how poor I am at this one particular aspect.
Any suggestions welcome.

