got my pegs down!......
got my pegs down!......
Author
Discussion

essex.newb!!

Original Poster:

92 posts

225 months

Sunday 29th April 2007
quotequote all
.....and yet not my knee.

Anyone else having or had this prob?? i imagine im not hanging off enough, as my brother keeps telling me you need to be hangin off 'like a monkey' to get the slider/tarmac connection...

black-k1

12,627 posts

250 months

Sunday 29th April 2007
quotequote all
I’ve been riding for 28 years and have worn away numerous ‘hero blobs’ and foot peg ends but have never gotten my knee down! Mind you, I have no interest in getting my knee down.

leeross

687 posts

237 months

Sunday 29th April 2007
quotequote all
It cost me alot of dosh tryin 2 get my knee down! crashed my bike 3 days after i got it

y2blade

56,251 posts

236 months

Sunday 29th April 2007
quotequote all
essex.newb!! said:
.....and yet not my knee.

Anyone else having or had this prob?? i imagine im not hanging off enough, as my brother keeps telling me you need to be hangin off 'like a monkey' to get the slider/tarmac connection...


nope i have no problem,took a while to first do it all those years ago ,take your time and it will come

dont try and rush it.......... see below

leeross said:
It cost me alot of dosh tryin 2 get my knee down! crashed my bike 3 days after i got it



ooooops


Edited by y2blade on Sunday 29th April 16:15

996 sps

6,165 posts

237 months

Sunday 29th April 2007
quotequote all
I started getting my pegs down first on my gixer when I first started riding, I got told numerous times to put my knee out and down otherwise i'll get pitched off, so thats what I did, got to be honest the ground clearance on the Duke is outrageous so will not be getting the pegs down on that......


Knee down does not really bother me so much now, all though theres a roundabout in Bedford which is awesome for it!

Farky

932 posts

225 months

Sunday 29th April 2007
quotequote all
leeross said:
It cost me alot of dosh tryin 2 get my knee down! crashed my bike 3 days after i got it
I remember the day as if it were yesterday, i dont know who was more upset, me or you!!

anonymous-user

75 months

Monday 30th April 2007
quotequote all
essex

Take it easy and don't rush.

You aren't hanging off enough. One bum cheek off the seat is enough. Find a safe roundabout - don't try it on just any old corner you come across. You don't know what's round the corner. The key to doing it first time is predictability - you will know how far to lean, etc.

Be careful about digging the pegs in - while they fold at first if you lean too far they stop folding, dig in properly, and then you are on your head.....

It is good - but be careful!

podman

9,004 posts

261 months

Monday 30th April 2007
quotequote all
If you’re scraping your pegs you’re close to the bikes lean limits at that point, with maybe the end can next to ground out, which will potentially have you off....and I bet you’re wearing the toe of your boots out as well?

If you adopt a knee down riding position (even if you don’t intend to get your knee down) you will INCREASE you safety margin as the bike will be travelling at the same (with much more to come) corner speed than you currently are with everything on the deck for LESS lean angle. Correctly positioned you wont be wearing your boots out either..

For those reasons a knee down technique works as well on the road as well as it does the track, it also gives you a confidence to change direction hard and fast with a high degree of lean...which is handy when something veers into your path or you’re riding an un familiar road.

..and I also go over to that roundabout by the BP garage in Bedford for a play 996

veetwin

1,572 posts

278 months

Monday 30th April 2007
quotequote all
Start on track, then proceed to roundabouts, then proceed to favourite bends.

The Midhurst junction off the A3 has what we call the Gooseneck which never fails to deliver sparks from the sparky slider.

I have a problem with toe clearance of late. At both Silverstone outings, no matter where I place the ball of my foot (weight the pegs near right up near my middle toes) the tips touched down. I am going to have a set of Demon Tweeks pegs machined down by 20mm for extra clearance. I have also invested in some Sidi Ceramic Toe Sliders to stop me going through the boot.

Mad Dave

7,158 posts

284 months

Monday 30th April 2007
quotequote all
I discovered the A37 > A303 (nr Yeovil) slip roads yesterday. Easy knee down. Also, slip roads onto A303 at Solstice Park Amesbury look good, though i'm yet to go there when i've got sliders on...

sammy_bibs

192 posts

227 months

Monday 30th April 2007
quotequote all
Funny you say that dave i got my pegs down there this morning as i was heading home. Nice little place with all them roundabouts and then the sliproad. =) I blame it on my suspension being shot to bits by my joyriding friend :P xD

anonymous-user

75 months

Tuesday 1st May 2007
quotequote all
If your pegs are down you have plenty of lean to get your knee down. Don't lean off too much; if you do, your arse hanging off tends to push the knee back in towards the tank and further away from the tarmac. Keep one cheek off only and the knee should stick out more. Whatever you do, be smooth, take it easy and try it on a road you know really well, preferably with several bends rather than necessarily a roundabout on which you'll go dizzy! Above all, warm those tyres!

essex.newb!!

Original Poster:

92 posts

225 months

Thursday 3rd May 2007
quotequote all
fanks you lot....

think im getting there, above all not trying too much, to be honest i wasnt trying when the pegs went down. (the sv's pegs arent exactly sky high!)

i think the only way i'l begin to feel comfy on the road is after a trackday has taught me about entry speed, lean angle etc. roads cant possibly give this info as you'r never constantly turning corners fast; roundabouts (decent ones) are usually followed by long straights and twisty roads are usually blind through hedges...

several times contemplated ditching the road bike for a race rep and doing trackdays only.... anyone else feel the same here????

scobby17

181 posts

229 months

Tuesday 8th May 2007
quotequote all
essex.newb!! said:
fanks you lot....

think im getting there, above all not trying too much, to be honest i wasnt trying when the pegs went down. (the sv's pegs arent exactly sky high!)

i think the only way i'l begin to feel comfy on the road is after a trackday has taught me about entry speed, lean angle etc. roads cant possibly give this info as you'r never constantly turning corners fast; roundabouts (decent ones) are usually followed by long straights and twisty roads are usually blind through hedges...

several times contemplated ditching the road bike for a race rep and doing trackdays only.... anyone else feel the same here????


Hi essex boy, a track day is the way to go, the main cause of people getting there foot or peg down before the knee is the body position, makes sense really, the lean angle is obviously there as the peg is touching.

Ideally the knee should touch before the peg or foot to give you notice that the limit is approaching, the peg touching can be a bit sudden and as a previous poster said, if it does dig in you are off weeping

If you are happy with your road bike by all means use it on a track day, if you then get the bug, and most of us do, then you will be looking at upping your fix level which may mean a track bike.

I suugest getting on one of the Novive track days see www.pistonheads.co.uk/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&t=372988


Edited by scobby17 on Tuesday 8th May 14:20