Excessive leaning & getting your knee down - who started it?
Excessive leaning & getting your knee down - who started it?
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Discussion

Woody

Original Poster:

2,189 posts

307 months

Tuesday 21st August 2007
quotequote all
Guy's,
Don't normally post on here so I'll say Hi first wavey

Popped over to my parents house the other day and managed to catch the start of the MotoGP.
I ended up having a conversation with my Dad about the GP boy's lean angles and getting there knees down. Now my Dad seems to think this all started in the mid/late 70's with Barry Sheene & Co.
I've noticed footage from the TT etc in the 50's & 60's where they're partially leaned over with knees out etc but not down.
I'm assuming a lot of it has to do with tyre technology and shapes (i.e. not square sided any more and sticky as $h1t).

So I ask you, the knowledgeable folk of the PH Bike forum - When did it start and who started it??

Cheers

Chris

Not got a bike but am very tempted (as I have been for the last few years.....) to do my DAS course.

Rawwr

22,722 posts

257 months

Tuesday 21st August 2007
quotequote all
I seem to recall Kenny Roberts Sr was the first person to habitually get his knee down.

Hooli

32,278 posts

223 months

Tuesday 21st August 2007
quotequote all
the real talent is 'elbow down'
i think its mostly due to having grip further around the tyre than in the 'olden days' too

Desmo

144 posts

243 months

Tuesday 21st August 2007
quotequote all
Jarno Sarinnen is generally accepted as the first rider to use the knee out and hanging off style. Unfortunately he died early in his career. He was an inspiration to riders such as Barry Sheene etc. Although they would not be dragging the knee as they do today.
regards, Desmo.

Twit

2,908 posts

287 months

Tuesday 21st August 2007
quotequote all
Don't know who started it, but if you watch the TT now there is actually not a huge amount of knee down action. It works on tracks but on the road, even in racing, it often can slow riders down.

mel

10,168 posts

298 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
quotequote all
I'd say both you and your dad are sort of right in that lean angles steadily increased from the fifties but without the actual knee going down, the first rider I know of who intentionally put his knee down and made contact (and in preperation was the first to wear knee sliders) was Paul Smart, Scott's dad and Barry Sheenes brother in law, Barry Sheene followed on pretty closely afterwards.

veetwin

1,573 posts

280 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
quotequote all
I have noticed that there are people out there that knock the 'Knee down' phenomena found in racing (all genres). I believe that these people are those that aspire to do it but feel that pushing that hard is a little beyond comfort.

All I can say is that at today's lean angles that the tyre compounds allow, it is a given that knees, toes, footpegs and now elbows will be scraping the floor.

So what! Big deal!

I have lapped Silverstone trying to 'purposely' have my knee scraping and was overtaken by someone who was bolt upright on the bike. Lesson learned.

So I stopped concentrating on body position (and trying hard for the cameraman) and worked harder on corner speed and track positioning.

Guess what.

Two laps later and my knee was scraping again as I pushed harder. The problem then was that I wasn't as far off the bike, I was running a more acute lean angle and then my foot and footpeg started to touch down.

The only benefit I can see of having your knee on the deck is trading off feel between your knee and the front wheel, whilst using the throttle as the balance. It gives you a sort of tripod feel on medium and high speed bends and gives you a better feeling from the front of the bike.

It just happens to look good, and being quite shallow, I like that!!

As for pioneers of the phenomena, Kenny Snr was a ambassador of this style, whether or not he was the first to touch down, I do not know!

Edited by veetwin on Wednesday 22 August 15:10

R1_JON

859 posts

266 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
quotequote all
veetwin said:
I have noticed that there are people out there that knock the 'Knee down' phenomena found in racing (all genres). I believe that these people are those that aspire to do it but feel that pushing that hard is a little beyond comfort.

All I can say is that at today's lean angles that the tyre compounds allow, it is a given that knees, toes, footpegs and now elbows will be scraping the floor.

So what! Big deal!

I have lapped Silverstone trying to 'purposely' have my knee scraping and was overtaken by someone who was bolt upright on the bike. Lesson learned.

So I stopped concentrating on body position (and trying hard for the cameraman) and worked harder on corner speed and track positioning.

Guess what.

Two laps later and my knee was scraping again as I pushed harder. The problem then was that I wasn't as far off the bike, I was running a more acute lean angle and then my foot and footpeg started to touch down.

The only benefit I can see of having your knee on the deck is trading off feel between your knee and the front wheel, whilst using the throttle as the balance. It gives you a sort of tripod feel on medium and high speed bends and gives you a better feeling from the front of the bike.

It just happens to look good, and being quite shallow, I like that!!

As for pioneers of the phenomena, Kenny Snr was a ambassador of this style, whether or not he was the first to touch down, I do not know!

Edited by veetwin on Wednesday 22 August 15:10
Agree with all of that...

macdeb

8,730 posts

278 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
quotequote all
ME! 1976, Honda 250 k2, leaned to far, fell off and hit me knee on road.

Woody

Original Poster:

2,189 posts

307 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
quotequote all
Cheers guys thumbup

Just love watching the MotoGP and BSB boy's hanging off there bikes.

Chris

Hooli

32,278 posts

223 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
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macdeb said:
ME! 1976, Honda 250 k2, leaned to far, fell off and hit me knee on road.
have a rofl for that

blueflash

92 posts

229 months

Wednesday 22nd August 2007
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Graham Crosby was the first, set the whole F1 racing scene on it's in the late seventies /early eighties. Sit up n beg Moriwaki tuned big jap 4, use to grind his way through engine casings. He was the first to hang off the bike and get his knee on the floor , long befor knee sliders were invented - which is attributed to Sheen & Dianese ,for the first produced knee sliders for racing. And it doesn't mean that Crosby was actually any quicker than someone like Mick Grant who's arse barely moved on the seat.

twizellb

2,783 posts

235 months

Thursday 23rd August 2007
quotequote all
Desmo said:
Jarno Sarinnen is generally accepted as the first rider to use the knee out and hanging off style. Unfortunately he died early in his career. He was an inspiration to riders such as Barry Sheene etc. Although they would not be dragging the knee as they do today.
regards, Desmo.
Seconded, the rest of ya are talking b*llocks [imho]

Biker's Nemesis

41,095 posts

231 months

Thursday 23rd August 2007
quotequote all
Say what you mean, man..

twizellb

2,783 posts

235 months

Thursday 23rd August 2007
quotequote all
Biker's Nemesis said:
Say what you mean, man..
I usually do john

sjwb

557 posts

231 months

Thursday 23rd August 2007
quotequote all
Paul Smart WAS the FIRST

catso

15,901 posts

290 months

Thursday 23rd August 2007
quotequote all
Hooli said:
the real talent is 'elbow down'
I got my elbow down once......

followed closely by my shoulder & headfrown

Hooli

32,278 posts

223 months

Thursday 23rd August 2007
quotequote all
ive done that on pushbikes, not learnt to fall off the powered ones yet. drop them yes, but always so slow i can stand there & say arse.

996 sps

6,165 posts

239 months

Friday 24th August 2007
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Rawwr said:
I seem to recall Kenny Roberts Sr was the first person to habitually get his knee down.
I agree

podman

9,020 posts

263 months

Friday 24th August 2007
quotequote all
twizellb said:
Desmo said:
Jarno Sarinnen is generally accepted as the first rider to use the knee out and hanging off style. Unfortunately he died early in his career. He was an inspiration to riders such as Barry Sheene etc. Although they would not be dragging the knee as they do today.
regards, Desmo.
Seconded, the rest of ya are talking b*llocks [imho]
Thirded...only cos i read the same in a Performance Bikes article last year.