sand turns
- 2strokeforever
- Posts: 1524
- Joined: November 13th, 2009, 1:04 pm
- Location: Vernon B.C Canada
sand turns
this is the only spot here without snow, trying to learn to turn properly but its hit and miss
i found sitting on the gas cap seems to help
any tips?
i found sitting on the gas cap seems to help
any tips?
the 450 will have less power and will be harder to start, and will be heavier, but to make up for it it will require more maintenance.
4stroke=dead fish
4stroke=dead fish
- dannygraves
- Posts: 8020
- Joined: June 1st, 2007, 2:03 pm
- Location: Las Vegas, NV
you want to keep the front end light, sit back, turn with the throttle and the rear of the bike and lean the bike but not yourself. Atleast thats what works for me in the sand. You cannot rely on the direction of the front wheel to make you go that way, just gas it and push the back end out.
'09 kx450f 4-Poke
Gen-4 trail bike --SOLD--
Gen-3 badass trail/mx bike --SOLD--
Gen-1 built dunes bike --SOLD--
'05 klx110 --SOLD--
'95 pw80
Gen-4 trail bike --SOLD--
Gen-3 badass trail/mx bike --SOLD--
Gen-1 built dunes bike --SOLD--
'05 klx110 --SOLD--
'95 pw80
- NightBiker07
- Posts: 1942
- Joined: April 16th, 2008, 8:59 pm
- Location: USA
Maybe a video from a bystander will help us see what you sre doing. it just looks like you are throwing the bike side to side in that video.
You definitely need a paddle if you want to ride aggressively in the sand....it will let the rear end bite in and pull you out of a slide, which seems to be why you crashed every time.
sand is tricky, especially when it is loose and dry. whole different feeling than dirt
You definitely need a paddle if you want to ride aggressively in the sand....it will let the rear end bite in and pull you out of a slide, which seems to be why you crashed every time.
sand is tricky, especially when it is loose and dry. whole different feeling than dirt
2000 CR250, pipe, filter, Vforce
1980 XL80s
1969 Broncco TX-6
Natural selection favors Smart people, so nature selects morons to be slow and dumb for tigers and stuff too eat. But in our modern world there just aren't enough tigers.
1980 XL80s
1969 Broncco TX-6
Natural selection favors Smart people, so nature selects morons to be slow and dumb for tigers and stuff too eat. But in our modern world there just aren't enough tigers.
- 2strokeforever
- Posts: 1524
- Joined: November 13th, 2009, 1:04 pm
- Location: Vernon B.C Canada
paddle isnt really an option cause that tiny patch is the only sand around, and its probably frozen now
running a M5B 5lbs of air, would a higher pressure be better?
running a M5B 5lbs of air, would a higher pressure be better?
the 450 will have less power and will be harder to start, and will be heavier, but to make up for it it will require more maintenance.
4stroke=dead fish
4stroke=dead fish
- dannygraves
- Posts: 8020
- Joined: June 1st, 2007, 2:03 pm
- Location: Las Vegas, NV
- NightBiker07
- Posts: 1942
- Joined: April 16th, 2008, 8:59 pm
- Location: USA
Well, if paddle isnt an option, then try to maintain more speed. maybe leave the bike a gear higher to get more grab from the tire.
lower pressure is better for a knobby in the sand.
lower pressure is better for a knobby in the sand.
2000 CR250, pipe, filter, Vforce
1980 XL80s
1969 Broncco TX-6
Natural selection favors Smart people, so nature selects morons to be slow and dumb for tigers and stuff too eat. But in our modern world there just aren't enough tigers.
1980 XL80s
1969 Broncco TX-6
Natural selection favors Smart people, so nature selects morons to be slow and dumb for tigers and stuff too eat. But in our modern world there just aren't enough tigers.
dannygraves wrote:you want to keep the front end light, sit back, turn with the throttle and the rear of the bike and lean the bike but not yourself. Atleast thats what works for me in the sand. You cannot rely on the direction of the front wheel to make you go that way, just gas it and push the back end out.
That works for big fast sweeping turns in the dunes, but for hard sharp U-turns I sit as far forward as possible, stick the front wheel into the turn, slam the bike and myself to one side and nail the throttle half way through the turn. No paddles here......I use an IRC M5B @ 8-10 psi.
99 CR500R
2006 Honda CBR 1000RR Fireblade
My Drinking team has a Racing problem !
2006 Honda CBR 1000RR Fireblade
My Drinking team has a Racing problem !
I grew up riding the Florida sand, the track in this video is just like it.
http://youtu.be/rrca21Kqgx8
http://youtu.be/rrca21Kqgx8
- Rhino89523
- Posts: 1233
- Joined: November 18th, 2010, 1:45 pm
Man for what you are doing, goofing around in some sand, everything looks fine, but to master turning I think the problem is you have no guidlines for the turn you are trying make. If you set up some cones or just established a track you would get better at the turns by learning to hang in the groove or blow up the loam outside of the turn or flatslide a big fast turn,but without guidlines just whipping it about I am not sure you will achieve what you are after. Half of a turn is the set up coming into it, then the exit. I know you are not trying to become the track master but you still need to have entry and exit points so you are controlling the bike through the turn instead of letting the bike flail another direction because thats where it wants to go. In the dunes you can lay back and carve, but when ripping a sand wash where there isn't room to take it wide its back to attack mode, up on the tank, elblows up, head up and keep the gas on.
For me one of the things that helped me out a lot on turns was racing around on xr80's. I am way too big for the 80 so if I let off the gas it takes a day or two to get it going again. ripping 80's around taught me how to maintain corner speed instead of always just using the 500 turning method of on-off.
For me one of the things that helped me out a lot on turns was racing around on xr80's. I am way too big for the 80 so if I let off the gas it takes a day or two to get it going again. ripping 80's around taught me how to maintain corner speed instead of always just using the 500 turning method of on-off.
- Rhino89523
- Posts: 1233
- Joined: November 18th, 2010, 1:45 pm
For the record I am not claiming to be a fast guy and my style sucks and is totally unorthodox so I probably shouldn't even respond to this post and 2stroke should probably take everything I say and work really hard to forget it.AlisoBob wrote:Thats where the fast guys are fastest....Rhino89523 wrote:.... ripping 80's around taught me how to maintain corner speed .
- 2strokeforever
- Posts: 1524
- Joined: November 13th, 2009, 1:04 pm
- Location: Vernon B.C Canada
thanks, i never thought of that, but it makes sense, i was just leaning and holding it wfo and seeing what happenedbut to master turning I think the problem is you have no guidlines for the turn you are trying make. If you set up some cones or just established a track you would get better at the turns
the 450 will have less power and will be harder to start, and will be heavier, but to make up for it it will require more maintenance.
4stroke=dead fish
4stroke=dead fish
- britincali
- Posts: 8207
- Joined: May 31st, 2007, 7:10 pm
- Location: Barstow, CA
Looks to me like your using the front wheel to do all the turning, sand is all about laying on the rear fender, keeping the front light and steering with throttle and body position. It looked like you were almost stopped and pivoting around the front wheel to me???
Its a weird feeling but when your really moving the front is probably only 20% of the equation while pitching the back out then planting your weight on the rear plus gobfulls of throttle is the majority getting the job done.
Its a weird feeling but when your really moving the front is probably only 20% of the equation while pitching the back out then planting your weight on the rear plus gobfulls of throttle is the majority getting the job done.
Coolness list by 90cr500guy
Bob's = 50/50
Cepek = cool
Solidbro = cool
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Stoffer = 1 up from Brit
MFDB = cool
Danny = ok
Bob's = 50/50
Cepek = cool
Solidbro = cool
Brit = loser
Stoffer = 1 up from Brit
MFDB = cool
Danny = ok
- dannygraves
- Posts: 8020
- Joined: June 1st, 2007, 2:03 pm
- Location: Las Vegas, NV
exactlybritincali wrote:Looks to me like your using the front wheel to do all the turning, sand is all about laying on the rear fender, keeping the front light and steering with throttle and body position. It looked like you were almost stopped and pivoting around the front wheel to me???
Its a weird feeling but when your really moving the front is probably only 20% of the equation while pitching the back out then planting your weight on the rear plus gobfulls of throttle is the majority getting the job done.
'09 kx450f 4-Poke
Gen-4 trail bike --SOLD--
Gen-3 badass trail/mx bike --SOLD--
Gen-1 built dunes bike --SOLD--
'05 klx110 --SOLD--
'95 pw80
Gen-4 trail bike --SOLD--
Gen-3 badass trail/mx bike --SOLD--
Gen-1 built dunes bike --SOLD--
'05 klx110 --SOLD--
'95 pw80
- Rhino89523
- Posts: 1233
- Joined: November 18th, 2010, 1:45 pm
Dude I found these photo's my bud took at sand mountain. It's with his Gopro so it has that bubble distortion and he had it set on like 1 second intervals or something like that there is a whole sequence. Anyway I am pinned in whatever gear the bike will pull with my fat ass sitting on there. I am not saying this is the form because I am a sitdown rider and that is pretty poor form period, but if you look at the second shot the front tire isn't leaving a track or touching the ground, I am not trying to do that it's just how the bike likes to ride sand, my ass, body position and power are turning the bike the front end is just giving me something to hold onto.
- britincali
- Posts: 8207
- Joined: May 31st, 2007, 7:10 pm
- Location: Barstow, CA
- Rhino89523
- Posts: 1233
- Joined: November 18th, 2010, 1:45 pm
The newest "Bitchin' Photo " award winner....Rhino89523 wrote:
http://bannedcr500riders.com/board/view ... 155#132155
- Rhino89523
- Posts: 1233
- Joined: November 18th, 2010, 1:45 pm