Read more - CLASS Motorcycle School
Transcription
Read more - CLASS Motorcycle School
UPSIDE DOWN ON THE CRASH PAGE RIDING THE 2013 HP4 HOT-ROD VERSION OF THE S1000RR: BMW Kicks The Competition While They’re Down! ROADRACING WORLD & MOTORCYCLE TECHNOLOGY Volume 22, Number 11 November 2012 What Can Motorcycle Racing Learn From F1 Car Racing’s Experience With A Spec ECU? 499 $ www.roadracingworld.com JOSH HAYES Was Overlooked For Years. Now He’s A ThreeTime Superbike Champion And Is Rewriting The Record Books. How A Three-Time AMA Superbike Champion Is Still Teaching Riders To Survive On The Street, After 40 Years November 2012 Colombian MARTIN CARDENAS WWW. ROADRACINGWORLD . COM Display until 11/19 Came To America After He Lost His Grand Prix Ride, And Became A Two-Time American Champion. RACER COLUMNS: JASON DISALVO • JOSH HAYES, ELENA MYERS, CHRIS ULRICH • SHOPS: DYNOJET RESEARCH • RACING, TRACK DAY & SCHOOL CALENDAR • INSIDE INFO • EDITOR’S SCRAPBOOK • MotoGP NUMBERS • MotoGP TRIVIA • CLUB RACER PROFILE • ASRA/CCS NEWSLETTER • HIGH-PERFORMANCE PARTS & SERVICES DIRECTORY • CLASSIFIED ADS • Reg Pridmore’s CLASS Motorcycle School: “It’s not about speed,” Pridmore, a three-time AMA Superbike Champion, told the 40-some students and guests assembled in the classroom at the Streets circuit on Labor Day weekend. Pridmore’s CLASS school emphasizes many of the fundamentals of riding a performance motorcycle at speed that other schools do. But because the focus here is on the street, one area of emphasis that is unique is survival via your placement on the road. “Make your own smart space,” Pridmore says. When it comes to cornering on the street, Pridmore emphasizes a line through the corner that places the rider as far away from the center yellow line as practical. In righthand corners in countries where traffic moves on the right side of the road (such as in the U.S.), such a line might cost the rider some visibility up the road. And it definitely isn’t the swoop- (Above) Reg Pridmore on track in 2012. Photo courtesy CLASS. (Right) Pridmore in the paddock at Ontario Motor Speedway in Ontario, California, November, 1974. (Bottom) Pridmore (163) leads BMW teammate Steve McLaughlin (83) in the first AMA Superbike National, held at Daytona International Speedway in March, 1976. Photos by John Ulrich. “Make Your Own Smart Space...” By Michael Gougis ook at a racetrack and compare it to the street. One huge, impossible-to-miss difference: No yellow line down the middle. I get to use all of that pavement, edge to edge—sweet! So it was a little disconcerting to hear that my assignment for the morning was to use only half the width of the track at the 1.8-mile Streets of Willow circuit. The drill was to go into the corners tight, use the inside line, and stay on the inside half of the circuit coming out. It’s a critical part of the curriculum at Reg Pridmore’s CLASS Motorcycle School for street riding. And it’s important because Pridmore’s not there to teach you how to win races, but how to survive on the street while enjoying the sport. L 64——Roadracing World, November 2012 ing racing line that the stars of MotoGP carve as they hunt for fractions of a second through a bend. But Pridmore argues that the street rider can’t afford to mimic that racing line, nor is a street rider looking to carve fractions of a second by carrying more speed at the apex of a corner. Selecting a line further away from the yellow stripe places the rider further away from oncoming traffic. where I learned what it means when an officer writes “T/C Fatal” on a report.) “The one thing that rings my bell the most is trying to introduce the idea of (selecting) better lines because of the safety it projects on the street,” Pridmore says. “It’s more to do with—someone else has taught them some bad lines, and it’s killing people on the street. So that’s where I’m really adamant. Riding-school students, an instructor, a chalkboard and chalk—this is an example of how learning takes place. Photos by Michael Gougis. That provides the not-insignificant benefit of being less likely to be hit by a vehicle coming the other direction that crosses over the yellow line and into oncoming traffic. (As an aside, the first two canyon motorcycling fatalities I ever heard of while working as a newspaper reporter occurred in exactly this manner. The first was a bike-on-bike collision. The second was a bike-on-car collision, and it was the incident Instructors meet one-on-one with students right before heading out for a session on the racetrack. “I’m not teaching racing. I’m teaching people that it’s a protective survival-type line. If you adjust it with the right speed and the right gear and know where your brakes are, you don’t have to be worried too much about what’s around the corner. And if you’re going to be stupid enough to go charging into it in third gear, WFO, you’re looking for death. You’re looking for trouble.” Staying away from oncoming traffic by selecting a line away from the center of the road is part of a broader concept about street safety, in Pridmore’s view. The road is a hairy place, made hairier by the day by drivers who are still convinced that somehow they have magically developed the ability to read and type on a tiny touch screen while hurtling down the road at a mile a minute. Defensive riding isn’t enough, Pridmore says. You have to think. “A good rider is a thinking rider. You can tell the brilliance of (Casey) Stoner, Mick Doohan, look at Ben (Spies). They’re good, thinking riders—they know when to and where to pounce, they know when to hang back in second, third or fourth place and go, ‘I’ll pick my point carefully’— they’re smart guys,” Pridmore says continued on page 66 Roadracing World, November 2012——65 CLASS Motorcycle School continued from page 65 the deck at the apex and a big fistful of throttle coming out (the ZX6R’s brakes are amazing, and once the revs are up, the next corner starts to arrive very, very quickly). I accepted the challenge of trying to do that while going into the corner tight on the inside and hanging tight on the exit. And I started to get what Pridmore was talking about. I was having fun, riding a sportbike the way it was supposed to be ridden, but with a far larger margin for error than at race pace. I could start to see what Pridmore was teaching—a re-set of the mind-set, an approach to sport riding that actually would pay dividends in the canyons and on the street. I wasn’t setting lap records, but that wasn’t the point. The reality was that I was going into, through, and out of corners with several feet of pavement to spare. And on a twisty mountain road, having a few extra feet between me and a car hurtling toward me from the other direction would be a nice insurance policy to have in my back pocket. It was nice to spend time on the track, fun to ride the ZX-6R and good to get in seat time, but that idea of creating and maintaining my own “smart space” was the most valuable lesson I learned on that day. Pridmore conducts the CLASS school at the Streets of Willow, The Raceway in Sonoma (formerly Infineon Raceway or Sears Point), Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, Virginia International Raceway and Oregon Raceway Park. For more information, contact the CLASS Motorcycle School at 320 E. Santa Maria St., Suite M, Santa Paula, CA 93060, (805) 933-9936, www.class RW rides.com. (hey, he’s a racer, it’s no surprise that he picks racers to illustrate his points). “When you’re out on the road, that’s a thinking man’s game. You’ve got to out-think a lot of other almost illiterate-type people that don’t have any time for motorcycles and they haven’t even got a clue what a motorcycle can and will do. You have to combat that in your own mind. I look at every (driver) as though they are texting.” Gigi Pridmore (left) plays an integral role in the CLASS school’s operations and Pridmore’s other area of emphacurriculum. Here, she appears to be unconvinced that this student’s “close sis on better, safer street riding centers on braking. The CLASS school your eyes and pin it” approach is productive on the Streets of Willow course! teaches you what not to do, and offers drills on what to do. CLASS runs an A (experienced) and “Grab and stab brakes,” B (less-experienced) group in rotatPridmore says, when asked ing 20-minute sessions, stopping only what else he sees riders doing for lunch. It’s a lot of track time. If poorly. “I’ve heard people you have questions, instructors are say, ‘Get that rear brake available by stopping at the oneengaged, man.’ Well, if you on-one help desk (literally located at happen to be riding an 1100the track entrance). pound monster, maybe the As the day wore on, I found that rear brake will work a little many riders were using more and better for you. Most of our more of the track, more like a typisports bikes don’t need as cal track day than a school, particmuch brake as they’ve got, ularly in the A group. But I stuck and consequently people who to the game plan, which required have been taught bad habits some mental re-jiggering on my part. like ‘Get on that rear brake I’ve raced at—and won—on the Streets first’ are the ones that sufof Willow course, and I wanted to use fer and some die. I think edu- Reg Pridmore, in 2012, still teaching 40 years on. every inch of the track. cating people towards the But I forced myself to use the effectiveness and the effiinner third of the track going into Move your bum off the seat just a bit. ciency of the front brake is where the corners and the inner half coming Doing just one of those at a time is emphasis should be at.” out. And I noticed that I was still not intimidating. Get used to doing To get students better at using enjoying myself quite a bit, knee on one, then add another. Soon enough, the front brake, Pridmore teaches a the rider is doing all of them. Priddrill where riders roll off the throtmore’s wife Gigi, an instructor and tle and ease into the brake in one rider at the school, summarizes the fluid motion. Modern sportbike brakes step-by-step idea in something she are phenomenal at anything other than says to the class: “It’s the little things (and often up to) full-on race pace, and that come together to make the big Pridmore teaches that the effective use things happen.” of them is the best way to get the The school’s procedures are simbike stopped quickly. Yes, some prople and laid-back. I arrived with an fessional racers use the rear brake absolutely stock Kawasaki ZX-6R, to stabilize a motorcycle that they’re removed the mirrors, unplugged the throwing into a corner at or above tail light, taped over the headlights the limits of traction. You’re not going and headed for tech. CLASS requires to be doing that on the street. fresh tires, mirrors removed or taped One other technique that Pridover and the brake light covered or more teaches effectively is body posiunplugged. I kind of taped over the tion. The basic idea is the same that headlights out of habit, and as an everyone else teaches; moving your excuse to use some cool digital-print body to the inside of the corner and camouflage duct tape on the bike. lower on the bike stabilizes the A full one-piece leather suit is machine through the turn. But the preferred, although a high-quality rider who’s never so much as sneaked textile suit is acceptable—mesh suits a cheek off the saddle may struggle A specified lunch period with a meal provided for everyone is a pretty good are not. An undamaged full-face helto see their way to getting to the Spieslearning opportunity for students. After a morning of lecture and practice, they met less than five years old is required, esque elbow-on-the-deck posture. as are gauntlet gloves and over-thePridmore teaches a step-by-step sat together and hashed their way through ideas good and bad over a ankle boots. approach. Weight the inside peg. Move spread provided by American Honda at this CLASS school. Then they went The day starts with a classroom your head toward the inside of the back out and tried the new stuff after lunch. Photos by Michael Gougis. briefing, then it’s on to the track. turn. Slide the inside knee forward. 66——Roadracing World, November 2012