Kawasaki Concours Forum
The C-14, aka Kawasaki Concours-14, the new one :) => The Bike - C14/GTR 1400 => Topic started by: gggGary on July 20, 2015, 08:37:07 PM
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Was working on my hard braking technique and the thought occurred. IMHO without ABS using the rear brake for a hard stop is a fools game. I am currently "braking" in a new set of EBC hh pads on an old rear rotor. Anyone ever mod the lever to get it closer to the grip than the adjustments allow?
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Excellent question and one I have pondered for some time! I do not know the answer but my suspicion is.... not likely. Perhaps with an under- inflated, pure sport bike tire at the front and some especially warm, clean popcorn asphalt. But given normal conditions and sport touring tires, I tend to doubt it. But if it can be done, I would LOVE to see it in the form of a video.
Brian
Was working on my hard braking technique and the thought occurred. IMHO without ABS using the rear brake for a hard stop is a fools game. I am currently "braking" in a new set of EBC hh pads on an old rear rotor. Anyone ever mod the lever to get it closer to the grip than the adjustments allow?
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Excellent question and one I have pondered for some time! I do not know the answer but my suspicion is.... not likely. Perhaps with an under- inflated, pure sport bike tire at the front and some especially warm, clean popcorn asphalt. But given normal conditions and sport touring tires, I tend to doubt it. But if it can be done, I would LOVE to see it in the form of a video.
The C14 is heavy AND has a long wheelbase... two more factors that work against stoppies.
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I doubt it, but mine got extremely light in the rear the other night as I braked hard for a deer that jumped in front of me as I was passing a pickup on a two lane road in Arkansas. That was with my wife on the back as well. I felt a little wiggle from the back as I was hard on the front brake. I applied a little read brake but very little. I was happy with the way the bike handled it. I was able to maneuver around and get back behind the truck. Of course at about 80, I'm glad mine didn't stoppie and catapult my wife into the distance. ;D
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I doubt it, but mine got extremely light in the rear the other night as I braked hard for a deer that jumped in front of me as I was passing a pickup on a two lane road in Arkansas. That was with my wife on the back as well. I felt a little wiggle from the back as I was hard on the front brake. I applied a little read brake but very little. I was happy with the way the bike handled it. I was able to maneuver around and get back behind the truck. Of course at about 80, I'm glad mine didn't stoppie and catapult my wife into the distance. ;D
Would that be grounds for divorce? ;D
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You mean such as "We were riding along and she just disappeared your Honor. Left me in the middle of Arkansas on a lonely two lane road!"? Yeah, might be grounds....
Brian
Would that be grounds for divorce? ;D
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I would guess an unprepared passenger banging into your back after a sudden application of binders might help create a stoppie.
I used to stoppie the 81 900F WERA racing. That was the first bike I owned with Real Brakes. you could modulate the front and keep the rear wheel "just touching" pretty easily.
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Would that be grounds for divorce? ;D
Does one even need grounds anymore?
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Does one even need grounds anymore?
Yes, such as abandonment. IE: Your honor, we were riding down this road and she quite suddenly abandoned me to a point 50 feet in front of the bike. When she came to in the hospital, and finally remembered who I was, she didn't want anything to do with me.
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Does one even need grounds anymore?
Way off topic, but not even sure there is really any point to "marriage" anymore.
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You mean such as "We were riding along and she just disappeared your Honor. Left me in the middle of Arkansas on a lonely two lane road!"? Yeah, might be grounds....
Brian
Would that be grounds for divorce? ;D
Yes, such as abandonment. IE: Your honor, we were riding down this road and she quite suddenly abandoned me to a point 50 feet in front of the bike. When she came to in the hospital, and finally remembered who I was, she didn't want anything to do with me.
:rotflmao:
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I would guess an unprepared passenger banging into your back after a sudden application of binders might help create a stoppie.
:rotflmao:
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Mine will...hopefully, NEVER AGAIN.
Me and the C14 were working at the Tour of California bicycle race last year. Coming over the mountains toward the day's finish in Santa Barbara, I get a radio message calling me forward.
I am in the back back back, and need to be in front of a bunch of cars, and NOW.
So I hit it, and I am coming up on the team cars - the caravan is maybe 25 - 30 MCs, 10 CHP SUVs, two ambulances, 50 team cars, 5 Officials cars, etc. etc.
They are going about 40mph about to crest the summit, and I am trying to get by as many as I can before they speed up for the descent. We have the whole road, so it is 4-5 lanes wide, and I am going 70-75MPH. At least. Lots of room on the left, so no problem.
At the perfect *wrong* time, the last team car in the line pulls off to answer the call of nature. This is no gradual move, but fairly sharp, with brakes added. Naturally, I am going way too fast to move right. By the time I figure out that he is heading for the bushes, I am well and truly trapped. I grab a big ole handful, and he keeps getting closer. So I do what I have practiced. Stay calm, find the limits of traction, and make it happen.
Still in 5th gear, clutch in, front tire chattering HARD, he finally sees (or hears) me, and gives me a little room. As I let off on the brake lever, the rear tire drops to the ground. Three downshifts, and I bog away in 2nd.
Pirelli Angel GT.
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Just saw your signature:
2008 ZG14X...ZX14 throttle bodies, full AreaP exhaust, heated grips, Corbin, and more...
161.5RWHP on the dyno
Formerly Silverdammit!
Is that Chet's (aka SOP) old bike?
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So I do what I have practiced. Stay calm, find the limits of traction, and make it happen.
Still in 5th gear, clutch in, front tire chattering HARD, he finally sees (or hears) me, and gives me a little room. As I let off on the brake lever, the rear tire drops to the ground. Three downshifts, and I bog away in 2nd.
That's what I'm talking about; in a REAL panic gotta stop situation, it's front brake and maybe clutch in. You don't have time for anything else, and you don't want to divert your attention away from the prime task; STOPPING as fast as possible while maintaining control and paying attention to the changing scene around you.
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You must be one of dem dare heterosexual haters ( I mean you are a heterosexual who hates.... not a person who hates heterosexuals)....
Sorry, I just could not resist. :rotflmao:
Brian
Way off topic, but not even sure there is really any point to "marriage" anymore.
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Sorry, I just could not resist. :rotflmao:
Brian
Response is in Open Forum so as not to further contaminate this thread: http://www.zggtr.org/index.php?topic=19889 (http://www.zggtr.org/index.php?topic=19889)
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That's what I'm talking about; in a REAL panic gotta stop situation, it's front brake and maybe clutch in. You don't have time for anything else, and you don't want to divert your attention away from the prime task; STOPPING as fast as possible while maintaining control and paying attention to the changing scene around you.
Amen. That is what saved me the other night as well. I heard some nice howling of the tires. The hard braking practice drills I do from time to time paid off. The Connie can and does stop quickly and controllably if you practice.
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Yeah but I still want to know: can a stock C-14 be made to put a foot+ of air under the rear tire just using the front brake?
I of course do not know but again, the bike's weight makes me dubious that it can be done at all. That said, it would be most impressive to see a video of a C-14 doing a true stoppie, at least to me.
Brian
Amen. That is what saved me the other night as well. I heard some nice howling of the tires. The hard braking practice drills I do from time to time paid off. The Connie can and does stop quickly and controllably if you practice.
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Datsaxman had the rear tire in the air. Once the rear tire is in the air, putting it up a foot or so is just show boating, IMHO the fastest stop is when the rear is not quite or JUST unloaded. As the rear rises the the amount of front brake has to decrease to keep it from going "all the way". (easy boys)
There now I feel like one of the gang!
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I've seen a Goldwing wheelie. If one of those can wheelie, I bet a C14 can do a stoppie!
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Yeah but I still want to know: can a stock C-14 be made to put a foot+ of air under the rear tire just using the front brake?
I of course do not know but again, the bike's weight makes me dubious that it can be done at all. That said, it would be most impressive to see a video of a C-14 doing a true stoppie, at least to me.
Brian
There was that day when I had to pick up the helium balloons and put them in the saddlebags...
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Yeah but I still want to know: can a stock C-14 be made to put a foot+ of air under the rear tire just using the front brake?
I of course do not know but again, the bike's weight makes me dubious that it can be done at all. That said, it would be most impressive to see a video of a C-14 doing a true stoppie, at least to me.
Brian
I bet a rider moving his weight forward with a very sticky, warm front tire on very sticky pavement can do it no problem... well maybe a problem if they over do it.
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Well, here's how anyway:
! No longer available (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGozt-6mM1U#)
And certainly these guys could do a stoppie on a C14, ABS or no:
! No longer available (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCHsNoBEdrM#)
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Anyone ever mod the lever to get it closer to the grip than the adjustments allow?
OK slightly off topic but relevant to the original post.
Why? Short fingers? Extra fat grips?
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And certainly these guys could do a stoppie on a C14, ABS or no...
I wonder if anyone could do it on a Harley :popcorn:
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Anyone ever mod the lever to get it closer to the grip than the adjustments allow?
Yes, that is one of the first mods I did. I have it posted in a thread somewhere (which of course I cannot find now). The "why" (asked later)- because I have fatter grips (puppies) and not huge hands.
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I have it posted in a thread somewhere (which of course I cannot find now).
Search is your friend. :P :P :P ;D
http://www.zggtr.org/index.php?topic=787.msg10850#msg10850 (http://www.zggtr.org/index.php?topic=787.msg10850#msg10850)
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I wonder if anyone could do it on a Harley :popcorn:
It actually can happen accidentally on a Harley if the playing cards in the spokes get caught.
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I think most Harleys have about 42° of rake. It would make a stoppie difficult at best.
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Yes. They do it fairly frequently when Hardley #4 in the left side of the pack crashes into Hardley #3 on the left side of the pack cause Hardley rider #3 almost passed a bar (pub).
Popcorn back at cha'.
Brian
I wonder if anyone could do it on a Harley :popcorn:
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Yeah, my hands aren't large. I think the lever is a bit far from the grip for optimum finger leverage. Bike still has OE front brake lines.
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I wonder if anyone could do it on a Harley :popcorn:
Why certainly!
! No longer available (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-nFu9uHqv4#)
Also ... you didn't say there couldn't be another rider on the front fender dragging his helmet, so:
! No longer available (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXr95G8NY-s#)
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Search is your friend. :P :P :P ;D
Yeah, I USED to say that... sometimes it is the enemy (when it doesn't cooperate).
http://www.zggtr.org/index.php?topic=787.msg10850#msg10850 (http://www.zggtr.org/index.php?topic=787.msg10850#msg10850)
I bow to your ninja searching skills :hail:
Damn, I posted a LOT of info about it!
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Why certainly!
Also ... you didn't say there couldn't be another rider on the front fender dragging his helmet, so:
! No longer available (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXr95G8NY-s#)
Lets see him take his helmet off and do it. Now, that would impress me.
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Brian, I WAS doing the full stoppie. Arms mostly extended, keeping the weight well back...bags and trunk in the chase truck... all front brake is the reflex for best stopping/control.
No way the rear tire was that far off the deck, but I would guess 4-6". Plus suspension sack. It landed with a real BUMP.
And yes, this is SOP's former hotrod. It goes even better than it stops. It really starts to work around 5000rpm. I got one chance to open er up that week riding with the rest of the event motos. Mostly big boxer BMWs. A couple of rental Yamaha Teneres. One Suzuki Bandit. A Honda CBR500. Haaahaaaahaaaa...We showed em all what the tail end of a C14 rapidly disappearing into the distance looked like!
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Oh, OK. I did not realize that from the original post- good to know and I have always wondered if it would work or not. Must have been warm (for better tire grip) and the road was clean. Still, this is a LOT of bike to pivot around the front wheel with the brake and frankly, I am pretty impressed that it will do it.
Brian
Brian, I WAS doing the full stoppie. Arms mostly extended, keeping the weight well back...bags and trunk in the chase truck... all front brake is the reflex for best stopping/control.
No way the rear tire was that far off the deck, but I would guess 4-6". Plus suspension sack. It landed with a real BUMP.
<snip>
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Yeah, a LOT of bike rotating up on me. I didn't have time to be impressed until later.
Just trying to stay upright and out of the back of that team car.
Yes, it was essentially perfect conditions. Clean, dry, warm. Fairly rough pavement.
No tar snakes or heavy cracking. Pirelli Angel GTs with 1500 miles or so.
So YES, the C14 will do a proper stoppie. But you gotta want it pretty bad.