lankeeyankee
Banned
Ya could also perform this mod Bling Bling.
you didnt hydroplane. you may have lost traction due to the wet surface but you wern't hydroplaning. vehicles with round profile tires like bicycles and motorcycles virtually never suffer from hydroplaning in normal road use when the road is wet.I wish I could agree with that, but riding through Texas a few months ago I got caught in a few flash thunderstorms and almost lost the bike a couple times due to hydroplaning (at fairly low speeds I might add).
Just my personal experience.
Ok I will do my best to relay a conversation I had with my friend who is a motorcycle accident reenactment investigator....I expect to do him no justice but here we go.
Car tires rely on stability from 3 other tires, caster, camber and toe all working together to give the car stabilty.
Motorcycle tires get stability from slip angle coeffiecient the left pushing to the right and the right pushing to the left. They also work together to give you stability. The front working with the back and the back working with the front. With a car tire on the back and a mc tire on the front the stabilty may be there but it's compromised and the ability for the rear to take a different track than the front can happen.
Car tires have basketball shaped contact patches and mc tires have football shaped contact patches. On a MC tire at lean angle the contact patch is almost identical as straight up, both front and rear have similar shapes and work together to give stability even at full lean angle. Add a flat bottom car tire with a basketball shaped contact patch to the rear and you now have two very different types of contact patches and keep in mind the rear contact patch gets smaller and smaller with the car tires when you lean as it was not designed to used on its edge it was designed to sit flat. So the more you lean the MC you get the same regular contact patch in the front and a decreasing contact patch in the rear.
I have talked with him at length about this in the past and completely trust him 100%.....I am not trying to change anyones minds just offering up some insight from a knowledgable friend that I have a ton of respect for.
Scott
When you put a car tire on the back of a motorcycle and lean into a turn the tire flexes with you and the bottom of the tire rolls so you still get the same amount of contact patch as you do when you are driving straight.
I also forgot to mention that with the grip of a car tire does to your rear breaking ability. It's 5x better than what it is with a MC tire. I know with sports bikes we dont use our rear breaks that often but the only way I can describe how much better it made the rear brake on my Honda VTX was to compair it to how much better a Gen I stops after you put SS lines on and EBC pro pads with wave rotors. A car tire really does make that rear break stop like the front does.
You are right by saying you have more contact patch while riding in a straight line vs while in a lean but you are wrong if you think that you are riding on nothing but the corner of the car tire while in a lean. What I meant to say is that the car tire flexs and rolls that contact patch. When you lean you are not on the corner or the car tire like you are on a MC tire, it rolls that tread around and you still have a large contact patch of tread with the ground. You have more contact patch with a car tire in a lean than you do with a MC tire in a lean..I didn’t mean to come off sound like you have the same amount of contact patch in a lean as you do while going straight, just that its more contact patch than with a MC tire. If it is something that you have not seen for yourself then it is not something that you can sit here and say isn't true. I’ve had a dark side bike and have spent many hours riding behind my father’s dark side bike and have seen with my own two eyes what that tire does in very hard leans up and down mountain roads.
I never said it was untrue, I am just asking questions, stating things I believe to be true and trying to understand this dark side madness.
Really hard for me to wrap my mind around the idea of a car tire on a bike. Reason being a car tire was designed to be flat on the ground not rolled on it's edge. I know you say it rolls and you still have big contact patch, but until I see it myself I will always raise questions in my mind.
I never said it was untrue, I am just asking questions, stating things I believe to be true and trying to understand this dark side madness.
Really hard for me to wrap my mind around the idea of a car tire on a bike. Reason being a car tire was designed to be flat on the ground not rolled on it's edge. I know you say it rolls and you still have big contact patch, but until I see it myself I will always raise questions in my mind.
stock busa rim? i wonder what the contact patch is like at higher speeds? whats the speed rating of the tire?