- Joined
- Feb 11, 2006
- Messages
- 8,050
- Location
- Jacksonville
- Bike
- GL1800 R1200RT NC700
- 2025 Miles
- 007920
The ST1300 will polish your skills on the way to "getting used to it". Throttle, brake, and clutch are not meant to be used in isolation to each other but rather in concert when needed.
ddemair, cyberwolf, and ATA all made excellent points. Keep 'tension' on the drivetrain with a tiny amount of throttle against trail braking into the corner. This keeps the throttle off the stop and the resultant dry injectors. Low speed 1st and 2nd gear corner exits and low speed maneuvers are smoothed by varying amounts of clutch slip.
Before you know it you'll forget all about the snatchy off-throttle behavior. The ST was designed twenty years ago in the first generation of fuel injection bikes coming to market. The ST was designed to meet the Euro emission standards of 2002 and those coming in 2005-2007. Those were more stringent that USA's EPA standards that didn't even address motorcycles in 2002.
ddemair, cyberwolf, and ATA all made excellent points. Keep 'tension' on the drivetrain with a tiny amount of throttle against trail braking into the corner. This keeps the throttle off the stop and the resultant dry injectors. Low speed 1st and 2nd gear corner exits and low speed maneuvers are smoothed by varying amounts of clutch slip.
Before you know it you'll forget all about the snatchy off-throttle behavior. The ST was designed twenty years ago in the first generation of fuel injection bikes coming to market. The ST was designed to meet the Euro emission standards of 2002 and those coming in 2005-2007. Those were more stringent that USA's EPA standards that didn't even address motorcycles in 2002.