I ride a 2016 ST1300 with ABS, has about 10k miles on it. Maintenance is kept up.
Curious if anyone else has experienced this. Only a slight pucker moment, as I was on a low traveled, no-outlet road with plenty of pavement left - so not an emergency, just concerning.
I was braking fairly aggressively while going downhill at ~30mph, and hit a bump. Well, more of a hump or a wave. I momentarily went airborne and when I touched down it was like I had zero brakes applied (I was on both the handle and the pedal, no pressure drop or anything). It was only long enough to register that my brakes must have failed and then they came back just as quick. It felt like forever but in reality it was probably less than a second. I can only assume that my ABS noticed stopped wheels and corrected for that. No actual lockup on the street and if ABS actuated, I did not hear or feel it.
This jogged a memory of my commute home from work, where there is a "wave" (drop-off) where two road types meet. It did the same thing there. Coming home, I just correct for that spot and don't hold my brakes going over it, but I forgot the "no brakes" sensation until now. Is this just how an ABS bike behaves or should I be more concerned?
Thanks!
Ryan
Curious if anyone else has experienced this. Only a slight pucker moment, as I was on a low traveled, no-outlet road with plenty of pavement left - so not an emergency, just concerning.
I was braking fairly aggressively while going downhill at ~30mph, and hit a bump. Well, more of a hump or a wave. I momentarily went airborne and when I touched down it was like I had zero brakes applied (I was on both the handle and the pedal, no pressure drop or anything). It was only long enough to register that my brakes must have failed and then they came back just as quick. It felt like forever but in reality it was probably less than a second. I can only assume that my ABS noticed stopped wheels and corrected for that. No actual lockup on the street and if ABS actuated, I did not hear or feel it.
This jogged a memory of my commute home from work, where there is a "wave" (drop-off) where two road types meet. It did the same thing there. Coming home, I just correct for that spot and don't hold my brakes going over it, but I forgot the "no brakes" sensation until now. Is this just how an ABS bike behaves or should I be more concerned?
Thanks!
Ryan
