Sadlsor
Site Supporter
The MSF courses will help, but training yourself is not out of the realm of reality, if you're familiar with riding.
As a RiderCoach, I always strive to become comfortable with slow-speed figure 8s / u-turns on any bike I own. I dropped mine after 2 days of ownership, doing precisely that. I wasn't prepared for the weight, although I'd had a couple days with it.
But it IS worth mastering this simple maneuver.
Couple rules of thumb:
1. ALWAYS come to a stop with the handlebars squared. Front tire in line with the bike.
2. In slow turns, TURN your head. You'll actually be looking over your shoulder, eyes up! when doing u-turns.
3. Counterweighting may help, although not actually a requirement.
Take your time, no hurry to get this done. An empty parking lot will suffice; 2 adjacent parking spaces is approximately the width of the 20-foot u-turn box in the MSF courses.
With minimum-to-no lean angle, at parking lot speeds or walking speed, the weight is nothing to worry about.
Remember too, there are motor cops who wheel these things like crazy, including gymkhana and bike rodeos. They're not super-human, but they have been trained, and they continually practice.
As should we all.
Welcome in!
As a RiderCoach, I always strive to become comfortable with slow-speed figure 8s / u-turns on any bike I own. I dropped mine after 2 days of ownership, doing precisely that. I wasn't prepared for the weight, although I'd had a couple days with it.
But it IS worth mastering this simple maneuver.
Couple rules of thumb:
1. ALWAYS come to a stop with the handlebars squared. Front tire in line with the bike.
2. In slow turns, TURN your head. You'll actually be looking over your shoulder, eyes up! when doing u-turns.
3. Counterweighting may help, although not actually a requirement.
Take your time, no hurry to get this done. An empty parking lot will suffice; 2 adjacent parking spaces is approximately the width of the 20-foot u-turn box in the MSF courses.
With minimum-to-no lean angle, at parking lot speeds or walking speed, the weight is nothing to worry about.
Remember too, there are motor cops who wheel these things like crazy, including gymkhana and bike rodeos. They're not super-human, but they have been trained, and they continually practice.
As should we all.
Welcome in!