Is your front brake cable connected? How do you not feel anything with the front brake?i mostly use the rear brake. When I use the front brake by itself it feels weak like it isn't doing anything at all hardly, it isn't until I get some good rear brake in there that I can really feel the bike squat down and come to a stop. Although in most situations I just use the rear brake, and on the freeway I just use less/close the throttle up and let the engine compression slow me down as needed. I learned a few things I've been testing out from the article though, good read for a novice.
If you can't feel your front brake something is wrong and you've been compensating. Get to a parking lot and do some stops with front brake only, then rear brake, from about 25 mph. They don't have to be lock ups but firm stops. Our bikes are heavy and the quickest stops are from the front brakes w/o question, its physics. Maybe you just need to adjust the handlebar lever for the front brake. Push it away from the bar, dial a number, lower and check grip feel.i mostly use the rear brake. When I use the front brake by itself it feels weak like it isn't doing anything at all hardly, it isn't until I get some good rear brake in there that I can really feel the bike squat down and come to a stop. Although in most situations I just use the rear brake, and on the freeway I just use less/close the throttle up and let the engine compression slow me down as needed. I learned a few things I've been testing out from the article though, good read for a novice.
A lot of motocross riders who slide well feel that way. The road has its differences though and front brakes give the best stops (like stoppies!!), so you have to learn/feel that lever. Our bikes front brakes have good feel, some riders have even put on grippier pads.I use my rear brake all the time... that article almost makes me feel like I'm over using it. I just really like that the bike squats when I do - and I feel like I have better control.
I shouldn't say I don't feel anything, but the difference in braking with the fronts only and the front + the rear is extremely noticeable for me. The bike stops alot more easily with both brakes is what I meant, I suppose.Is your front brake cable connected? How do you not feel anything with the front brake?
Gotcha. Together is definitely better than using only one alone, for sure. Now everyone think about this....Have you ever wondered why there is two discs/brakes on the front and only one on the back? 80% front/20% rear...that's how I roll! (and stop rolling)I shouldn't say I don't feel anything, but the difference in braking with the fronts only and the front + the rear is extremely noticeable for me. The bike stops alot more easily with both brakes is what I meant, I suppose.
Too cocky to learn is one thing - Too cocky to ride within your limits... that's how you go down.I hope I never become too cocky to learn.
I do the same too. I like when the bike squat and take a set before hitting the front brake. It feel more secure to me. The bike doesn't pitch as much. Little blip on the throttle and downshift at the same time. When you can here the rear tire squicking without locking up every time you downshift... that mean you got it right. It put a smile on my face every time!I always hit the rear brake first. If there is anything squirrely going on, it straightens it out real fast. Dipping into a corner and you decide you might have gone in with a little too much speed, hit the rear brake before doing anything else. Don't chop throttle and don't touch the front brakes.
When coming to a hard stop, hit the rear brake lightly first and then the front brake hard. I use the rear brake to straighten out the bike before I hit the front clampers hard. It is useful in turns while leaving the throttle alone, it is useful as a noise maker when cagers pull out from a parking spot....the eeeeeeerrrrrrrrrtttttt...before you hit the front brake is fun.