Had a buddy calculate his speed on the bike based on how far he traveled in the air after his chain broke and lock the back wheel.
Naw, I got that. Still doubt that number. Unless he hit something or pulled a chute.... EDIT: Found this on Brembo site. Not saying it's impossible but to do it on (while likely toasty) street tyre, on a street bike... Let's just say that most likely the speedo metrics are well off....
The miraculous thing would be finding a motorcycle w both an accurate speedo and tach. I'd like to see that.
For reference that's a championship-winning rider on a top-level 1000cc superstock machine braking for T1 at Road Atlanta. Only T6 at Atlanta exceeds that. As measured on an AIM EVO4. YRMV.
That must be old data, just a quick search shows that Brembo listed the maximum braking for Motogp at COTA at 1.8g... would be interesting to go back and look at braking times into some corners on the 600 and compare. I'd be willing to bet braking into 10A at road Atlanta is well over 1.3g on a SS bike. That is pretty much 160 to 60... Stuff like this is interesting to me.
I'm willing to bet if you have a car run in front of you going that fast you might be able to pull off some serious braking if you are a half decent rider.
definitely a 1%er in terms of riding ability. Seems like those riders that gamble around traffic are usually looking way ahead.
Interesting article but the author may have overestimated the g-force by overlooking the fact that the rear wheel likely left the ground during deceleration and the swift decline in tach and speedo during the period in question only reflects that.
Whether or not the calculations are correct, it was impressive that he didn't panic. Most riders in that situation would be either lodged under the rear bumper or launched over the bars.
No doubt that this rider handled a tough situation. Respect. Another piece of information that we cannot ascertain from the video evidence is the content of the rider's undies after the incident. I'm guessing brownish.
Would be curious to know the deltas between a MotoGP bike with up to temp carbon/carbon brakes on ridiculously sticky race rubber versus your typical street bike setup though. It is a bit of an apples to oranges comparison wth the amount of friction and therefore G's generated.