titlegif
February 2006 Louisiana HSTA Newsletter Bob Chappuis, Editor

UPCOMING HSTA EVENTS
April 7-8
T-18

Mena, Arkansas
Queen Wilhelmina Lodge 800/264-2477
Becky Wing 501-824-3413

April 28-30
Helen - North Georgia Classic
Alpenhof Motel
(800)535-8678
Helen, Georgia
Eric Larsen 770/805-0607

May 5-7
Arkansas Byway Boogie
Hot Springs Village Inn
(501)992-9600 or (888)922-9601
Hot Springs Village, AR
Robert Bashaw
870-460-9570

May 19 - 21
TwiStar
Voyageur Inn
608-524-6431 or  800-444-4493
Reedsburg, WI
Ray Kang 952-476-6677

May 26 - 29
Tri-Star
Alleghany Inn
888/372- 2501
(mention HSTA when you call)
Sparta, NC
Galen Diehl 276/647-3162

June 18-21
STAR 2006
The Christie Lodge
Avon, CO
Mike Morris (Registrar) 580-745-2294 (w)

TRACK DAY JANUARY 30 NPR

Session 1 by Bob Chappuis

Tony Crowell and I both arrived before gates opened Monday morning. Tony snuck in the back way on the V-Strom and staked out our pit. I met rider Frank from Leesville waiting at the gate, prepping his yellow Ducati 996. He was a first timer and I recognized he and his bike from the Rocket Maddness online community. We got aquainted and had a nice chat. The gates soon opened and we drove in and unloaded, passed tech inspection and waited for the rest of the riders to roll in.

In the riders meeting we are warned of dirt on the track and soggy grass off track. A (racers & advanced) & B (intermediate) riders are combined into a single group due to too few A riders present. There is a delay due to the EMT arriving late. Most riders seem hesitant to take the track for the first session. Tony and I go out with the first small group of A riders. I take the track condition warning to heart and the group leaves me behind on the first lap.

After a couple of laps I start to pick up speed, riding alone. After a couple more laps now Tony is coming into sight, he's lost contact with the A riders and slowing to come back to have someone to ride with. He lets me pass and then 4 or five fast riders pass us on the long straight. Tony and I reel them back in tho, braking for T1. I tuck in behind the group and make up some more gap braking for T4 and I stay close through 5, 6 and 7. They pull away a bit with a horsepower advantage over the anemic SV but not too much. This is just what I was hoping for, some fast guys to follow through 8, 9 and 10. Great! I follow them for several laps and on lap 11 I drop my best lap time by 2.2 seconds. Then, on my 12th lap two riders in front of me go straight at T1 and as I start to turn in I see a third blocking my entrance. I have no choice but to stand it up and hit the sodden turf. I loosen up and let off the throttle and coast as straight as I can. The SV stays upright as I coast to a crawl. I look around, no bikes in sight. I carefully re-enter the track between T2 and T3. I know I need to take it easy until I know the tires are clean and I do, in fact I decide to just stay off the racing line and limp back to the paddock. But as I try to turn for T3 the front tire immediately slides out and I slam the pavement and slide about 15 feet to the edge of the track. I stand up and calmly walk over to the still running SV and hit the kill switch as the corner worker runs up. Someone else arrives and they pick the SV up and push it out of harms way.

My shift lever tip is broken off, my finger hurts, feels like maybe broken. The SV won't start. They have to haul it back to my pit on a trailer. My riding day is done. I spend the rest of the day talking to other riders (including two other crashers to commiserate with) and working on the SV. I clear the oil out of my front cylinder and finally get it started. My first track day crash at NPR is behind me.

Session 2 by Tony Crowell sees me out again with the group A and B riders. A replay of session #1 wherein I ride like a madman in the tight stuff and catch up only to be left for dead on the straights. I keep telling myself "there's no way you can catch them just leave it alone and relax," but by the time they start the early braking again at turn 1 that gives me just enough hope to flog the little twin some more. It truly is the definition of insanity for me to think I can run with the big dogs, but alas, I can't help myself.

Session 3 by Tony Crowell I wise up and join the boys in group 3. This proves to be the most fun of the day. I sliced and diced with superior machinery and even passed a couple by using late braking before turn 10. The one thing I learned from the A group rides is a better line through the fast turn 8 and 9 sections. I knew I needed improvement there and worked hard all day to carry more speed through those turns. It paid off as I got an early blast out of 9 which led to my pass of a CBR 600 at turn 10. All in all, I find something to improve on every time and I have yet to find anything nearly as much fun as track days. TC
Low Rez version of Video for Dial-up

FEBRUARY LUNCH RIDE By Bob Chappuis

Louisiana HSTA usually eats a great lunch on these rides, this time the ride ate us...

The February 4 Lunch ride, rescheduled from the rained out January 28 date was a dark day for the Louisiana Chapter. In our efforts to recruit new members it has always seemed natural to invite guests along for our rides to give then a chance to see first hand what a great bunch we are and how much fun we have. Motorcycling, however, is a dangerous sport and risks can never be totally eliminated no matter how hard we try. We have had a good record for the many rides our chapter scheduled over the years since I have been State Director. On this Saturday bad luck struck twice. Guest rider Steven Knecht took a spill on his 1991 VFR just minutes into our planned 150 mile ride to Natchez, MS. Not far from the end of sinuous Jones Vaugn Creek Rd. Steven encountered some gravel that moved his rear tire off line and spooked him. He stood his VFR up mid corner and took to the ditch along side the road. His off road excursion ended with a low speed impact with the heavy brush and woods. The VFR suffered significant right side cosmetic damage and Steven suffered a dislocated thumb. The bike was rideable and Steven was able to ride home unassisted and get his thumb Xrayed and treated.

Chris Mixon was our second guest to crash this day but in a much more spectacular fashion and with much more substantial damage. Chris also failed to negotiate a curve, this time on Hospital Rd north of Meadville, MS. Chris and his ST1300 had a much higher impact with the woods bordering the road. Both front forks of his ST1300 were snapped in addition to the smashing of various plastic fairing pieces. Chris suffered a blow to the face with a large bruise over one eye and bruising of the back. X-Rays revealed no fractures but as Chris described it his back felt as if it had been beaten with a two by four. Chris was taken by ambulance to the Emergency Room in Brookhaven, MS where the rest of our group spent the remainder of the day before we carefully road back home. The "rest of us" included Tony Crowell and Kevin Yeats on their ST1300s, and me and Mark Galyean on our VFR800s.

Why did two experienced riders go down on the same day? I have no explanation. From all accounts, excessive speed was not involved. In Steven's case he was spooked by some gravel in the road. However, he has ridden this road many times and it is never totally free of gravel.Chris still has no explanation for his crash. Typically, our club rides are limited to a small group of riders who ride together often and generally know exactly what to expect from the ride dynamics. This ride was different with new riders unfamiliar with each other. I can only speculate that riding an unfamiliar road with unfamilar riders may have been distractions contrubuting to the accident. This scenario however is necessary if our club is to welcome new prospective members and grow and thrive. We must and will re-emphasize our committment to safety. Starting with the following. Please read it and/or re-read it before your next group ride! And expect a few changes on our next ride.....

Read it, Learn it, Live it!

THE PACE BY NICK IENATSCH

.... Racing involves speed, concentration and commitment; the results of a mistake are usually catastrophic because there's little room for error riding at 100 percent. Performance street riding is less intense and further from the absolute limit, but because circumstances are less controlled, mistakes and over aggressiveness can be equally catastrophic. Plenty of roadracers have sworn off street riding. "Too dangerous, too many variables and too easy to get carried away with too much speed," track specialists claim. Adrenaline-addled racers find themselves treating the street like the track, and not surprisingly, they get burned by the police, the laws of physics and the cold, harsh realities of an environment not groomed for ten-tenths riding.

.... But as many of us know, a swift ride down a favorite road may be the finest way to spend a few free hours with a bike we love. And these few hours are best enjoyed riding at The Pace.

.... A year after I joined Motorcyclist staff in 1984, Mitch Boehm was hired. Six months later, The Pace came into being, and we perfected it during the next few months of road testing and weekend fun rides. Now The Pace is part of my life - and a part of the Sunday morning riding group I frequent. The Pace is a street riding technique that not only keeps street riders alive, but thoroughly entertained as well.

THE PACE

.... The Pace focuses on bike control and de-emphasizes outright speed. Full-throttle acceleration and last minute braking aren't part of the program, effectively eliminating the two most common single-bike accident scenarios in sport riding. Cornering momentum is the name of the game, stressing strong, forceful inputs at the handlebar to place the bike correctly at the entrance of the turn and get it flicked in with little wasted time and distance. Since the throttle wasn't slammed open at the exit of the last corner, the next corner doesn't require much, if any, braking. It isn't uncommon to ride with our group and not see a brake light flash all morning.

.... If the brakes are required, the front lever gets squeezed smoothly, quickly and with a good deal of force to set entrance speed in minimum time. Running in on the brakes is tantamount to running off the road, a confession that you're pushing too hard and not getting your entrance speed set early enough because you stayed on the gas too long. Running The Pace decreases your reliance on the throttle and brakes, the two easiest controls to abuse, and hones your ability to judge cornering speed, which is the most thrilling aspect of performance street riding.

YOUR LANE IS YOUR LIMIT

.... Crossing the centerline at any time except during a passing maneuver is intolerable, another sign that you're pushing too hard to keep up. Even when you have a clean line of sight through a left-hand kink, stay to the right of the centerline. Staying on the right side of the centerline is much more challenging than simply straightening every slight corner, and when the whole group is committed to this intelligent practice, the temptation to cheat is eliminated through peer pressure and logic. Though street riding shouldn't be described in racing terms, you can think of your lane as the race track. Leaving your lane is tantamount to a crash.

.... Exact bike control has you using every inch of your lane if the circumstances permit it. In corners with a clear line of sight and no oncoming traffic, enter at the far outside of the corner, turn the bike relatively late in the corner to get a late apex at the far inside of your lane and accelerate out, just brushing the far outside of your lane as your bike stands up. Steer your bike forcefully but smoothly to minimize the transition time. Don't hammer it down because the chassis will bobble slightly as it settles, possibly carrying you off line. Since you haven't charged in on the brakes, you can get the throttle on early, before the apex, which balances and settles your bike for the drive out.

.... More often than not, circumstances do not permit the full use of your lane from yellow line to white line and back again. Blind corners, oncoming traffic and gravel on the road are a few criteria that dictate a more conservative approach, so leave yourself a three or four foot margin for error, especially at the left side of the lane where errant oncoming traffic could prove fatal. Simply narrow your entrance on a blind right-harder and move your apex into your lane three feet on blind left turns in order to stay free of unseen oncoming traffic hogging the centerline. Because you're running at The Pace and not flat out, your controlled entrances offer additional time to deal with unexpected gravel or other debris in your lane; the outside wheel track is usually the cleanest through a dirty corner since a car weights its outside tires most, scrubbing more dirt off the pavement in the process, so aim for that line.

A GOOD LEADER, WILLING FOLLOWERS

.... The street is not a racing environment, and it takes humility, self assurance and self control to keep it that way. The leader sets the pace and monitors his mirrors for signs of raggedness in the ranks that follow, such as tucking in on straights, crossing over the yellow line and hanging off the motorcycle in the corners, If the leader pulls away, he simply slows his straight way speed slightly but continues to enjoy the corners, thus closing the ranks but missing none of the fun. The small group of three or four riders I ride with is so harmonious that the pace is identical no matter who's leading. The lead shifts occasionally with a quick hand sign, but there's never a pass for the lead with an ego on the sleeve. Make no mistake, the riding is spirited and quick in the corners. Anyone with a right arm can hammer down the straights; it's proficiency in the corners that makes The Pace come alive.

.... Following distances are relatively lengthy, with the straightaways taken at more moderate speeds, providing the perfect opportunity to adjust the gaps. Keeping a good distance serves several purposes, besides being safer. Rock chips are minimized, and the police or highway patrol won't suspect a race is in progress. The Pace's style of not hanging off in corners also reduces the appearance of pushing too hard and adds a degree of maturity and sensibility in the eyes of the public and the law. There's a definite challenge to cornering quickly while sitting sedately on your bike.

.... New rider indoctrination takes some time because The Pace develops very high cornering speeds and newcomers want to hammer the throttle on the exits to make up for what they lose at the entrances. Our group slows drastically when a new rider joins the ranks because our technique of moderate straightaway speed and no brakes can suck the unaware into a corner too fast, creating the most common single bike accident. With a new rider learning The Pace behind you, tap your brake lightly well before the turn to alert him and make sure he understands there's no pressure to stay with the group.

.... There's plenty of ongoing communication during The Pace. A foot off the peg indicates debris in the road, and all slowing or turning intentions are signaled in advance with the left hand and arm. Turn signals are used for direction changes and passing, with a wave of the left hand to thank the cars that move right and make it easy for motorcyclists to get past. Since you don't have a death grip on the handlebar, your left hand is also free to wave to oncoming riders, a fading courtesy that we'd like to see return. If you're getting the idea The Pace is a relaxing, noncompetitive way to ride with a group, you are right.

RELAX AND FLICK IT

.... I'd rather spend a Sunday in the mountains riding at The Pace than a Sunday at the racetrack, it's that enjoyable. Countersteering is the name of the game; smooth, forceful steering input at the handlebar relayed to the tires' contact patches through a rigid sport bike frame. Riding at The Pace is certainly what bike manufacturers had in mind when sport bikes evolved to the street.

.... But the machine isn't the most important aspect of running The Pace because you can do it on anything capable of getting through a corner. Attitude is The Pace's most important aspect: realizing the friend ahead of you isn't a competitor, respecting his right to lead the group occasionally and giving him credit for his riding skills. You must have the maturity to limit your straightaway speeds to allow the group to stay in touch and the sense to realize that racetrack tactics such as late braking and full throttle runs to redline will alienate the public and police and possibly introduce you to the unforgiving laws of gravity. When the group arrives at the destination after running The Pace, no one feels outgunned or is left with the feeling he must prove himself on the return run. If you've got some thing to prove, get on a racetrack.

.... The racetrack measures your speed with a stop watch and direct competition, welcoming your aggression and gritty resolve to be the best. Performance street riding's only yardstick is the amount of enjoyment gained, not lap times, finishing position or competitors beaten. The differences are huge but not always remembered by riders who haven't discovered The Pace's cornering pureness and group involvement. Hammer on the racetrack. Pace yourself on the street.

© Copyright MOTORCYCLIST Magazine November 1991 issue

UPCOMING RIDES

NPR TRACK DAY SUNDAY February 26

DAYTONA 200 SATURDAY MARCH 11

LUNCH RIDE SUNDAY MARCH 19

Meet at STARBUCKS on Corporate Blvd, Baton Rouge at 9:30 ride start 10:00 am
DETAILS TBA

gotta run...KEEP IN TOUCH! chappuis@demco.net (225)281-0799 Cell and Ride Safe,
Bob Chappuis