Wind on big highways 401 - 400 etc | Page 2 | GTAMotorcycle.com

Wind on big highways 401 - 400 etc

油井緋色;2566610 said:
Loosen your upper body; become the wind.

Thanks for the feedback. All very good.

This last part made me think of the Matrix... there is no spoon!
[COLOR=inherit !important]


[/COLOR]
 
@sburns

The EG/SG batwings are prone to the effects of the wind.

Road Glide having a fixed fairing cut through nicer. Looks wise, are polarizing. It’s why I prefer a RG.

Dammit... ah ok.
An yes RG yhesshh ugly... but hey if it cuts out wind then I get it.
 
I am less interested in the wind and more interested in:
"FINANCING AVAILABLE. ALL CREDITS APPROVED. RATES START FROM 4.9% OAC. ZERO DOWN IS POSSIBLE. I'M 100% SERIOUS. PM ME!"



Hehe... It's legit, I know a guy.
 
Last edited:
ku-xlarge.jpg
 
Wind impact is scary when you first feel it, after a while you probably won't notice it at all.

You might have felt a little fear from the twitch a the tar snakes gave you when you first started riding - that passed quickly. Big wind its the same, sooner or later you'll only notice the big blasts (they feel like a soft punch), even those won't bother you.
 
blocking position?

if you know different, speak up?

forums are for exchange of info

not opportunities to go ahah! you're wrong!

You might want to stay out of the "I saw you" thread lmao- they'll hang you out if they don't think you are riding with the right eye colour lol
 
this is useful

https://www.windfinder.com/forecast/mississauga

stay off the downwind corner of transports - especially B-rigs with two trailers... the vortex is stunning.

aero47.jpg


If you can cruise in the windshadow of a big rig it's very nice on a windy day.

On two lane road with a cross wind ...the down wind side of an oncoming truck can really slam you around.

I assume you wear earplugs.
 
油井緋色;2566610 said:
To solve the above: loosen grip on bars, get on the gas.

What happens with wind is very similar to the above. Wind hits stiff body, body tries to tighten up, rider death grips hand bars, the wind's effect on the body now causes the death gripping hands to do stupid **** (like push or pull on handlebars), and now the bike feels like it's being pushed by the wind.

Loosen your upper body; become the wind.

+1

Some people will say "it's because you have a big bike", and others will say "it's because you have a small light bike", but when it comes down to it, just grip the tank with your knees, and keep your hands loose.

Unless you're riding with 50km/h+ winds hitting you from the side, you should be okay. Even so, knees hugging the tank + loose grip is still the way to go.

Other factor would be large trucks. You should be staying away from them anyway and never pacing beside them (unless you're stuck in bumper to bumper traffic). Gas it out of there.


Same applies for a car. Closing up your knees depends if you need to pee.
 
Last edited:
blocking position?

if you know different, speak up?

forums are for exchange of info

not opportunities to go ahah! you're wrong!

It's the way I was taught. Don't get so defensive, I was going to say ahah! you're right, but thought you were wrong! I'm just trying to get some online verification, which is difficult. I'm pretty sure it was in an Gearing Up presentation (probably also in the MSF), showing that you start in the truck's rearview, but go wide and accelerate briskly as you start your pass, some of the reasons are the wind, limiting your time in the blindspot, giving your self more space if he decides to move, and not buzzing him like Top Gun's Maverick buzzed the control tower. I'll double check in a week or two when I talk to a couple of people with over 5,000 hours teaching people how to ride.


As for wind, you hold the bars like you would a little kid, you don't crush them, but you don't let go either, give them room to wiggle and correct, but not go off in a new direction.
For the most part the bike will correct itself from the wind, if you haven't added any extra inputs to it, or tried to hold it rigid, but you also need to stay in your lane.
 
you mean the ones that tell you to use high beams all the time? :rolleyes:

No you have me mistaken for someone else.

The ones who tell you to ride the outside of the curve until you can see around it, if I'm not mistaken about your disagreement.
 
Everyone is right, relax your body and learn to deal with it. My Magna gets tossed around a LOT on the highway, I tend to tighten up my knees on the tank and let it dance.
 
The ones who tell you to ride the outside of the curve until you can see around it,
hehe...so you are right in the line of fire of the centre line straddler coming the other way .....yeah problably the same bunch advising you to do that :D
 
this is useful

https://www.windfinder.com/forecast/mississauga

stay off the downwind corner of transports - especially B-rigs with two trailers... the vortex is stunning.

aero47.jpg


If you can cruise in the windshadow of a big rig it's very nice on a windy day.

On two lane road with a cross wind ...the down wind side of an oncoming truck can really slam you around.

I assume you wear earplugs.

Thanks for this, earplugs kinda sometimes. Still figuring that one out.
 
Everyone is right, relax your body and learn to deal with it. My Magna gets tossed around a LOT on the highway, I tend to tighten up my knees on the tank and let it dance.

I don't feel tense or ridge on the highway, I'm not sure where all that came from, just the wind feeling like it's slapping me around. Like a bunch of invisible hands batting at you.

The other thing my helmet felt like it was going to lift off my head, so I tilted it a bit down. Hehe I have a half helmet so I guess it goes with the territory.

Good input all around thanks everyone!
 
I don't feel tense or ridge on the highway, I'm not sure where all that came from, just the wind feeling like it's slapping me around. Like a bunch of invisible hands batting at you.

The other thing my helmet felt like it was going to lift off my head, so I tilted it a bit down. Hehe I have a half helmet so I guess it goes with the territory.

Good input all around thanks everyone!

Does your windshield adjust? Maybe the flow of the windshield is just at the wrong spot for your height and riding position.

For bonus pucker points for those around you, is your helmet gold by any chance?
 
I don't feel tense or ridge on the highway, I'm not sure where all that came from, just the wind feeling like it's slapping me around. Like a bunch of invisible hands batting at you. The other thing my helmet felt like it was going to lift off my head, so I tilted it a bit down. Hehe I have a half helmet so I guess it goes with the territory. Good input all around thanks everyone!
Lots of protein out there the other day for open faced helmet people. Might want to check your helmet size. 100 earplugs are twelve dollars at Walmart, Hearing Aids are over two grand. Wear your earplugs or become deaf like the rest of us lunkheads.
 

Back
Top Bottom