He was a fabricator at a GTA custom bike shop.
He left behind a wife and 2 young children.
His funeral was packed full of bike people, it was beautiful.
Holding the end of the bar isn't an error that needs fixing, I do it and I've seen MotoGP riders that do as well. (until you get a blister in your palm, that is)
I think you'll find that there's little to gain and a lot of comfort to lose, but you should try a few things to learn what difference...
I'm new to this circle j*erk so I'll waste another attempt to enlighten you on the reality of the situation.
I once witnessed Frank Trombino (multi-time pro champion) make it all the way to turn 7 on his first lap of a trackday before he comprehensively balled his bike up and went home. As good...
What I learned today:
Highly knowledgeable people will spend inordinate amounts of time trying to educate people who clearly have no frame of reference with which to comprehend the information.
Bless you all for trying, but for your own sanity, please focus on those who actually want to learn...
You would find it easier to understand if you had the focus and drive that every rider on that grid has. Rain is just another condition to be managed, like worn tires or poor setup. I personally love racing in the rain and would always vote to race.
The "Fail" is in this post.
The largest lubricants supplier in the world and the largest oil retailer in Canada conspired to sell a sub-standard version of the top diesel oil brand in the world, and you're the only one who knows it.
Uh-huh
All that stuff is over-priced due to it's heritage. If you really want to buy a 500 V4 GP bike....
http://www.suterracing.ch/en/suter500.html
Buy a brand new one from the guy who developed the Roberts, Ilmor and Kawasaki MotoGP chassis'
From MCN, the world's number one motorcycle publication...
Save yourself some money and buy your ticket from a scalper at the gate. 2 years ago I got my ticket for $60 from a vet named "Sarge". You'll have a blast.
Same thing ran through my mind. What could be better than hacking around the track for a day, then going to watching the fastest riders in the country do it right, the very next day? I'm making phone calls right now, gonna stuff Paul like a Cornish hen. :)
Rotor prep is every bit as important as the pad itself.
Remove the rotors, bead blast or scotch-brite the surface, bed-in according to pad manufacturer.
I would imagine it to be difficult for someone who has no racing history to be able to get the deal. It's not a newbie racing program so past racing history will be the first criteria for consideration. I'm sure they're response will be very polite, nonetheless.
Stay safe, Alberta has the worst winter road conditions imaginable, I don't think you could accidently make them that bad, it has to be on purpose.
We'll miss you, stay in touch.
That's actually opposite of the effect you'd see from a higher concentration of glycol. You should ask what type of lubricant is compatible with glycol, I'm interested to know as well.
BTW, This ^ is the GTAM way of telling you that people are not telling you the truth. At least I don't use...
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