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So what he really wanted was a piece of paper saying his bike could do "x" as far as performance on the dyno, whether it actually pushed that on the street or track is moot since he has a piece of paper saying his bike can do "x" and he can show it to all his buddies as proof of how big his penis is.
Right? :lol: |
I agree with Dnyce, performance is always about having ten or more things all working together producing synergy, rather than one thing boosted a hundred percent. The bigger is better, if some is good get more attitude just wont work.
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I think suspension is the most crucial. I've ridden on the track with stock suspension that wasn't set up, stock that was set up and full Ohlins. The feeling you get from a properly tuned and/or upgraded suspension is great. More stable on the brakes, mid corner and exit. And you could have the best tires on your bike, a badly tuned suspension could eat through 'em in a matter of a few sessions. And getting your suspension tuned is probably the cheapest thing you could start out with...but you could see some great results from it. Power will make you faster in the straights. Suspension will get you through the corners faster.
I still have yet to try anything other than stock gearing, but I have a feeling it'll make a world of difference in regards to leaving corners and accelerating, as the R6 down low is a bit lacking. A couple extra teeth should help aleviate that. |
Gearing can be a bit of a compromise. and it probably isnt as crucial nowadays with FI'd bikes that pull through a much wider band of torque than with bikes in the past. Its just another one of those advantages you want on your side...
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Never mind that your suspension affects you no matter how fast or slow you're going....... |
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And for most folks, that's OK, too.
A properly sprung and set up bike is about 90% as good as it gets.... The only folks who really NEED that other 10% are the guys who ride at 99%... the ones who find their forks chattering, or rear tire tearing or hopping on the rough stuff, or pushing the front end. Or who load there bikes heavy for long distances. Or who want a softer, more compliant ride with control. Or , who've set their bike up properly and find it still is starting tankslappers on bumpy exits. Or who are lighter than the theoretical "average" and get tired of harsh response even with a custom spring on those 500 miles backroad days........ Ps: lighter riders really do get the worst of it; most jap bikes are overdamped on compression, and a lot of harshness gets transmitted to lighter riders. |
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