Rocket_Rider
Supercharged
Accepted. The alternate would be that the oil, which caused the wheel under acceleration to step out, ended.
While stepped, out the clear dry pavement provided a sudden increase in friction which allowed the tire(s) to regain traction, causing the top of your motor to pitch forward and you to be catapulted off.
Many, many issues were in play here - too many unknown to address regarding a definitive cause.![]()
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this is what I think happened (or atleast it fits with what i felt) but again as it was soo fast its hard to know or even recall as it all happened in seconds. Is there anything i as a rider can do about handling a bike as it regains traction? if i had been braking would it have been better? i have read and been told conflicting accounts over the years about shutting off a throttle completely some say not to, some say to shut it off....
I guess the hard part is every situation is different and Im interested in how i train my automatic responses.... cause presumably whatever I'm going to do is not likely to be a thought out action, its going to be instinctive, so i'll do whatever I've trained. One thing I am going to do going forward is some extra advanced rider training on the rocket, if only to brush up skills and self-confidence as I haven't done any formal training in the last 3-4 years and even then they were smaller bikes that did handle differently.
out of interest, does the bike's ecu store any data about what was happening prior to tip over?