SectorOne wrote: ↑03 Mar 2020, 18:23
Andres125sx wrote: ↑02 Mar 2020, 08:45
Yes, that is exactly what gyroscopic effect means, the wheels try to keep straight up by theirselves, if you lean the bike you need to keep some force (your weight outside the contact patch to cause a turn/momentum wich counteract the gyroscopic effect) to keep the bike leaned.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8H98BgRzpOM
Notice he moves the wheel straight up. It does not go up by itself.
The faster it spins the harder it is to move the angle but he could easily take the wheel standing up, move it to a horizontal position and it would happily spin that way.
Obviously, otherwise leaning/cornering would not be possible. But now imagine, instead of a 2kg bicycle wheel spinning at 100rpm, a 6kg motorcycle wheel spinning at 2000rpm... or even better, imagine two of them at the same time. Instead of causing a gyroscopic effect strong enough to keep a bicycle wheel straight up by itself, the effect is strong enough to keep a 200kg bike straight by itself
SectorOne wrote: ↑03 Mar 2020, 18:23
It would not stand up by itself.
Sorry but this is not correct. I guess you never watched a crash on motoGP (or any other category), where the rider fall down and the bike stand up by itself without rider, going straight into the barriers... I´ve been searching some video to show you but didn´t find any, too many bike crashes to find one of these
SectorOne wrote: ↑03 Mar 2020, 18:23
Stand up relative to what? Center of the earth?
In space which way does the wheel consider up?
The position where the wheel/bike built up the speed, wich normally is straight up
SectorOne wrote: ↑03 Mar 2020, 18:23
Because you did not countersteer, the way you steer a motorcycle at speed.
Countersteering starts coming into effect at around 30km/h.
Countersteer? What are you talking about? We´re talking about motorcycles.
BTW, in MX we corner way faster than 30km/h, so sorry but you need to find any other reason, I perfectly know how to steer a motorcycle, both in the dirt and on tarmac.
Edit: I did a search about countersteering and learnt what it means in bikes, but still disagree about your statement, the problem was not that, it was the gyroscopic effect. Countersteering helps to make fast direction changes, but you don´t need to countersteer to steer a bike, no matter at what speed, moving your body causes same effect, moving the center of mass out of the bike, causing a lean. Countersteer just make it faster as a slight handlebar movement (to move the bike to one side while your body keeps centered) is faster than moving your body out of the bike to one side while the bike keeps centered. It´s same effect, moving center of mass out of the bike.
Also, countersteer only applies to the start of the lean, once it´s leaned you can´t countersteer anymore, and that was the problem I described, I started to lean and realiced the bike was a lot heavier than usually, same body movement caused a much smaller bike movement, so countersteer would not help in that scenario, it was just a matter of the gyroscopic effect
That´s the reason off-road bikes use 21´ front rims (better for bumps), and road bikes use 19´rims or smaller, to reduce gyroscopic effects and make it easier to lean at speed.
The bike I mentioned wich I struggled to lean at first fast corner (actually the problem was changing direction on a series of consecutive corners) was a dual sport bike (Aprilia Pegaso) oriented to off-road, so it had 21´front wheel and the effect was even more noticeable than normally