Blipping the throttle.
#11
So? Lowering a gear increases engine speed every single time. Why wouldn't you want to blip it really quick and match the engine speed. You may not lock the tire up on the street, but you're still going to get jerked around at any kind of somewhat substantial RPM range if you don't.
#12
Also, even on the track it is highly unlikely you'll be hitting redline downshifting. If you are, you should work on learning to feel for the right timing on shifting on your bike better or watch your tach until you do because you are wreaking havoc on your engine. Over-revving an engine as a result of downshifting is a big no-no. Every now and then accidentally is one thing, but every turn... you're doing it wrong and you will feel it in your wallet.
And fuuuurthermore, downshifting to meet the redline -- even if you can magically get it to redline every time without over-revving it -- doesn't give you any room to accelerate out of a corner in said gear; thus negating the entire reason for downshifting in racing. This is why first gear is essentially unusable in racing except on starts and slow tracks.
Last edited by chuckbear; 07-26-2010 at 02:09 PM.
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Kuroshio
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