Cycle News

Cycle News Issue 25 June 27, 2017

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/842139

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 117 of 149

VOL. 54 ISSUE 25 JUNE 27, 2017 P117 MSC (MOTORCYCLE STABILITY CONTROL). M ost motorcycle accidents and fatalities happen from riders who grab too much front brake midcorner and either fall down or the bike stands up and goes wide. Bosch wanted to develop systems that would make cornering a motorcycle safer. Motorcycle Stability Control deals with some of the latest real world rider aides of our time. Electronic Combined Brake Systems (eCBS—a system that electronically applies rear brake to your machine when the system deems it beneficial), ABS with lean-angle sensitivity, traction control with lean-angle sensitivity, rear-wheel lift control, and wheelie control were some of the systems we were going to test to their absolute maximum parameters. Oh dear. We headed to Bosch's enormous skid pad to test the various types of ABS and MSC systems, and each of our fleet of top-shelf motorcycles came equipped with various systems. Some had simple ABS, some enjoyed full eCBS linked braking systems, while others had with rear- wheel lift control fitted. The linked eCBS was far less intrusive and scary than I thought it'd be. Under hard front braking at full lean angle and while still scraping my knee, the bike would just slow down at a mas- sive rate, with no front tuck and the rear wheel remained planted and tidy. Outrageous. At the end of our sessions, I thought I'd get more cheeky and physically try to lock up some wheels. With all my strength, I pulled and pushed down on brake levers to no avail. The bikes slowed, and my leath- ers never got scuffed. While testing each additional varia- tion—be it simple ABS or enhanced ABS—overall, every system worked as they were designed. I must say I was happily surprised at how far motor- cycle braking aides have come and where they aim to go. I used to hate ABS on motorcycles with a passion, now I'm thinking if they can keep a rider with my experience from crash- ing even when he's trying to, imagine the number accidents that could be avoided by the public at large. Motorcycle ABS units have steadily decreased in size since the late 90s. They will only get smaller in the coming years. Hitting the brakes as hard as you like in the middle of the corner can't fool the Cornering ABS system, which is standard fitment on bikes like the KTM 1290 Super Duke GT.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News Issue 25 June 27, 2017