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Centre stands....for better or worse.
#1
This has been out for a while now but at what point did he loose balance of his bike? The grounds pretty level so no worries there. Maybe not enough leverage pushing his foot down on the stand/with extra help with his hand?
Centre stands are a good thing for all year round bikers right? Or perhaps not in this case? How could it be so easy for that to go so wrong?  :\
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ssqcg0avHDk 
The road to success is always under construction.....
Happiness is finding you have another gear left....
If there's no solution then its not a problem.
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#2
Poor bugger hope he remembers to face fore and aft next time :'(.
a bird in the hand poops on the wrist
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#3
I have put bikes on centre stands wearing anything from flip flops to wellingtons, never dropped one off the centre stand yet, it looks like he didn't have a god grip of the bike which is why it fell away from him, moral of tbe story stop filming yourself doing stuff, then nobody will ever know it happened Smile

Saying that I dropped my FZ1 last year whilst putting on the sidestand, didn't notice a loose stone and just as I turned away the bike went over, scratched the crash bung and snapped ball off end of clutch lever, moral of the story- shit happens Smile
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#4
Only bike I struggled putting on a centre stand was my wife's ybr 125 centre of gravity seemed way off
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#5
I've never dropped the bike from trying to put it on the centre stand, even from failing first try. Same as with slappy as well, I've done it wearing the likes of my boots, trainers and even bare foot once
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#6
I nearly dropped mine putting it centre stand today , bike nearly went away from me .
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#7
I can see how it can happen...... The centre stand is designed as a lever,  so that the working force should be from the leg into the stand and the arms only guide the bike up.. . . . . If you do not exert enough force on the stand and try to pull the bike up with your arms, then it becomes unstable and the arm with furthest reach will cause more leverage and likely result in the bike pulling away from you!
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#8
Always found it easy, bike central, weight straight down on the lever, hand on the side gripand pull straight up . . . Now taking a bike off a centre stand, that's another story!
Treat everything in life the way a dog would- if you can't eat it or foc it, forget it.
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#9
erm whats a centre stand? now getting the bike onto a rear paddock stand takes some doing, first get stand behind bike set to right width, next put a block of wood under side stand so bike is almost vertical, then while still holding on to bike (important if outside and it's windy) get the stand under swingarm/onto bobbings, make sure they are seated on both sides and check again, lever down on stand and its done now you can let go of bike. Getting it of is reverse of this except you dont need the block of wood and you check side stand is down check side stand is fully forward and check for a third time side stand is down and fully forward then lift the paddock stand till the wheel touches the ground making sure it's going to lean over to the side stand then hold your breath till it's on the side stand, lol.
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#10
Worst centre stand design in the whole wide world is on my 1958 Velocette- although the bike only weighs about 150lbs you have to lift most of its weight to roll the stand underneath it.
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#11
The worst centre stand I had was on my 1969 BSA 250 Starfire, take a corner and it would hit the road and lift the rear wheel clear and chuck you off if you wern't careful. Everyone took them off, how wasn't this picked up in the trials before the bike went into production, or was only the Japs who tested bikes?
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#12
(11-08-15, 01:28 PM)SteveMc278 link Wrote: How could it be so easy for that to go so wrong?  :\

Looking at it carefully, I'd say that what happens is that, as he starts to put it on the centre stand, his left hand pushes the left handlebar slightly forward.

Then, when it doesn't lift cleanly onto the stand, it rolls forward, the front wheel is twisted to the right and the momentum of the bike is away from him and there's simply no way for him to get the centre of gravity back before it goes over Sad

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#13
Looks to me like it was a half hearted weak attempt to pull the bike up when it wasn't levelled first, when the bike drops down it's more on the left side of the stand, so as it goes down the momentum pulls the bike away from him.
Silly, but shit happens.  :\
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#14
(12-08-15, 06:27 AM)darrsi link Wrote: Looks to me like it was a half hearted weak attempt to pull the bike up when it wasn't levelled first, when the bike drops down it's more on the left side of the stand, so as it goes down the momentum pulls the bike away from him.
Silly, but shit happens.  :\
Yep I would go with that. I always make sure that both stand feet are flat square on the floor before pushing down with foot and lifting up from the back of the bike at the same time

I don't think its placed in the perfect sweet spot I think it could be easier to put on but i suppose its in the only place it could go
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
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#15
would rather have a centre stand than not have one, the only time I've ever struggled is with a pan 1300 on a tiled floor.....slid everywhere and shit me up as it's a works bike and I saw a massive discipline/deduction out my wages to cover the damage.........luckily I managed it but its an ongoing saga each time I take the bike out :rolleyes
fire never sleeps
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#16
I put my GSx1400 down once.. I had wet trainers on and my foot slipped as I went for the lift... all I could do was to put it down as it went away from me... suprising how easy to pick up how easy to pick up a 1/4 ton bike..  :rollin
FOCing down under.......dodging vacant Skippy's.
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#17
Looks to me like he doesn't know HOW to put in on the centre stand.  He looks too close and like he's trying to lift the bike, rather than rolling it up. When he's too close he has no leverage/control to stop it when it starts to get away from him.
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#18
When I had my last centre stand on, which was corroded and twisted, that was a bugger to put the bike up.
It was only after replacing it that I could see how bad the twist was and I was lucky it never actually collapsed on me.  :look
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#19

The problem was a half-hearted heave that failed to get it up on the stand and because he was standing too close his weight wasn't able to balance it once it was leaning fractionally away. If he'd kept his weight on the stand it would have stabilised.
I don't know if it's because I don't weigh much, but I can't get the bike onto the stand using my right foot, it puts the grab rail too far away for me to lift hard enough. Does anyone else use their left foot on the stand?
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#20
Why do people have to video tape their whole lives. Ooh look at me having a dump. Unlocking my door, dropping my bike. Schmuck.
Sent from my villa in the South of France.

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