Thanking all for thier pearls of wisdom in advance.
Rowan (as long as no part of me is scraping the road I am having fun)
check out the thread with subject 'and the question begins, it has covered
this issue, and should still be current.
my two cents....the clutch is there for a reason, use it. the time saved by
not using it is I think insubstantial.
Brenden
1987 GSXR1100 (The Slab)
> The questions that I hope someone can answer are
> -does it do any harm not using the clutch?
> -and will it just automatically click up without backing off on the revs?
>
> Thanking all for thier pearls of wisdom in advance.
>
> Rowan (as long as no part of me is scraping the road I am having fun)
I have been upshift on suzuki's (250, 750 1100) for years now without a clutch
and have found it smoother than using the clutch. Never had a single prob with
the 'box in 100,000km but I always shift up at peak tourque. I find its good
to do when dragging of V8's at the lights so as to put less strain on the
clutch.
Hope this helps.
----
Harley Davidson - "Yesterday's technology at tomorrow's price"
Brendan
Rowan Kemp wrote in message <01bdec34$009289e0$4bfc37cb@damo>...
>Wondering if someone can give me some sound advice. Just picked up myself
>an FZR1000 after being off a bike for a couple of years. (The last one was
>a GSX750 which my loving brother parked "in" the drivers door of a car)
>Anyway I have been told different things by differient people about
>changing up thru the gears. Initially I was taught to use the clutch each
>time I changed gears. However I have recently been told that the easiest
>way, and smoothest, is just to back off all the way on the throttle and go
>up a gear without using the clutch at all. Just to cloud the issue I was
>told the other day that the best way is to not use the clutch and after
>changing up to put some pressure on the gear lever and when the revs are
>right the thing will just click up by itself. Sounds good but I cant get
>this system right.
Well, I think you'd find, if you were to look inside a gearbox for a
motorcycle, that the gear-pairs (one pair for each gear) are constantly
meshed together....all of them, and all the time, the shifting is done with
dog-clutches which either lock the gears onto the shafts on which they
rotate, or release them from the shafts.
These dog-clutches don't actually have "teeth" like gear wheels, rather big
metal lumps and gaps which mesh fairly easily, and are stronger than the fine
gear teeth.
Clutch-less upshifts, done properly won't do any harm, but getting the knack
of doing them properly can take some practice.
If you're new to this, use the clutch for the first couple of changes, 1 to
2, 2 to 3, and then try shifting the higher gears, gently. There is no need
to scream the motor to max power, or even max torque. The trick is to back
off the throttle to the setting which will maintain your current road speed
in the gear you are changing upto. If the shift _doesn't_ go right first
try, grab the clutch, 'cos it won't work the second grab either.
regards,
CrazyCam