
The Tiger was frisky and I was enjoying exploring its limits. After a run up and down the north shore I crossed the river on a road I don't usually take. Coming up the south river bank hill, I think I'm still a few hundred yards from the stop sign when I finally pick it out of the growth on the side of the road and realize it's only about forty yards ahead of me; I'm doing 80km/hr and the Tiger doesn't stop that quickly from 80km/hr.
Ahead on the right you can see the stop sign, but this spring it's in long grass and the trees have filled out around it.
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Between smaller tires in general and a curved profile to manage cornering on half as many contact patches, motorcycle tires do an amazingly good job. |
Finding myself astride an athletic Tiger coming in too hot to a stop sign with through traffic doing the better part of 100km/hr had me realizing I'm in a bit of bother. You can feel remarkably naked on a motorcycle in that moment. If I can't stop in time I'll end up in the intersection, possibly side swiped by a two ton box.

The big Tiger is crouched down on its long front suspension, trying to shed all that forward momentum into the ground. I would have stopped already on the Ninja with its sticky Avon road tires and hard suspension, but this isn't a purpose built road bike with pavement biased tires, it's a tall trail bike with multipurpose tires - tires that are evidently very easy to lock up, though I didn't know that until now.
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These are wicked all rounders - they handle the road well and are magical on loose stuff, but there is compromise in that |
"Get your head on straight!" I say to myself as I gear down and move off down the road. You don't miss stop signs until it's too late on a motorcycle, especially when you're going to be entering a through way with high speed traffic. Getting t-boned in a car there would probably have been fatal, getting t-boned on a bike would have been a certainty.
There are two take aways from this little incident. Firstly, pay better attention and approach unfamiliar, overgrown intersections in a more circumspect manner. The Tiger's big triple gets you going quickly so easily that it's easy to forget how fast you're moving - keep that in mind too. Secondly, those Metzelers may feel fantastic on gravel and loose dirt (and they do, the bike is astonishingly stable), but they aren't grippy like road tires and they'll lock up early on you in an emergency.
I was remarkably calm afterwards and enjoyed the rest of the ride. Even during the emergency braking and immediately after I didn't get the shakes or anything like that. This turned into a good learning opportunity about a few key items. I now know how I handle emergency braking (better than I could have hoped), and I've learned the dynamic limitations of multipurpose tires, all with no penalty.
If it happens again I might give myself a smack in the head, but it won't.
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A picture perfect day for a ride along the Grand River... |