Had a surprise experience this Monday involving hard braking. On my way with "honey-do's" to do, following tractor-trailer at slow speed 45 to 47 and back again. Cab-over truck (tractor) pulling a rusty lowboy trailer on a state two lane highway. Hey, slow no problem! Ride lasts longer, I'm retired, not s'posed to be inna hurry! So, anyway, the truck slows deliberately, driver waves arm out the open window the "pass me" signal so we bank left, straighten up and roll on throttle and HE STARTS A TURN TO THE LEFT! Hard brakes on, front tire growling, rear just a slight barely audible squeal and a very fast stop from about 30 mph. Insults inside a closed modular helmet remain mostly inside the hat. He carries forward and to the left into a field entrance and we get back in the proper lane and carry on.
Observations on this mini drama are:
1. Front brake technique not that difficult even when not practiced all that much. Just be quick to just relax the grip a little when the howl starts.
2. Rear brake less crucial even if tire slides. This situation different because of the car tire back there! That thing stuck to the pavement WAY BEYOND what a cycle profile would have! I have read of others experiencing this but now I know it is NOT a fantasy. Braking action is definitely superior.