
Progressive Braking
Gradually increasing brake pressure from light to firm. The foundation of safe braking.
What is it
Progressive braking is the technique of gradually increasing brake pressure: light touch first, then building, then maximum force. This allows the front suspension to compress, the tire contact patch to load, and traction to build to its maximum.
How it works
When you grab the brake abruptly, weight transfers violently forward, overloading the front tire beyond its grip limit. A progressive approach gives the tire time to adapt to the load. The first 0.5 seconds — light pressure (20%), then build to 80-100% over the next 0.5-1 second.
How to practice
- In an empty lot: accelerate to 25 mph and brake with building pressure
- Think in phases: «touch — press — squeeze»
- Practice front and rear brakes separately, then together
- Compare stopping distances: abrupt vs progressive braking
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Related terms
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Push right to go left. The fundamental physics of motorcycle steering at speed.
Trail Braking
The technique of continuing to brake while entering a corner — gradually releasing the brake as lean increases.
Emergency Braking
Stopping the motorcycle as quickly as possible in a critical situation. The skill that saves lives.
Engine Braking
Slowing down through engine compression with the throttle closed — no brakes needed.
Clutch Control
Smooth clutch management for power control — essential for maneuvering and starting.
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Emergency Braking
Stopping the motorcycle as quickly as possible in a critical situation. The skill that saves lives.