
Lane Positioning
Choosing the right position within your lane for maximum visibility and safety — left, center, or right third.
What is it
Lane positioning is the conscious choice of where within your lane you ride. The lane divides into three thirds: left, center, and right. Each has advantages depending on the situation.
How it works
Left third — better sight lines, more visible to oncoming traffic, but closer to the opposing lane. Right third — farther from oncoming vehicles, but closer to the shoulder and parked cars. Center — worst position: oil drippings, less visible. The ideal position changes every few seconds.
How to practice
- Consciously choose your position — don't just ride wherever
- Before intersections — left third (you're seen sooner)
- Near parked cars — left third (farther from doors)
- In curves — outside third for better sight lines
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Related terms
Counter-steering
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.
Progressive Braking
Gradually increasing brake pressure from light to firm. The foundation of safe braking.
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.
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Body Positioning
Correct body position on the motorcycle — the foundation of control, agility, and comfort.