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Optimal Racing Body WorkUPDATE: The Optimal Racing BodyWork shipment has come in and We Ride Motorsports can now ship to your door for Ducati, Yamaha, Honda, Kawasaki, and SuzukI models!

At these prices this body work sells out quickly so ACT FAST!

Plus: New models! 05/06 GSXR 1000 and 03-09 Suzuki SV650s!

If you have ever shopped for bodywork, you’ve probably heard that Optimal Racing is one of the rare of examples of  higher quality body work  offered at a price far below its real value.

One fellow rider wrote: “With these plastics you get much more than you pay for . . . this quality at this price is a rare find indeed”.

However, due to it’s quality and relatively low price, this bodywork is almost always sold out before or immediately after we replenish our inventory – often people have to wait months to get the next order.

Good news!  We will be shipping out new Optimal Racing Body Work kits in days.  If you want this bodywork, you should ACT TODAY before it is sold out nationwide again.

To reserve your Optimal Racing bodywork simply click the following link, locate and order the body work that you need on the website:  OPTIMAL RACING BODYWORK.  It’s that simple!

Your order will guarantee that as soon as it clears US customs, your body work will be on the way to your doorstep.

Contact us with any questions at 434 696 4190.

Optimal Racing Body Work - R6

OPTIMAL RACING BODY WORK – Click here for more information and available models

Optimal Racing Body Work - Ducati 1098

Optimal Racing Body Work – Click here for more information and available models.

Get them while you can!

As of this posting, we are able to ship motorcycle bodywork for the following models:

05/06 GSXR 1000, 03-09 Suzuki SV650s,06-07 gsxr 600/750, 08-09 gsxr 600/750, 05-06 gsxr 1000,07-08 gsxr 1000, 09-10 gsxr 1000, 03-08 sv650,05/06 honda 600rr, 07/08 honda 600rr,09/10 honda 600rr,08-10 honda 1000rr,09-10 honda 1000rr, 04-05 kawasaki zx10, 07/08 yamaha r1,  03/05 yamaha r6, 06/07 yamaha r6, 08-09 yamaha r6,07-08 yamaha r1, ducati 1098, triumph 675, 07/08 zx6,

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If you enjoyed this post, be sure to take a look around. We have free stuff, contests, product reviews, promotions, videos, and lots more for fellow riders around the globe . . . because We Ride Too.

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Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!

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Motion Pro PBR Chain Tool | We Ride Motorsports

Click here to pick up your Motion Pro PBR All in One Chain Tool today!

NEW! Motion Pro PBR Chain Breaker, Press and Riveting Tool

  • Innovative design will Press, Break & Rivet 520, 525, & 530 chains with one convenient tool
  • Versatile design will remove chain pins, press master-link plates and rivet hollow nose & soft nose (quad stake) master link pins on O-ring and non O-ring type chains
  • Easy to use design allows you to change tool functions by simply moving the position of the anvil block
  • Indexing letters on movable anvil and body insures correct tool configuration. Simply line up the letter on the anvil to the letter on the body to get the configuration you need!
  • All components conveniently store on tool when not in use
  • All steel construction with heat treated components for strength and durability
  • May be supported in a vise or held with included handle
  • Great for the professional technician or DIY mechanic
  • Compact and light enough to carry in a tool bag for trail side repairs
  • Includes spare pin
  • Patented Design

Click here to pick up your Motion Pro PBR All in One Chain Tool today!

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If you enjoyed this post, be sure to take a look around. We have free stuff, contests, product reviews, promotions, videos, and lots more for fellow riders around the globe . . . because We Ride Too.

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Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!

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We Ride Motorsports Has Slipper Clutches | We Ride Motorsports

Have you ever raced down a long straightaway with the throttle pinned and then fought to stabilize your bike before flicking it into the turn at the end of the straightaway – by quickly braking, shifting gears, and blipping the throttle, while the rear wheel begins to dance around.  If you have ever been in this situation then you know that matters can get out of hand and unpredictable quickly while you are trying to prepare for that upcoming turn.

This is where a slipper clutch really comes in handy!

Click here for more information about our Yoyodyne clutches.

A slipper clutch is designed to help stabilize your bike by partially disengaging or “slipping” when, under braking, the rear wheel tries to drive the engine faster than its current speed.

The engine braking force in basic/conventional clutches will typically transmit back along the drive chain which causes the rear wheel to hop, chatter or lose traction – all of which creates an unsettled/unpredictable chassis and destroys your confidence.

Slipper clutches help to get rid of all of this confidence robbing instability and give riders a more settled chassis.  They help reduce the need to blip the throttle, minimize the risk of over-reving the engine during downshifts, and free your attention up to focus on what’s ahead of you.

Slipper clutches can also help prevent a catastrophic rear wheel lockup in case of engine seizure or transmission failure.

We Ride Motorsports offers Yoyodyne slipper clutches for nearly every year make and model!

A Yoyodyne slipper clutch customer wrote: “Been running the yo yo . . . for 3 years now.  LOVE the slipper!!”

Click here for more information about our Yoyodyne clutches.

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If you enjoyed this post, be sure to take a look around. We have free stuff, contests, product reviews, promotions, videos, and lots more for fellow riders around the globe . . . because We Ride Too.

___________

Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!

Visit WeRideMotorsports at the Online StoreJoin WeRideMotorsports on Facebook

Follow WeRideMotorsports on Twitter

Copyright We Ride Motorsports © All rights reserved


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Fastest - The Sequel to the Motorcycle Classic Faster - Pre Order Yours Today

PRE ORDERED CUSTOMERS' DVDS WILL SHIP IN LESS THAN TWO WEEKS!

Order “FASTEST” Today at www.WeRideMotorsports.com – before all of the copies are gone.

PRE-ORDERS SHIP IN LESS THAN TWO WEEKS: THE WEEK OF NOVEMBER 15th.

The first 100 pre-orders receive:

*Full soundtrack to Fastest plus
*$20 off of your next purchase at WeRideMotorsports.com

The holidays are coming – this is a great stocking stuffer for you & your friends that love motorcycles!

From the creator of the motorcycle classic “Faster” comes “Fastest” – a spectacular fast paced documentary film full of thrills, spills and highlights, charting the Moto GP World Championship series.

Valentino Rossi strives to win his 8th eighth premier class world championship – fighting off the young guns like Jorge Lorenzo, Ben Spies, Dani Pedrosa and Casey Stoner in an amazing season of racing, capped off by Lorenzo’s championship.  With unprecedented behind-the-scenes access and never before seen angles, this true cinematic experience charts the highs and lows of all sixteen races, including Rossi’s career-threatening crash at Mugello and his spectacular return to racing just 41 days later at the German Grand Prix.  It also explores his experiences on the Ducati.

Just like the classic “Faster”, this movie is destined to be a masterpiece that must be in every motorcycle rider and racing fan’s collection.

. . . the holidays are coming and this is a great present!

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE TRAILER FOR FASTEST!

Pre-Order yours today at www.WeRideMotorsports.com!  The first 100 pre-orders receive:

*Full soundtrack to Fastest
*$20 off of your next purchase at WeRideMotorsports.com

Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts & accessories . . . because We Ride too!

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Yamaha YZF R6 riders may be dangling on the verge of disaster!

Yamaha R6 fuel tanks have proven susceptible to fire during any accident – on the track or on the street. This was proven to be a legitimate flaw in the fuel tank design of the R6.

Many R6 owners have sat by helplessly watching their bikes go up in flames because they failed to take steps to protect their bikes.   If you need any proof of this problem then take a look at this video:

We Ride Motorsports offers all that you will need to protect you and your bike from this disaster on the street and the track: Fuel Tank Protection

Contact We Ride Motorsports so that we can outfit you with the protection that is proven to save your bike!



Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!


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We Ride Motorsports is expecting a new shipment of Optimal Racing Bodywork very soon.

If you know anything about bodywork, you know that Optimal Racing is one of the rare of examples of  a high quality body work that is offered at a price far below its real value.  This bodywork is a steal at its suggested retail price!

Consequently, this bodywork is almost always sold out before or immediately after we replenish our inventory – and often people have to wait months to get the next order.

We are now taking reservations for Optimal Racing bodywork because of the expected arrival of a new shipment.  To reserve your new bodywork simply place your order for the body work at http://www.weridemotorsports.com.  As soon as we received the body work it will go out the door to you.  It’s that simple.  Contact us with any questions at 434 696 4190.

Optimal Racing Bodywork - click for more information

Optimal Racing Bodywork - click for other models/more information

Get them while you can!

We will be able to offer bodywork for the following bikes:

06/07 gsxr 600/750, 08/09 gsxr 600/750, 07/08 gsxr 1000, 05/06 honda 600rr, 07/08 honda 600rr, 07/08 r1, 07/08 zx6, 03/05 r6
06/07 r6, 08/09 r6, ducati 1098, triumph 675

Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!

Visit our store at www.WeRideMotorsports.com
JOIN US ON FACEBOOK
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER


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HELD gloves are well known by motorcycle riders around the world as the very best in protection, comfort, durability for your hands.

We Ride now offers that same protection, comfort, durability for your entire body: HELD Slate.

These leathers are now on sale for a limited time.

Get them now while supplies last!



Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!


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These excerpts come from a posting on www.tz250.com

If you race very long you inevitably notice a pattern about races: You start, then you pass everyone you can, everyone who can pass you does so, and then you ride to the end and see where you finish. If you are a beginner, almost all your concentration has to be devoted to going fast and dealing with the track, not with other riders.

If you were not expecting to be passed, then when you are it’s somewhat startling, particularly if you were doing all you could and someone comes along and takes away a vital part of the track you had intended to use in just a moment. Passing and being passed in a turn is a moment of supreme risk . . .

Yet there are those who pass you without regard for your safety and intentionally set out to disrupt your riding just because they can.

The purpose of this article is to see what can be done about it.

What I noticed about being passed by [the top racers] was that I had to do absolutely nothing different than what I was already doing for a safe pass to happen. They came and went without bothering me in the slightest. I did not have to change lines or grab a handful of brake or even let off the throttle, because they had already calculated my speed and line and theirs, and knew it was going to work out. It had better; it was their responsibility to see to it.

Passing . . . is one of the skills that makes roadracing continually challenging. My job, as a rider being passed, is to maintain the integrity of their calculations by not changing anything. That’s right, all I have to do is press on as hard as I can at what I was already doing and I will be protected and safe. Of course, there is one factor with two expressions that can make all this go wrong—rider judgement. If the guy being passed changes something during the pass, and contact occurs, then it’s his fault. Changing your line or throttle setting or braking in a turn while someone is in the process of passing you is asking for trouble.

Why? He is faster here than you or he would not be passing. That being true, he has the only view of both bikes as he approaches and he alone can make calculations about where you will be when he passes. If you alter that calculation after he has committed to the corner and the pass, then you caused the consequences that come after. Simple enough: Protect yourself during passes by keeping on doing what you were already doing as if the other rider was not even there.

. . .  there is nothing intuitive about this. When I hit the banking at Daytona on a TZ750 the first time and [Kenny ] Roberts passed me a mile later at 180, I was petrified. I knew he was good, but I wasn’t sure I was good enough to be on the track with him. If I made some stupid unexpected move we were both going to pay for it, so holding my machine steady (and leaving room at the edges) was a necessity. I also should add that he would pass incredibly close, but we never touched. He just came and went, and I kept doing what I had before he was there . . .

The point of all this is safety . . . Some bikes are faster than others, and the same is true of riders. Every time we pass someone we should strive to set an example to them and to everyone watching of what an art passing can be. The measure of that art is the degree of disruption you caused when you passed. If the other rider could keep on doing just what he had been doing, as if you had not come and gone, then you have made a masterful pass, and he should appreciate it as much as you should.

It’s a small world for us on the track, and there’s not just courtesy to be considered—some day in some other corner that guy you just passed may be passing you, and if you did a bad job of it and left a bad impression, he may leave one on you as well. That is what we don’t need in this sport.

Secrets of the master passer
We all have corners that seem to match our particular sensibilities. You may be a whiz at flat-out sweeping bends but cannot get out of your own way in a first-gear righthander. That being true, when you pass your way forward in a race to the point that you can no longer catch those in front of you and those behind cannot catch you, you know which corners you have wired and which still need work.

If you are smart, and if you can go to school on the guy in front of you, and if he has faster lines in corners where you are not catching him but you have faster lines in other corners (because you always catch back up to him there), then to get past him just learn his lines and use them. Remember, he hasn’t seen your faster lines, so timing may be a consideration; if you think you may not get much further up in the results, it may be wise to wait until the last lap to make your pass, so he does not have the opportunity to return the favor.

Ever been caught late in the race by someone you thought you had passed and left behind? Wonder how he did it? Now you know.

As a final point, there comes the question of what to do with those who do not subscribe to this orderly view of how we should apply our skills. You know them. They pass any way and any time they can, and call it racing. If someone gets knocked down, that’s just tough and their own fault for being slow.

Here is my solution to that problem. There comes a time in a corner with this sort of rider when he has failed to calculate or even consider your position in the turn and contact is imminent. You have been left with the choice of hitting him or falling yourself. Do you have to save him from his own lack of skill by letting him go on his way at your expense? I say no, and here is why. Imagine a conversation afterward when you are asked about the resulting crash because you did not take evasive action. In response to being asked what you did when he appeared in the turn with you, you could say either that you kept doing just what you had been doing, or you could say you attempted to take evasive action and lost control. The former speaks of your skill and composure. The fault is his for the miscalculation which caused the contact. The latter puts the blame on you for losing control of a situation that was beyond your control to begin with. There is one additional benefit to the first choice—the onus of the mistake of the passing rider stays with him, and that may mean all the way to the ground. If it is his fault it happened, then better him than you.

Racing is not safe and never will be. Risking the limits of speed has its own hazards and all of us have learned a lesson here or there by falling down while dealing with them. Some of us have also been put on the ground through no fault of our own by some predatory passing. The first is unavoidable, the second unforgivable. Some people die when they fall, some are crippled for life. Nobody wants that to happen to anyone. Let’s clean up our passes and make the effort to demonstrate our skill at every opportunity, not just by running up front but also by how we got there.



Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!


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We at We Ride are students of the Keith Code School of riding.  Professor Code breaks down a skill essential to success on the race track in the excerpts below:

The Fine Art of Braking
By Keith Code

By survey 100% of over 10,000 riders agree on this point: they know that if they possessed the ability and skill to get their turn entry speeds consistently right, their confidence would soar; they would feel more in control; they would be faster and they would be smoother. Here is some information on why you might want to master that ability.

Coasting Races

In the mid ’70’s I was introduced to an amazing form of “racing”. Four or five of us would get together at the top of one of our favorite southern California canyon descents; turn off the engines; line up across the road; heckle each other; count to three; pick up our feet without pushing off any more than was necessary to get moving and laugh and yell out insults to one another all the way down to the bottom. Most of the runs were a couple of miles long with lots of turns. That’s a coasting race.

The rider who coasted the farthest and fastest (they were usually the same rider) “won”. There weren’t any tricks, equipment mattered little, it was all you. Well, I did have one little trick — pushing the pads back into my front caliper to eliminate the pad drag.

The camaraderie was elevated enormously by the fact that, unlike our usual canyon rides we could, for the most part, communicate throughout the descent. It was such a delight. Even when it went wrong and someone crashed (like me) I still have fond memories and get a warm sensation when recalling it.

Strategy of Coasting Races

On the technical side of things: I was immediately impressed with several aspects of this form of entertainment and a couple of those points were indelibly printed in my memory and became a part of the California Superbike School over 20 years ago.

The simple trick to winning a coasting race is the obvious, the rider who could maintain his momentum by using his brakes the least generally would prevail. Doing an entire run down some of the steeper roads with little or no braking took as much or more mental grip than doing it with them, this becoming immediately apparent in the first semi-tight corner you came to. Unwilling to give up the momentum yet afraid of the speed which had accumulated, your focus and interest became laser sharp.

Sure your hand would be poised over the lever and sure it took some supreme acts of willpower to keep from using brakes and sure you would make errors and have to use the brakes but you also paid closer attention to the speeds than you normally would. The reduction of distractions like engine noise and gear changes and throttle and charging the corners with hard braking were all eliminated and it allowed you to make much finer estimates of your corner entry speeds and maintain that precious momentum . . .

One of the things I have noticed when I watch students is how erratic their turn entry speeds often are. That comes from the idea they have to charge the corners and brake hard but they can tend to over-brake and foul up their entry and corner speed momentum . . .

Ignore the Instincts

It’s almost as if riders feel obligated to charge turns. It’s the idea that you will go faster because of it and seems such a simple and direct route to that end but rarely works. The instinct to brake late and hard is like clubbing a female to then take her for a wife. That plan isn’t going to work.

I have observed many truly diligent riders who ignored the instinct and stayed with the No Brakes format knocking off seconds from their lap times. To top it off they were achieving their quicker times with only one or two gears instead of the usual thrashing through the gear box. They might be going 20 mph slower on the straights but one should pay attention to the results (improved lap times and corner speed) not the impulse to go fast on the straights.

As I have said a thousand times, the brakes become more of a crutch than a tool for most riders. Someone always whines about the no-brakes riding format at school. Well, crutches are notoriously hard to put down, aren’t they? Riders claim it is difficult (of course it is), that they could go faster with them (faster down the straight away, yes); that they “had” to use them (the crutch again) and on and on.

What these riders don’t realize is how satisfying it is to persevere at the exercise until you really get it, so you really can judge your entry speeds and really know you can do it. Very, very satisfying. Very, very big contribution to your riding confidence. Very!

The Basic Idea

The logic is flawless. Using or not using the brakes is irrelevant to the intended result of getting into the corner at the exact right speed. One either knows what that right speed is and can achieve it or they are guessing. If they are guessing they are paying more attention to it than they should have to. Guessing brings about inaccurate braking and inaccurate braking brings about rough and uncertain turn entries . . .

I see many riders who feel compelled to stab at their brakes in the last moments before entering a corner. While watching them do it, the only conclusion one would come to is that the speed was a big surprise; all of a sudden they become aware of it and it seemed too fast. This is an obvious error. They aren?t using the brake to adjust anything except their fear. In either of the above cases, an accurate sense of speed opens the door to confidence.

Results Then and Now

The essence and final result of any brake release for cornering remains what I said in 1980 in my first Superbike School lecture and on page 64 of the first ?A Twist of the Wrist? book in 1982: To set the speed of the bike correctly for that place on the track (or road) so that no further changes are necessary. In other words, you get it right. Not too fast, not too slow.

Braking itself is an art within the art of cornering. Your sense-of-speed is the underlying resource you have to get it right. As an exercise, no brakes riding will help improve your sense-of-speed. Do no-brakes whenever you have the opportunity and see what happens to your sense of speed and see what happens to your riding. The best part is that once you have combined a good sense of speed with the other twelve basic skills of cornering it all begins to come together.

It is truly one of the skills that allows you to discover the ART OF CORNERING.

You can learn more from Keith Code at his racing school.



Before your next race, track day or street ride, be sure to visit us at www.WeRideMotorsports.com for the best value in motorcycle parts, apparel & accessories . . . because We Ride too!


Visit our store at www.WeRideMotorsports.com
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