Simon - what a legend. Total anti-presenter in many regards (postures, movements, doesn't remember the topics), but as soon as he enters his rider's zone, he's invincible. He probably doesn't even notice, but his constant hand gestures while talking help SO much in understanding the topic he's explaining. And these gestures are 100% like all MotoGP rider's gestures when explaining bike's behavior. All in all, such a lovable guy.
Thats how a rider talks to their engineer regarding whats happening to the bike as they rode them and whats needed to be changed for them on next session
If this bloke would talk little louder or position microphone little closer to the face it would be a blessing. He has such weird voice, I can hear him the same if my volume is at 10 or 90% 😄
I am not a racing engineer, but I do understand quite a bit of those concepts talked about in tech talks. And from all the top motorsports categories Simon Crafar (ok, from this season F1TVs Albert Fabrega) are the only two tech talking guys whose explanations are super simplified for everyone to be able to understand, yet you don't feel like they are talking down to you or mocking you. Huge props for that 👍👍
Interesting. I thought motoGP could take some notes from F1’s tech series on RUclips. The presenter isn’t saying ‘I learned…,’ he teaches the audience. I want concise, technical information from an expert.
I just love listening to Simon Crafar talk. He could talk about virtually anything- and I'm pretty sure I'd be just as interested in that as I am about MotoGP. He just has a comforting tamber in his voice. It's very calming.
I appreciate all of Simon's input. His knowledge every race week and on every one of these videos is priceless. He adds so much for us fans. Thank You.
I've had many Teachers and Professors in 3 Colleges that had 2 things in common. They were my only PHd instructors and the most passionate, therefore truly enjoyable. I aced their classes because i was enthralled. Simon reminds me of these Educators. I, no doubt, would score 100% of any Test Dr. Crafar might assemble. Good Job Professor!
Riders choosing hard fronts in the last ten years or so all makes sense now. Thanks Simon. Oh, and when you were animating counter steering into fast corners i was laughing out loud.. it's one of the riding techniques i didn't realise i already had. Love the show, guys
Well done Simon - a very interesting topic. 20 years ago, on a MotoGP forum I questioned why teams weren't using any sort of aero bits on the machines and was immediately set upon as a rube and stupid person (lol). Fast-forward to 2022 and it seems that aerodynamics have been entirely embraced and actually make the bikes faster.
imo, 20 years ago indeed it was stupid.. but in nowadays motogp, they dont have any other chances/area to develop the bike. engine freeze in 2020 and 2021, homologated single electronic control, etc etc.. chassis wise already matured, brakes are from supplier, single tires, very limited area to develop something. thats why the next reasonable thing is aero.
If I ever have an opportunity to attend a riding school it would be Simons. I feel like I am on the bike experiecing the ride height device just by watching this video. Bravo!
Its guys like Simon thats responsible for pushing the bar higher and higher to make our motorcycles rival the technology NASA uses in the space shuttles. The tech alone in the past 10 years is so advanced that its makes you scratch your head on how some of its even possible or how it was thought of. On behalf of the motorcycle addicts like myself thank you for everything you do!
@ 1:15 yup, you can still go straight with some lean angle. Lean doesn't turn the bike, turning the bike induces lean angle. @ 6:25 Simon mention how ride height devices help reduce aero induced drag, "a little bit". Which is the same reason the America's cup cats rode bow down at speed. I know I know, no active aero, don't trust the bits or the algo... but wouldn't it be fun?
1:00 Physics. Its got to do with the suspension and how a bike react to the sudden torque and weight transfer. Same with your feet and legs, if you put your 160-200ish lbs on the seat, of course its going to assist the front wheel in coming up. Keeping the bike at an angle has to do with the same stuff. The rear swing arm wants to move to allow the bike upward, the suspension fights this, but your weight fights it back, its a combination of balance and skill.
Totally agree with Spartan_1007 ❗❗ Tech Talk with Simon is really cool, that opening sentence about why the riders found Japan different instantly gets you thinking. The end result is a mind boggling bunch of knowledge, thanks to the teachings of Sensei Simon .... cheers to you 🤟✨
But the change in tyre construction..they don't lean as much in 2019..in 2019 marquez lean 66 in germany...64 and 63 is easily achieveable...now even marquez and fabio 61 and 62 angle
Marquez lean and lose speed and not get enough exit speed. Problem was with marquez if Alex rins can bend much lower and find the right line and accelerate perfectly he will get faster exit and compensate bending beyond 60 degree redundant
Hi Simon, your videos are extremely informative, thank you. One interesting info would have been if you can tell the lap time differences from 2019 to 2022. Keep up the good work!
The old 500cc two-stroke Grand Prix bikes were more exciting to watch than MotoGP ever has been. Even if the big four-strokes are faster, they aren't as thrilling to watch.
I wonder whether the the combination of higher speeds at various points on any given MotoGP track along with the complicated effect of devices and aerodynamics also means that the high side incidents are (1) more complicated (due to the additional factors), (2) less predicable (same reason), and (3) potentially more violent due to the relatively higher speed. We see riders emerge relatively quickly from low side slides, but even with air bag suits the violent forces associated with high sides do not mix well with human bodies, especially the extremities.
Simon, if the rear ride height is lowered coming out of the corner, improves straight line speed and again lowered at corner entry, why not leave it lowered for the complete lap/race?
nice question, because high position of bike (suspensions and height) is better for the ''rolling'' on curves and handles better the bike movements ... this is called rolling by the tecnicians of mGP , SBK, ... low centre of gravity is good for some things and high centre of gravity is well for another things ... and bikes have a lot more of settings ,wheel base, height pivot swingarm ...
Simón! Que bonita motocicleta estas presentando, la gran suzuki, y en color azul, supongo que lo último en tecnología, y también supongo que estas comentando sus ventajas. Saludos Simon! De Noemi de México! 🇲🇽
I was in the 05’ teams garage and was able to hit the throttle a few times on the Suzuki motogp bike. It was so fast it felt like the gas pedal on a electric car. Instant power
I believe MotoGP is 300-350 ish and wsb is like around 200 (all hp units) 3 seconds for such a difference in power to weight seems minimal to me. It's mostly limited by tires. Tracks with more straights benefit moto gp bikes but if there was a hypothetical track that was all tight curves I would expect lap times to be within half a second of each other
The hand gestures are awesome, looks a lot like what you see riders do when talking to their engineers! 7:52 "if you did it too quickly you lock the front", proceeds to absolutely wipe-out with 300% steering lock 😂
I thought lowering device was only used at the start to make it like a drag bike. how are the device switched on when moving? you can see riders pushing and moving up/down to make device switch on at the starting grid. how they do it when moving?
Hey Simon I have few tech question from Malaysia..Why does moto3 bike have 2 exhaust on one cylinder?..Does the exhaust camshaft on moto3 bike run different deg/lift on each exhaust port?..Does the length of each exhaust the same or not?..Thank you
OK, that 's the theory behind it - so now, how does it work? What sort of device do they use for rear ride height adjustment? How are the aerodynamics different? Some tech info would be good......
I've been wondering could you switch of traction control on a straight ,and out accelerate a bike using traction control ,even if it does wheel spin , 🤔
Not really. Loss of traction means loss of drive. The traction control is limiting power just enough to stop slip and no more. I would prefer to see the riders manage the power themselves but that is just my opinion.
@@glennvandenberg3912 appreciate the feed Bak ,I maybe should have left the wheel spin part out ,I figured if I didn't say wheel spin some 1 would tell me it would just spin ,I've ridden a 280 rear wheel HP turbo busa ,with no traction control and nothing else I've ever ridden would touch it in acceleration ,I ride gsxr 1000 k8 , I was thinking mid way down a long straight in Moto Gp ,flick of traction control and wind it on hard and try limit the wheel spin ,would be interesting too see 2 exact gp bikes try this , obviously the turbo busa doesn't weigh 160 kg and a GP bike would stomp it ,
Simon - what a legend. Total anti-presenter in many regards (postures, movements, doesn't remember the topics), but as soon as he enters his rider's zone, he's invincible. He probably doesn't even notice, but his constant hand gestures while talking help SO much in understanding the topic he's explaining. And these gestures are 100% like all MotoGP rider's gestures when explaining bike's behavior. All in all, such a lovable guy.
Thats how a rider talks to their engineer regarding whats happening to the bike as they rode them and whats needed to be changed for them on next session
What he lacks in smoothness he more than makes up for it in charisma and passion.
Agree 100%
If this bloke would talk little louder or position microphone little closer to the face it would be a blessing. He has such weird voice, I can hear him the same if my volume is at 10 or 90% 😄
@ Well I don't know, I hear him without any problems, loud and clear. Ok, not particularly loud, but clear definitely.
I am not a racing engineer, but I do understand quite a bit of those concepts talked about in tech talks. And from all the top motorsports categories Simon Crafar (ok, from this season F1TVs Albert Fabrega) are the only two tech talking guys whose explanations are super simplified for everyone to be able to understand, yet you don't feel like they are talking down to you or mocking you. Huge props for that 👍👍
Interesting. I thought motoGP could take some notes from F1’s tech series on RUclips. The presenter isn’t saying ‘I learned…,’ he teaches the audience. I want concise, technical information from an expert.
Simon is the cool science teacher who's class you looked forward to attending! Guy is awesome! Has taught me so much and makes my watching better!
I just love listening to Simon Crafar talk. He could talk about virtually anything- and I'm pretty sure I'd be just as interested in that as I am about MotoGP. He just has a comforting tamber in his voice. It's very calming.
I appreciate all of Simon's input. His knowledge every race week and on every one of these videos is priceless. He adds so much for us fans. Thank You.
Another great, animated talk from Simon - I love his representation of the rear ride height device!
Thank you Simon and thank you MotoGP. This content is golden. I really love this.❤️❤️❤️❤️
This tech talk series is soooo good! Cheers Simon and Moto GP 👍
I've had many Teachers and Professors in 3 Colleges that had 2 things in common. They were my only PHd instructors and the most passionate, therefore truly enjoyable. I aced their classes because i was enthralled. Simon reminds me of these Educators. I, no doubt, would score 100% of any Test Dr. Crafar might assemble. Good Job Professor!
I've followed the sport since the mid 80s and everytime I think I know everything there is to know, Simon teaches me 2 or 3 new things :)
i could listen to Simon for days and days, just pure passion breathing through his words
This is one of my favorite bits in motogp: Simon, the racers perspective and the tech talks. What a legend and what a show! Keep it up, mate!
It's the only MOTOGP content I watch... Don't even watch the races any more!!
Brilliant explanations Simon- well done, really appreciate your credentials as a pro rider, and thank you.
Riders choosing hard fronts in the last ten years or so all makes sense now. Thanks Simon.
Oh, and when you were animating counter steering into fast corners i was laughing out loud.. it's one of the riding techniques i didn't realise i already had.
Love the show, guys
Well done Simon - a very interesting topic. 20 years ago, on a MotoGP forum I questioned why teams weren't using any sort of aero bits on the machines and was immediately set upon as a rube and stupid person (lol). Fast-forward to 2022 and it seems that aerodynamics have been entirely embraced and actually make the bikes faster.
Except they’re f*ing up the racing. Badly.
@@Showmetheevidence- nah
@@Showmetheevidence- *Stares at Phillip Island*
WOW. That one aged poorly.
imo, 20 years ago indeed it was stupid.. but in nowadays motogp, they dont have any other chances/area to develop the bike. engine freeze in 2020 and 2021, homologated single electronic control, etc etc.. chassis wise already matured, brakes are from supplier, single tires, very limited area to develop something. thats why the next reasonable thing is aero.
If I ever have an opportunity to attend a riding school it would be Simons. I feel like I am on the bike
experiecing the ride height device just by watching this video. Bravo!
Its guys like Simon thats responsible for pushing the bar higher and higher to make our motorcycles rival the technology NASA uses in the space shuttles. The tech alone in the past 10 years is so advanced that its makes you scratch your head on how some of its even possible or how it was thought of. On behalf of the motorcycle addicts like myself thank you for everything you do!
Thank you Simon ! Great Info ! You make Learning Easy !
Excellent presentation as usual - thanks Simon 😎
Always a pleasure to listen too, thank you Simon!
Another excellent one, Simon. Makes me proud to hear the kiwi accent.
I Watch every episode twice...so much interesting info which forces one to think about it...I love it!
*Pure gold* 🪙🪙🪙 Sir 😎 real content
Simon is great! Great information and very articulate from a fast former racer! Keep the videos coming 👍🏻
@ 1:15 yup, you can still go straight with some lean angle. Lean doesn't turn the bike, turning the bike induces lean angle. @ 6:25 Simon mention how ride height devices help reduce aero induced drag, "a little bit". Which is the same reason the America's cup cats rode bow down at speed.
I know I know, no active aero, don't trust the bits or the algo... but wouldn't it be fun?
Love these tech talks and found that a fascinating insight into how it’s all come together over the last couple of years with the advances. 🤓😎
1:00 Physics. Its got to do with the suspension and how a bike react to the sudden torque and weight transfer. Same with your feet and legs, if you put your 160-200ish lbs on the seat, of course its going to assist the front wheel in coming up. Keeping the bike at an angle has to do with the same stuff. The rear swing arm wants to move to allow the bike upward, the suspension fights this, but your weight fights it back, its a combination of balance and skill.
Simon is a treasure in Moto GP ,such an asset !!!
Another great tech talk! Great job to you and the crew. I hope to see more!
I am old enough to remember GP races in the 80's. They didn't have any of this stuff and the racing was much more fun to watch as a result.
Facinating stuff, and Simon you are the right guy for this Tech Talk. Thanks.
As usual! Perfectly explained and presented
Always watching from Georgetown Guyana south America 🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾
Super impresive. I love that animation style. Great tech talk!
Just the best technical videos in motorsport.
I could listen to Simon talk for hours. Thanks for the tech talk.
Really cool breakdown and explaonations. Look forward to more of these
Cheers Simon,,, great video!!
Really enjoy watching these videos, cheers Simon 👍
Cheers simon, that all went in , great career mate ,loving your comments come race day too , keep up the great work mate
Totally agree with Spartan_1007 ❗❗
Tech Talk with Simon is really cool, that opening sentence about why the riders found Japan different instantly gets you thinking.
The end result is a mind boggling bunch of knowledge, thanks to the teachings of Sensei Simon .... cheers to you 🤟✨
Sensei Simon 😄 I love that.. thanks Craig T
Fantastic explanation, Simon. Thank you!!!
Love all the tech! ♥️ Let's have more aero and electronic trickery!
But the change in tyre construction..they don't lean as much in 2019..in 2019 marquez lean 66 in germany...64 and 63 is easily achieveable...now even marquez and fabio 61 and 62 angle
Its more like sacrifice for straight line speed
Marquez lean and lose speed and not get enough exit speed. Problem was with marquez if Alex rins can bend much lower and find the right line and accelerate perfectly he will get faster exit and compensate bending beyond 60 degree redundant
Marc was "overleaning" and using his elbows as a 3rd wheel + shoulders as shock absorbers. Not sustainable. 61-63 degrees is more realistic.
Great work Simon,keep it up pal
Very cool, very informative. Thoroughly answered.
Thank you !! Much appreciated 👍🏻😁
Another great tech talk from Simon. Thanks.
Love these vids….keep up the good work Simon👍🤓
Really well done. Great details in the explanation.
Excellent as always. Thanks!
Simon so passionate speaking about them bikes
Great work!
Thanks mate, these are great.
Very informative and entertaining. Thank you Simon
Excellent commentary by Simon!
Hi Simon, your videos are extremely informative, thank you.
One interesting info would have been if you can tell the lap time differences from 2019 to 2022.
Keep up the good work!
very good xplanation. well done sir!
The old 500cc two-stroke Grand Prix bikes were more exciting to watch than MotoGP ever has been. Even if the big four-strokes are faster, they aren't as thrilling to watch.
Simon is the bomb! NEVER let him go, please!
Such a Lehman way to explain things in a very simplistic manner , thanks Si
Interesting,huge step of evelopement. Thanks Simon
Fantastic and very informative, from Te Awamutu
Classic Livio Suppo! Great tech talk
Sweet as explanations. Learnt alot. 🇳🇿👍👌
Great easy to understand info thanks/
I wonder whether the the combination of higher speeds at various points on any given MotoGP track along with the complicated effect of devices and aerodynamics also means that the high side incidents are (1) more complicated (due to the additional factors), (2) less predicable (same reason), and (3) potentially more violent due to the relatively higher speed. We see riders emerge relatively quickly from low side slides, but even with air bag suits the violent forces associated with high sides do not mix well with human bodies, especially the extremities.
Fantastic Tech Talk Simon,I look forward to further installments.
Yes this is good content. Simon is great. 🏁🏁👍
Simon, if the rear ride height is lowered coming out of the corner, improves straight line speed and again lowered at corner entry, why not leave it lowered for the complete lap/race?
Travel my friend.
nice question, because high position of bike (suspensions and height) is better for the ''rolling'' on curves and handles better the bike movements ... this is called rolling by the tecnicians of mGP , SBK, ... low centre of gravity is good for some things and high centre of gravity is well for another things ... and bikes have a lot more of settings ,wheel base, height pivot swingarm ...
Simón!
Que bonita motocicleta estas presentando, la gran suzuki, y en color azul, supongo que lo último en tecnología, y también supongo que estas comentando sus ventajas.
Saludos Simon!
De Noemi de México! 🇲🇽
Hope this kind of video will come more in the future.
fascinating synopsis - very impressive
I was in the 05’ teams garage and was able to hit the throttle a few times on the Suzuki motogp bike. It was so fast it felt like the gas pedal on a electric car. Instant power
Love it!
Gotta love Simon! ❤😊
Thanks Simon
2021 Johan Zarco / 368 km
2022 Jorge Martin / 369 Km🕡
2023. ? / 370 Km
I LIKE ✌
Cool!!
Good job!
Whew Simon talk’s you listen !
What’s the advantage of the raised rear suspension position then? Better cornering?
What is the difference in hp between a MotoGP bike and a WSBK bike?
Lap times nowadays are pretty close (depending on the track obv)
In barcelona wsbk is 2 seconds slower, in aragon 3 seconds slower, misano 3+ seconds, is this pretty close to you?
@@radityaanugrahp
What’s the hp difference?
I believe MotoGP is 300-350 ish and wsb is like around 200 (all hp units) 3 seconds for such a difference in power to weight seems minimal to me. It's mostly limited by tires. Tracks with more straights benefit moto gp bikes but if there was a hypothetical track that was all tight curves I would expect lap times to be within half a second of each other
@@327efrain wrong on your hp figures-motogp is around 275 max,wsm 235
@@zeke2566 thanks for the correction, my logic still stands as 40 hp for 400 lbs (an upper limit, probably closer to 300 lbs) is a huge difference.
Yet some lap records suggest they haven't got much faster in recent years and in some cases are slower.
He is correct about this 👍
The hand gestures are awesome, looks a lot like what you see riders do when talking to their engineers!
7:52 "if you did it too quickly you lock the front", proceeds to absolutely wipe-out with 300% steering lock 😂
Haha yes that gesture🤣
Ah he's former motogp racer indeed.
Suzuki such a beautiful bike😎😎😎
can we please show us on youtube about motogp tire sizes and compare them to street tires and worldsuperbiketires please
I thought lowering device was only used at the start to make it like a drag bike. how are the device switched on when moving? you can see riders pushing and moving up/down to make device switch on at the starting grid. how they do it when moving?
Anyone miss the 500 Grand Prix years or just me ?
Hey Simon I have few tech question from Malaysia..Why does moto3 bike have 2 exhaust on one cylinder?..Does the exhaust camshaft on moto3 bike run different deg/lift on each exhaust port?..Does the length of each exhaust the same or not?..Thank you
i think that's a top secret information.
Thanks, great.
I like the way your hands signal like that
do you think they'll ban the rear ride height devices eventually?
OK, that 's the theory behind it - so now, how does it work? What sort of device do they use for rear ride height adjustment? How are the aerodynamics different? Some tech info would be good......
Although we know who will be teaming up with peco next year, would love to see part 2 video.
Thanks simon
when he said "back in my days".
feels like i just watch an old tiger who lost his fang but not the claw
I've been wondering could you switch of traction control on a straight ,and out accelerate a bike using traction control ,even if it does wheel spin , 🤔
Not really. Loss of traction means loss of drive. The traction control is limiting power just enough to stop slip and no more. I would prefer to see the riders manage the power themselves but that is just my opinion.
@@glennvandenberg3912 appreciate the feed Bak ,I maybe should have left the wheel spin part out ,I figured if I didn't say wheel spin some 1 would tell me it would just spin ,I've ridden a 280 rear wheel HP turbo busa ,with no traction control and nothing else I've ever ridden would touch it in acceleration ,I ride gsxr 1000 k8 , I was thinking mid way down a long straight in Moto Gp ,flick of traction control and wind it on hard and try limit the wheel spin ,would be interesting too see 2 exact gp bikes try this , obviously the turbo busa doesn't weigh 160 kg and a GP bike would stomp it ,
Brilliant summary. Thank you Simon. Still don’t like the aero wings and winglets.
I would love to work with this guy one day 😭❤️