LeMans Start: Parting Shots

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courtesy of Dain Gingerelli
What appears to be crowd mayhem on the racetrack is, in reality, a LeMans start of a World Championship Endurance Race.

Learn about racing terminology with a little history of the LeMans start that was once the standard for motorcycle racing events around the world.

Motorcyclists in general, and racers in particular, sometimes exhibit patterns of speech that suggest they have their own language. For instance, you might hear a motorcycle rider say, “The clutch went out.” The clutch didn’t go anywhere; what he really meant was that, plain and simple, the clutch stopped functioning properly.

Or, you might hear a racer exclaim after a spirited practice session on the racetrack, “The tires aren’t biting in Turn 2,” as if he were actually fishing for rubber in … Turn 2. In reality the bike’s tires were losing traction somewhere through that turn.

You also might hear someone say at a track day gathering, “I dove into Turn 5, clipped the apex perfectly, then stood it up.” Translation: He rode fast and furious into Turn 5, maintained a smooth and steady line through the corner’s apex that allowed him to accelerate hard at the turn’s exit after stabilizing the bike into an upright position for full tire tread contact, thus allowing him to twist the throttle for maximum acceleration. (Clearly, though, the racer’s original explanation is much easier to say or listen to!)

Here’s an easier one to decipher: “I was running in first place for a change!” Usually that means the racer was leading the race. But, it could also describe, in factual detail, that the motorcycle racer was indeed running, putting left foot in front of right foot in front of left foot, and so on, and that he actually was in first place at the time. How does he do that?

  • Updated on Oct 17, 2023
  • Originally Published on Oct 10, 2023
Tagged with: classic motorcycle touring, motorcycle racing, racing
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