countersteering

Articles, guides, and products tagged "countersteering" — a combined view of every catalogue resource on this topic.

User guide

Cornering on an electric scooter: lean angle and centripetal force physics, countersteering at ≥15 km/h, body position, line choice, surface hazards (tram rails, paint, sand), tire pressure, common mistakes + practice drill

Cornering on an e-scooter is not 'turn the bar that way.' It is a sequence of four independent mechanisms: (1) leaning at θ = arctan(v²/(r·g)) — for a 10 m radius at 20 km/h this is 17°, at 30 km/h it is 35°, at 40 km/h it is 52° (beyond a normal tire's adhesion); (2) countersteering above ~15–20 km/h — a brief push of the bar in the opposite direction initiates the lean, and this is physics, not an alternative to leaning; (3) body position with the scooter's high CoG (centre of mass 20–25 cm higher than a motorcycle at the same wheelbase) — knees bent, weight forward on entry, eyes on exit; (4) outside-inside-outside line with a late apex — this increases effective radius and cuts required lean by 5–10°. Plus surface hazards that turn a routine corner into a crash trigger on a single-track vehicle: tram rails at an angle < 30° (the critical threshold, PMC 10522530), painted road markings with glass beads (Minnesota DOT — the lowest COF of all road surfaces), sand/gravel on off-camber surfaces (front-wheel washout), tire pressure as a switch between contact patch and rolling resistance. Helsinki TBI cohort (2022–2023): e-scooter riders end up in ED 3× more often than cyclists at the same intersections. Ten sections — physics, countersteering, body, lines, surfaces, tires, trail braking, mistakes, drills, recap.

14 min read

User guide

Emergency maneuvers and obstacle avoidance on an e-scooter: swerving, threshold braking, two-step weight transfer, target fixation, and PIEV reaction time

Emergency maneuvering is a discipline distinct from planned braking and from steady-state cornering. There is no time for a second attempt — there is one decision made in 0.5–1.5 seconds and one motor sequence executed in the next 0.3–0.8 seconds. If the decision is wrong (you brake when you should have swerved, or you swerve when you should have stopped), two-wheeled physics with small wheels and a high center of gravity punishes you immediately: 86 million shared trips on e-scooters in 2019 ([NACTO — Shared Micromobility in 2019](https://nacto.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/2019sharedmicromobilityreport_final.pdf)) generate 118,485 ED visits in 2024 ([CPSC — E-Scooter and E-Bike Injuries Soar, 2024](https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/News-Releases/2024/E-Scooter-and-E-Bike-Injuries-Soar-2022-Injuries-Increased-Nearly-21)), and CPSC explicitly notes that e-scooters have much higher centers of gravity and smaller wheels with less shock absorption, so pavement quality matters significantly more than it does for bikes or e-bikes. Small wheels and a tall CoG mean that the same patch of damaged pavement that a cyclist will absorb as a transient ride-quality blip will throw an e-scooter rider over the handlebars. This guide covers the two symmetric skills the Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF) calls core emergency skills: **threshold braking** (maximum deceleration at the edge of wheel lockup) and **emergency swerve** (rapid line change without braking during the lean phase). Plus — when to use which, and when to combine them sequentially. ENG-first sources: MSF Basic RiderCourse / 'Do I Brake or Swerve' / Quick Video Tips, Wikipedia (Countersteering, Threshold braking, Dooring), CyclingSavvy (Emergency Maneuvers, Door Zone Tragedy), Cycle World and MCrider (target fixation), AASHTO (2.5 s PIEV), CPSC injury reports, IIHS sidewalk speed studies, Nature Communications (projected time-to-collision e-scooter), ScienceDirect (e-scooter vs bicycle crash typology), 99% Invisible (Dutch Reach), Bennetts (brake and swerve), Hupy and URide (emergency drill protocols).

14 min read