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Why can a motorcycle in a parking lot often steer around a cone with the front wheel pointed into the turn, even though road-speed turns use countersteering?

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Answer: Low-speed balance dominates

Low-speed balance dominatesCorrect. At walking or parking-lot speed, balance management dominates: riders can turn the bars toward the turn and keep the bike under control. Once speed rises, the quick countersteer-to-lean pattern becomes more useful and more noticeable. The same motorcycle is not obeying two physics systems; different effects dominate at different speeds.

Body lean alone worksBody lean helps, but by itself it is not the whole parking-lot trick. Slow maneuvers can use direct bar steering because the balance problem is different from a road-speed curve. This is why a cone weave can look unlike a faster turn even on the same motorcycle.

Road-speed rule dominatesApplying the road-speed rule too literally is the misconception. Countersteering can exist at many speeds, but it is not usually the most visible parking-lot move. At very low speed, direct steering and balance management dominate; at road speed, the brief press becomes the efficient way to create lean.

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