I call bs - he continues thru the curve while he is airborne. Pretty sure he would go in a straight line once he leaves the ground, all that pesky physics stuff.
No BS at all. The bike was already lined up with the straightaway when it became airborne, pesky physics (gyroscopic effect of the rotating mass) kept the bike in the lean while it was airborne. The bike was not cornering in midair, it was going straight, even though it was leaned over.
I'm not talking about the lean of the bike. I'm talking about the apparent curved path the bike is taking thru the air. I don't care if he is doing somersaults in the air, its going to be in a straight line (neglecting the effects of gravity and wind resistance, of course). It must be an optical illusion or the camera angle.
No BS at all. I've done that sort of thing plenty on a mountain bike. I wouldn't dream of it on a motorcycle on a race course though. Same physics, different size balls.
I don't see anything good coming from speculating about the size of Tom's doodads.
If I had to guess though...2" trailer hitch and made out of the same stuff; if he's done anything similar to the videos, maybe a clack, clack, clack when he walks.
No BS at all. I've done that sort of thing plenty on a mountain bike
Exactly...if you catch air midway through a turn, the back end will continue to come around while you are in the air. That is what appears to be happening in the video(to my eyes anyway) There is a spot at the base of the half-pipe at Fantasy Island that I regularly do that on my mountain bike...there is no way I would want to try it on the 1125 though.