About the bolded part, I think you´re not considering weight transfer in longitudinal axle. When riders rise to increase drag, they also move their weight backwards, wich IMHO is the real reason they rise. That´s what I did when racing MX (moving as back as possible), to prevent the rear wheel jumping on the bumps. MotoGP is different, lower CoG, longer wheelbase, and no bumps compared to MX, but much stronger braking force wich in the end causes same problem (rear wheel lift), so riders need to act similar to prevent itTommy Cookers wrote: ↑23 May 2018, 11:28fwiw I imagine .....
front braking potential is not clipped by the rear contact load falling to zero - they're matched at the design stage
Mr Pedrosa's weight limits him via needing more bike lean (for equally competitive combined bike+rider CG angle)
his braking should be competitive and his straightline acceleration greater (or he can use less fuel for equal acceleration)
he should have a shorter wheelbase ie the rear wheel forward ie rider-normalised to same behaviour as Mr Marquez's bike
Or maybe you think the lower CoG for Pedrosa due to his lighter weight is more beneficial than the handicap of a lower weight transfer to the rear wheel?