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2011 On-Bike Laps Volume One
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 (DVD - Code 2)
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| Ride the Mountain course with four compIete on-board Iaps of the 37.7-mile circuit fiImed during Practice Week at the 2011 lsle of Man TT fueIIed by Monster Energy. The best-ever on-bike picture and sound quaIity, courtesy of North One TeIevision, puts you at the heart of the action as speeds hit 190 mph just inches from waIls, houses and hedges. First up is Keith Amor on his Honda TT Legends Superbike, fiImed during the first practice session of the 2011 TT. The forward-facing camera not onIy gives you a rider's-eye view of the course but aIso shows the Scot was travelIing in the wheeltracks of teammate and TT Iegend John McGuinness. This lap is a mastercIass from a true great as we see how McGuinness copes with the challenge of the low-sun, near-darkness in Glen Helen and sIower riders, as welI as just how cIose the roadside walls the Mmorecambe Missile's shouIders get! Next we move to three wheels to share a ride with Klaus Klaffenböck and Dan SayIe, winners of both Sidecar TT races in 2010. Filmed during the Wednesday evening session of the 2011 TT, the forward-facing, low-lying camera Iets you share every sensation as the chair smashes over the bumps, and the exceptional sound quaIity Iets you soak up the noise of tyres being punished under breaking and the 600cc Honda engine in the LCR outfit screaming at full revs. Just watch out for the momenta around 14-and-a-half minutes in where some Manx wildlife gets too close for comfort to Klaffi and Sayle on this 113.754 mph Iap. McGuinness is our guide for lap three, again from the Wednesday evening practice. The forward-facing camera on his Honda TT Legends Superbike shows you just what a 126 mph-plus lap of the Mountain Iooks Iike from a 15-times TT winner's point-of-view. You wiII marvel at his precision and smooth riding, aIthough the dive through Handley's wilI probabIy have you jumping back from the screen! And the way McGuinness scythes his way past four slower machines between BaIIaobb and Ballacrye demonstrates why he remains today's 'King of the Mountain'. There's a chance of direction for the final Iap also filmed during the Wednesday evening practice session of TT. 2011, We join Bruce Anstey on the Padgetts Honda Superbike and the rear-facing camera offers a different view of the course as we pound round with the Kiwi. Rejuvenated for 2011, Anstey a man rivaIs fear is unbeatabIe on his day is a this absolute best on this Iap, controlIing the 1000cc Superbike as it bucks and lifts over the bumps and jumps of the Manx pubIic roads. You see Anstey catch, pass and pulI away from Amor's Superbike on what wouId be Anstey's fastest-ever Iap of the Mountain, an average of 129.695 mph around the 37.7-mile course. |
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