Anybody who’s tried to pull a standard burnout on a motorcycle knows this feat doesn’t come without a certain time spent tormenting the clutch and the rear tires. Nonetheless, there are certain people for which bike burnouts are some sort of a second life and the Kawasaki rider in the adjacent clip is the perfect example of this.
The biker is seen riding with his friends, when he suddenly decides to engage in a rolling burnout at what you could call considerable speed. Subsequently, the guy carries on riding as if the rear tire wasn’t being turned into smoke. He splits lanes, overtakes, among other stuff.
At a certain point, one of his mates decided to join the rolling burnout bandwagon, but after his attempts failed to even get close to that of the irresponsible rider who started it all, the man called it a day.
After red-lining his Ninja all the way through the footage, all that power thrown onto the rear tire made the latter give up - the tire splits at the end of the clip.
PS: The Ninja is no German bike, but perhaps the rider knew the story of Hansel and Gretel and decided to write the motorcycling take on this, so that the group wouldn’t get lost.
At a certain point, one of his mates decided to join the rolling burnout bandwagon, but after his attempts failed to even get close to that of the irresponsible rider who started it all, the man called it a day.
After red-lining his Ninja all the way through the footage, all that power thrown onto the rear tire made the latter give up - the tire splits at the end of the clip.
This is wrong on so many levels
While the Ninja rider obviously has a set of skills you don’t see everyday, he’s putting them to use in a manner that is wrong on so many levels. The sheer idea of doing a rolling motorcycle burnout on a public road is bad enough, but when the guy starts splitting lanes the whole feat turns into a puddle of irresponsibility.PS: The Ninja is no German bike, but perhaps the rider knew the story of Hansel and Gretel and decided to write the motorcycling take on this, so that the group wouldn’t get lost.