Darryn Binder: High vs stable MotoGP bike, race sim.... 'I've got a lot left'

Rookie Darryn Binder feels fast enough to be 'amongst' other riders on his MotoGP debut in Qatar and confident 'I've got a lot left', finding balance between bike height and stability.
Darryn Binder, Indonesia MotoGP test, 12 February 2022
Darryn Binder, Indonesia MotoGP test, 12 February 2022
© Gold and Goose

For most premier-class riders, the gap bet🐎ween their final appearance in the 250cc Moto3 class and race debut on a 1000cc MotoGP prototype is measured in years and separated by at least one season of Moto2.

For Darryn Binder, it'll be less than four months and sep🦂arated by nine days of winter testing.

The new RNF📖 Yamaha rider completed his pre-season preparations at Mandalika on Sunday, when he was 24th and last on the timesheets, 1.9s from pace setter Pol Espaꦬrgaro (Honda) and 0.451s behind next-closest rookie Remy Gardner (KTM).

But the South Afr♔ican feels he's closer than the final timesheets appear 🐟and is optimistic of being able to battle with other riders in Qatar.

"It's difficult to say, but I f🗹eel like I'm going to be in amongst them [in Qatar] but we'll only really know once we get there. Time will tell," Binder began.

"I would have liked to have gone out this morning and put in a time attack to really see where my fastest lap wou✤ld put me. But today is our last day of testing and I still had a lot of work to do in finding a set-up that was working for me.

"So this morning we focussed on ♔riding back-to-ba🐻ck, changing set-ups and stuff to try and see which one I felt more comfortable on. And then a long run at the end of the day.

"I mean, it's difficult to know exactly where I am. I feel like if I c💜ould have started today on what I ended today with, I could have really been able to see where I was.

"At the end of the day, sometimes I need to remind myself that I'v🐷e come from Moto3, it's a big jump and I've just got to take it as it comes.

"Because it's been a big step, a big jump and although all th꧙ese test days have been really good, it's never enough. You just start to find something and off we go again.

"What's really positive for me🧸 is, I feel I've got a lot left… I know I've got that half-a-second in me, I just can't put it together yet.

"At the same time, one lap is a lot different to a race, so I think we're going to have to just take it as it comes in Qatar. I hope that I'm in amongst other guys and,💃 if I'm not, then obviously I'll have to keep working until I get there.

"I think once you're within a🦩 second, that's when it gets tough. You're really searching for little things and that's when we're reall🃏y able to see if I'm going to do it or not."

Darryn Binder, MotoGP, Indonesian MotoGP test, 11 February 2022
Darryn Binder, MotoGP, Indonesian MotoGP test, 11 February 2022
© Gold and Goose

The 2020 Catalunya Moto3 race winner, seventh overall with two podiums for Petronas SRT last season, got his f𒐪irst taste of handling an M1 over a MotoGP race distance on the final afternoon in Indonesia.

"I did a longer🥂 12-lap run in Malaysia on the final day of the Shakedown test. Today I did a 20-lap run, I think the race here should be 24-27 laps, nobody is 100 percent sure," said Binder. "But I'd already done 40-laps, so by the tim🌊e I started my race simulation I wasn't feeling the freshest!"

Binder's half-second deficit to Gardner over a single lap looked to be repeated, on aver🧸age, during the race simulation, although the Austr🧸alian did his earlier in the day before the heat peaked.

"It was a goඣod learning experience, feeling what the bike does over all those laps," Binder said. "I started really struggling towards lap 15 and then I remembered I've got options to play with the [engine] maps, tone the bike down a little bit and change things. I ended up going a bit quicker again after that, so 🌟I managed to figure things out.

"That was really positive for me and at least I can tell the guy♕s now, 'in the race in Qatar, maybe by lap 10 put something on my board to remind me I've got those things there'. Because prꦰeviously we didn't [in Moto3].

"I was going to do the race simulatio💖n in the morning, straight after the 40 laps and then I thought, 'no, take a little break'. So I waited until 3pm and it was probably the hottest conditions I've ever ridden in. I was drenc♔hed when I finished!

"But when we come here for the race [on March 2𝄹0𒊎] it'll probably be conditions like that, so it was a great time to do it.

"I feel like I've got a good base for Qatar. I know what I like and don’t like. I think if we can just focus and do a normal race weekend then hopefully I can start to make 𝓡proper steps fꩵorwards and be amongst the other guys."

Stability vs manoeuvrability

In terms of Binder's likes and dislikes, the 24-year-old explained he's been♔ understanding the trade-off between stability and manoeuvrability wit🍌h his year-old Yamaha.

"We've tried let's say a more stable bike, which is really nice, but it's a lotꦫ heavier to change direction and sᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚtuff," he said.

♓"As much as I like the stableness, I didn't like how heavy it was and over a race I think a heavy bike would be a disaster because when you get tired you're just not going to be able to change direction.

"Then, making the bike higher, I definitely felt𓆉 it was an easier bike and I liked it a lot more, but I lost a litไtle bit of the stability.

"But over time I've found that you can really help the stability with the electronics, so by putting smoother maps and maybe cutting a little bit of power you're able to have a lot more stable bike and still ha♑ve that high, easier to rider, bike.

"I don’t like it when they give me a lot of power because honestly I'm not abl🤪e to ride it the w♑ay I want to, because if it's really aggressive I find that I just make too many mistakes.

"So I've been really enjoying the smoother [set-up], I mean obviously we are talking one🎀 step down and stuff, but in my mind it definitely makes a big difference.

"That's the type of things that I've found I like and don’t like. Everybody is starting to understand which way I like to work and🧜 what helps me to go fast♑er. So I'm really happy with that."

Following more experienced riders is an obvious way to try and s🉐teepen the MotoGP learning curve, but bike differences mean it's not always helpful.

"It's funny, I got behind my brother once and I was like, 'oh yes, it's Brad, this is going to be cool, let's see'. But because he's on such a different bike I've got to keep tellin𝓰g myself, 'remember your points. Don’t change what you've been doing. Keep your same lines'. Because his lines 💖are very different and he may be faster here and I may be faster there."

Aside from following another Yamaha whenever possible, Binder would like "someone that is smooth. because when you see somebody nice and smooth in front of you, you ride smooth. And when you see somebody fighting and all over the place you tend to get yourself all🌸 rolled up and do the same thing.

"I feel like it's not really the way to ride this bike. I think the smoother you a♒re, the🦹 faster you are.

"It's definitely a learning curve and I think it's really important to try and follow some guys, because if you rock up at the first race and it's the first ti☂me you ride behind somebody I think you're going to get a big shock.

"I feel 🐻like I've learned a lot and I've still got a lot to learn. 🍃A full race, with all the bikes together at the start, is going to be really interesting."

Darryn Binder, Indonesia MotoGP test, 12 February 2022
Darryn Binder, Indonesia MotoGP test, 12 February 2022
© Gold and Goose

'It’s horrible. A few guys lit up on the start line.'

Starting a MotoGP bike requires initiating front and rear ride-height systems plus launch control, then a leap of faith by dropping the clutch wit🎃h the throttle wide open.

Normally all🍬 goes to plan and, on a dry track, the limiting factor is anti-wheelie, which kicks in to reduce power when the front wh😼eel starts to rise too much.

But in𒁃 wet conditions, or on a low grip dusty surface such as Mandalika, the rear tyre can suddenly spin-up before the wheelie point is reached, causing the bike to swerve sideways. A far scarier outcome.

"It's horri💧ble. A few guys lit up [the rear tyre] on the start line because the front of the grid is a long way from the last corner so there's no rubber down," said Binder, the first rider to attempt a Moto3 to MotoGP move since Jack 𓄧Miller in 2015.

"It's really scary to see that and then you're next🥃 up and think 'I hope this doesn't happen to me'. But I've been lucky and nothing has happened and I've had all good starts.

"Gees... If that [swerving sideways because of the rear spinniꦡng up] was to happen in a race, I think that must be the scariest thing ever."

Team-mate Andrea Dovizioso, rid💝ing the factory-spec bike, was 1.2s faster than Binder in 🌄19th.

Free ཧpractice for the Qatar season-opener starts on Friday, March 4.

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