Well the brakes have not been applied to this thread. It's shot off since I last looked. Amazing how one comment can cause a thread to swerve violently
Some of you may have read about my "stoppie" experience but for those that haven't. I was on a fast road and braking to adjust my speed approaching a roundabout which had a car on my junction waiting to pull out. I checked the car and saw the brake lights go out so thought he was pulling out. Checked the traffic on the roundabout and as it was clear started to ease off the brake. As I looked to the corner exiting the junction I saw that the car hadn't moved one jot so slammed the front brake on. The forks did compress to their limit and I realised that I was still in danger of hitting the back of the car to applied more front brake. That was when the bike went into a stoppie, continued, deposited me on the road about 10 ft from the back of the car then fell on top of me.
What did I learn from this; apart from being a damn sight more observant of the cars and my positioning in the lane approaching a roundabout?
Trying to do an emergency stop without a rear brake is foolish in the extreme as it can lead to a handlebar flip. I am sure that the gyroscopic inertia inherent in a freewheeling rear wheel provides enough force to exaggerate the lifting of the back of the bike.
I have since had to perform other emergency stops (T-junctions

) and have applied some rear brake in those situations and found the stop to be more controllable. However, instead of a straight line deceleration, on my bike at least, the rear tends to drift slightly to the right so that I end up looking like Nicky Hayden approaching a corner

As I am aware that this is going to happen I can now anticipate and control the bike better.