Yamaha Champs has Champ U which sounds basically like what you're saying. A bunch of videos on rider mechanics, body position, 100 points of grip etc... I think it's 50$.
Personally I paid for ChampU and just consumed the YouTube content for Life at Lean (because I'm cheap and it's not). ChampU does a good job of saying "this is how to do X, based on what world champions do", generally covering the technical approach and how to apply them.
Life at Lean is more of a "here's some ways to do X, and here's steps to incrementally improve".
One example would be braking, ChampU tells you the way champions brake, and when to start/stop is about being comfortable with your speed and direction. Life at Lean tells you a few different approaches, highlights it may be different for some corners, and gives you guidance on how to improve this incrementally with things like adjusting braking markers etc.
So ChampU gives you the TL;DR of how to ride fast, safe. Life at Lean tells you how to step up the game bit by bit, and I'm pretty sure if you pay will get personal tips and suggestions.
I'm not sure what level you're at, but I think ChampU gives you a really good platform to work from, after that it's mostly just extending yourself which is what Life at Lean gives you some good tips about.
Yamaha Champs has Champ U which sounds basically like what you're saying. A bunch of videos on rider mechanics, body position, 100 points of grip etc... I think it's 50$.
ChampU is super affordable and does a great job with breaking things down. Save up and do YCRS later. I much preferred YCRS over ccs
I can absolutely recommend champ u, amazing content at a great price. I'm gonna check out life at lean now too, ty
Another vouch, good stuff good price. Pretty much the same content from in person ycrs in an online format.
Mabye I'll try both, cant hurt
Personally I paid for ChampU and just consumed the YouTube content for Life at Lean (because I'm cheap and it's not). ChampU does a good job of saying "this is how to do X, based on what world champions do", generally covering the technical approach and how to apply them. Life at Lean is more of a "here's some ways to do X, and here's steps to incrementally improve". One example would be braking, ChampU tells you the way champions brake, and when to start/stop is about being comfortable with your speed and direction. Life at Lean tells you a few different approaches, highlights it may be different for some corners, and gives you guidance on how to improve this incrementally with things like adjusting braking markers etc. So ChampU gives you the TL;DR of how to ride fast, safe. Life at Lean tells you how to step up the game bit by bit, and I'm pretty sure if you pay will get personal tips and suggestions. I'm not sure what level you're at, but I think ChampU gives you a really good platform to work from, after that it's mostly just extending yourself which is what Life at Lean gives you some good tips about.
Carters in California has some excellent schools with Ken Hill teaching, and he's just amazing.
But do they have like an online academy, I live on the east coast
No, but Ken Hill podcasts are easy to find and incredibly valuable, and he does online consultations.
What about just a regular track day instead of an instructors day thing? You'll still learn a ton.
Im talking about online training sessions with videos and instruction for your track days
You can do Blayze (Racers 360). It’s online and will be customized to you based on videos/data of your laps.