Skip to content

New Mexico Motorcycle Control

Mastering motorcycle control means understanding how a two-wheeled vehicle responds to inputs for throttle, brakes, steering, and body position. Unlike a car, a motorcycle requires active balance and …

1/31·0 done

Question Map

Correct Wrong Unseen

When a motorcyclist encounters a patch of sand or gravel on a New Mexico road, what is the safest approach?

On the New Mexico driving test, motorcycle control questions are part of the 25-question exam. New Mexico requires a score of 72% (18 correct answers) to pass.

Mastering motorcycle control means understanding how a two-wheeled vehicle responds to inputs for throttle, brakes, steering, and body position. Unlike a car, a motorcycle requires active balance and coordinated use of multiple controls simultaneously.

Braking technique is critical: the front brake provides about 70% of stopping power, while the rear brake provides about 30%. Using both brakes together — smoothly and progressively — gives you the shortest stopping distance. Grabbing the front brake suddenly can lock the wheel and cause a crash.

Countersteering is how motorcycles turn at speeds above 12\u201315 mph: push the left handlebar to turn left, push the right to turn right. This is counterintuitive but essential to understand. Slow-speed maneuvers use direct steering and require clutch and throttle finesse. Body positioning through turns — leaning with the bike or using a press technique — affects stability and control.

Key Topics

  • Front and rear brake balance (70/30)
  • Countersteering technique
  • Slow-speed maneuvering
  • Throttle and clutch coordination
  • Body positioning in turns
Motorcycle Control — New Mexico Study Guide (2026) | DMV IQ