Ron P wrote:...He also found a flaw in my cornering in that I wasn't leaning my shoulder into the turn and so my inside arm would be straight.
Therefore, I was pushing the front wheel out a bit.
Sometimes called "pushing the bike under yourself". One way to break the habit is to consciously bend your inside arm (pretend you have a brick tied to it) and drop your inside shoulder -- you will find you can ride a given curve a higher speed and not put a peg feeler down (depending on the bike's ground clearance). Many people have a tendency to scoot a butt cheek off on the inside (good) but also tend to lean their spine back towards the bike centerline (not so good). Takes practice to overcome -- DAMHIK. Scott