My question is, how to corner best with an EV bike with regen activated. In my view that should be (at least somewhat) different from handling an ICE bike.
In riding school I learned the basic (ICE) way is finish all speed reduction before entrance of the turn. While cornering hold the speed or slightly increase throttle and when you can see the end of the turn (if it was a blind turn) you can accelerate again.
As far as I understood, the more advanced technique is trail braking when you enter the turn with higher speed but with engaged front brake which is then released gradually. But that is not the same as entering the turn with working regen - that would be like trail braking with the rear brake.
I would like to hear how you people using the brake(s) and regen during cornering.
"In riding school "... At the track, MSF?
My opinion is there is no best way to enter a corner on an EBike or ICEbike.
You ever ridden behind a half-fast 600 rider through a canyon? They rev the things to the moon then double downshift as they enter a corner. Tons of rear tail brake going on. Faster guys tend to try and stay close to the same gear and gently use the rear to trail brake. The primary purpose is to get the back of the bike to settle or sit down before applying the front.
You use a bunch of brakes on the front to reduce your speed. Upon getting close to the turn, you release some brake pressure but try to keep the forks halfway down the stroke. During the turn, the forks will want to collapse/sink. This is when you release the front brake. You use the front brake in a trailing fashion to set up the dive the forks will take. As you exit a turn, you will want to give it more throttle. That will cause the forks to extend changing the fork angle and lightening the tire patch. If you give it a bit of front brake drag again, the tire will fight to stick causing the forks to stay down and increasing the tire patch. Not a big front brake drag, just a bit. Once the bike is straight, no brakes and all throttle. If it's choppy exiting the corner, again, drag the rear brake to make the bike sit and help absorb chop.
Regardless of an ICE or EV, they both will have engine or regen drag. Big race bikes have adjustable slipper clutches or use the clutch to combat engine drag.
Now no two corners are the same, with racetracks being designed to confuse the driver and make it difficult to go fast. Public roads have a constant radius and constant width.
If you really want to learn how to go fast around corners, get a dirt bike. They are the same as a road bike but they have about 1/10th the traction. They slide starting, stopping, and turning. You really learn about how to finesse them around as you fight for every bit of traction. Most street bikes today are made so well you can drive very poorly and still go pretty fast.
You can think of it this way on an EV bike with high regen.
If you are completing the straight and roll all the way off the throttle, heavy regen will start pulling the rear and front of the bike down. If you start applying throttle, the front starts to come up, then starts to dig in as you make the turn. This is very bad. We don't want the front going up and down in a turn.
Finish you straight by stopping the throttle and giving full regen. This will pull down the rear and a bit of the front. Keep some front brake on to keep the front down halfway in the stroke. As you apply the throttle, you will be turning off the regen (raising the front) and applying the throttle (Raising the front). Not good.
As you reduce regen, you need more back brakes to keep the bike squatting. Not a lot, just to keep it under control. As you apply throttle, apply a bit more front brake to keep the forks in midstroke. As the front tire takes a bite, reduce the front brake. There is a lot of subtleness to doing this and lots of practice at 2/3 top speed to make this process a habit so all steps will be automatic.
When first starting, review each step, focusing on it, and see how it helps the bike turn and stay glued to the ground.
And have fun.