
i learnt on a kx250 mx bike i had, nearly looped it a few times :O lol once you get a feel for the height its easy, just dont go too far

These big hypersports bikes are not the best for doing wheelies. Well yeah they easily get of the ground, but when they come down they break things. Just ask The Brick..ross79 wrote:I'm still waiting for some useful info. I'd like to learn how to wheelie, but would have to buy another bike to practice on. Spent enough time playing with the suspension on the 12 to make sure the front wheel stays on the ground!
all mine feel like that..thats half the reason i do em....wags wrote: your first (intentional) wheelie is like going over a rollercoaster with that sickness feeling in your stomach, but once you've experienced what the bikes feels like with a light front end, its alot easier to do it again.
Actually the trick is to manually preload the front..... Just before starting your wheelie, allow the front suspension to compress... and then wham.... open the throttle... the other way to do it depending on which bike you have is to unload the front and THEN suddenly accelerate.... this is much tougher and you will end up going much faster than the other way...varden wrote:having your bike set up with loads of rear preload would prolly help, when i set the sag to 40mm on my 636 it's desire to power wheelie dissapeared. :evil
Same with my old 9 too, set susp and the wheelies dried up.
The RF900 was good for em tho...not that i was.
nomrmina wrote:did u read an articleSmitty wrote:it can......I knowBlue14 wrote:Cant wheelie, dont want to wheelie. Although i think the 14 is capable of pulling a wheelie on its own..