Advice please
- Possum
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Advice please
Plenty of steep down hill and up hill action on the weekend.. A few "you've got to be shitting me" moments all good though. What brought me unstuck was a really steep ravine.. downhill, then straight up. The bike came to a sudden stop at the bottom and off i came. Definately learning to lift the front would have helped and im working on it, but i want to know how should it be done? I cant seem to find anything specific on riding terrain like this. Any ideas?
It all comes down to how you ride it.....
- laidback
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Re: Advice please
Don't ask me...I dont know... 

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Re: Advice please
More practice and eventually you will stop falling off 

- Possum
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Re: Advice please
Cheeky! I only had one off for the whole weekend!
but i need to know 'how' to do it better, cause clearly what i did is not right
you would have liked the river stuff 


laidback wrote:Don't ask me...I dont know...


It all comes down to how you ride it.....
- laidback
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Re: Advice please
That's why I called the DRZ 'Bronc'... 

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I've reached the age where 'happy hour' is a nap.
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I've reached the age where 'happy hour' is a nap.
- z900/zx9
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Re: Advice please
Not being a trail bike specialist i am thinking looking ahead far enough and having a line that u intend to take in your head before you get there as well as comitment to that line surely might be a step in the right direction. 

http://tinypic.com/hu369k.jpg[/img]
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- robracer
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Re: Advice please
Poss get some logs / obstacles in the back yard & practice getting the wheel up over them, its surprising just what you can do when you are forced to, basically just use the clutch to build up the revs & drop it, 2 stroke works off throttle as does the 511 

- 6maniac
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Re: Advice please
Coming from a trials bike perspective .....
Downhill = bum as far back over rear wheel as possible, more front brake than rear.
Uphill = can't help - trials bike will just pull uphill at a low speed, due to much lower gearing.
HTH ..
Downhill = bum as far back over rear wheel as possible, more front brake than rear.
Uphill = can't help - trials bike will just pull uphill at a low speed, due to much lower gearing.
HTH ..
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- Possum
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Re: Advice please
Yes im basic
This is what i did.. - the second pic im guessing i should do by lifting the front before i get to the bottom? is this correct?

It all comes down to how you ride it.....
- RustyAs
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Re: Advice please
Pos,
Assuming steep incline going in and just as steep going out
+ beginner
Going down
1 go slow
2get your body position right: bum as far back as possible
3arms out stretched BUT not locked straitght. you need some give in them, just like shocks
4 go slower, as slow as possible, using rear brake . Dont worry if you lock the the rear a bit, just ease of to keep forward motion.
5 front brake only if confident. Usually leads to locked front wheel and the front washing out.
6 get the bike into the lowest gear possible, depending on speed and incline, you need a fair range of revs to be able climb as far out before running out of revs and needing to change up
Across and up
1.for a beginner, If possible have the bike come almost to a stop, or very slow crawl, as the front tyre nears the other side, obviously this will depend on balance etc
2.at this point you either bounce the front to get the weight off and the front tyre up, or allow the tyre to roll up the incline WITHOUT loading up the front suspension.
this is where most of the problems occur. The front hits the other side at speed the front suspension dives loads up and springs back. knocking you off balance.
3 apply power, generally lots of it !
4 as you apply power you need to pull your self as far forward as possible, get your head over the handle bars, as you need your weight to keep the front end down
5 dont wory about wheel spin, you adjust your weight back to get grip if needed.
Better this than all the weight back and the bike flipping
6 as you start to climb, adjust revs / wheel spin to ensur you keep forward momentum. Sometimes you may need to wheel spin all the way up, depending on the ground.
sounds easy, but it is a hard one to get. but once you get it, it does become easier and you can do it with more speed.
hope this helps
cheers
Rusty
Assuming steep incline going in and just as steep going out


Going down
1 go slow
2get your body position right: bum as far back as possible
3arms out stretched BUT not locked straitght. you need some give in them, just like shocks
4 go slower, as slow as possible, using rear brake . Dont worry if you lock the the rear a bit, just ease of to keep forward motion.
5 front brake only if confident. Usually leads to locked front wheel and the front washing out.
6 get the bike into the lowest gear possible, depending on speed and incline, you need a fair range of revs to be able climb as far out before running out of revs and needing to change up
Across and up
1.for a beginner, If possible have the bike come almost to a stop, or very slow crawl, as the front tyre nears the other side, obviously this will depend on balance etc
2.at this point you either bounce the front to get the weight off and the front tyre up, or allow the tyre to roll up the incline WITHOUT loading up the front suspension.
this is where most of the problems occur. The front hits the other side at speed the front suspension dives loads up and springs back. knocking you off balance.
3 apply power, generally lots of it !
4 as you apply power you need to pull your self as far forward as possible, get your head over the handle bars, as you need your weight to keep the front end down
5 dont wory about wheel spin, you adjust your weight back to get grip if needed.
Better this than all the weight back and the bike flipping
6 as you start to climb, adjust revs / wheel spin to ensur you keep forward momentum. Sometimes you may need to wheel spin all the way up, depending on the ground.
sounds easy, but it is a hard one to get. but once you get it, it does become easier and you can do it with more speed.

hope this helps
cheers
Rusty

If everything is under control.......your going to slow
2012 Husaberg FE570 Dirty
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2012 Husaberg FE570 Dirty
2002 ZZR 1200 Roady
Bandit 1200 (Written off. My fault )
FJ 1100 ( Written off. Not my fault)
2000 ZZR 1100 (Sold)
XR 600 (630 Ballard Kit)
- Possum
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Re: Advice please
YAY Did all that... may have been a touch faster than i should, but was still in controlRustyAs wrote:Pos,
Assuming steep incline going in and just as steep going out+ beginner
![]()
Going down
1 go slow
2get your body position right: bum as far back as possible
3arms out stretched BUT not locked straitght. you need some give in them, just like shocks
4 go slower, as slow as possible, using rear brake . Dont worry if you lock the the rear a bit, just ease of to keep forward motion.
5 front brake only if confident. Usually leads to locked front wheel and the front washing out.
6 get the bike into the lowest gear possible, depending on speed and incline, you need a fair range of revs to be able climb as far out before running out of revs and needing to change up
Ooo Yup this where I came unstuck. Balance and the kick back would explain how i ended up a bit further away from the bike than just a drop. There was no chance to let the front roll up, so maybe i should have tried to bounce it. Its freaking dauntingRustyAs wrote: Across and up
1.for a beginner, If possible have the bike come almost to a stop, or very slow crawl, as the front tyre nears the other side, obviously this will depend on balance etc
2.at this point you either bounce the front to get the weight off and the front tyre up, or allow the tyre to roll up the incline WITHOUT loading up the front suspension.this is where most of the problems occur. The front hits the other side at speed the front suspension dives loads up and springs back. knocking you off balance.



Thanks! that helps heaps!..RustyAs wrote: 3 apply power, generally lots of it !
4 as you apply power you need to pull your self as far forward as possible, get your head over the handle bars, as you need your weight to keep the front end down
5 dont wory about wheel spin, you adjust your weight back to get grip if needed.
Better this than all the weight back and the bike flipping
6 as you start to climb, adjust revs / wheel spin to ensur you keep forward momentum. Sometimes you may need to wheel spin all the way up, depending on the ground.
sounds easy, but it is a hard one to get. but once you get it, it does become easier and you can do it with more speed.![]()
hope this helps
cheers
Rusty

I dont have any issues going up or going down, it just the bit at the bottom on such a steep incline.
Awesome thanks.. More practice YAY

It all comes down to how you ride it.....
- seiko1
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Re: Advice please
Must........resist......the.......urge.............Possum wrote:ravine..

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- Nelso
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Re: Advice please
Learn to sip the clutch and pop the front wheel up, then learn to do it standing up and you will eat these obstacles up for breakfast.
You could always book into Dale Corser's dirt bike school (http://www.corserconceptsmotorcycleschool.com/) the next time you are up this way and get taught the right way in a fun, professional environment so that you don't have to learn the hard way through trial and error.

You could always book into Dale Corser's dirt bike school (http://www.corserconceptsmotorcycleschool.com/) the next time you are up this way and get taught the right way in a fun, professional environment so that you don't have to learn the hard way through trial and error.

Green '08 ZRX1200 Road bike
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Green 2012 ZX10 Track/race bike
Green '89 H1 ZXR750 race bike
'89 RMX250 motard race bike
2015 YZ450
2017 KTM EXC300
- Possum
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Re: Advice please
Thanks Nelso.. I would luv nothing more to master this skill.. the little XR doesnt have the power "just to pop it" so any help im open ears!Nelso wrote:Learn to sip the clutch and pop the front wheel up, then learn to do it standing up and you will eat these obstacles up for breakfast.![]()
You could always book into Dale Corser's dirt bike school (http://www.corserconceptsmotorcycleschool.com/) the next time you are up this way and get taught the right way in a fun, professional environment so that you don't have to learn the hard way through trial and error.
(I did have a crack Sat arvo at trying to pop the front wheel.. smacked my head on a branch and bit my tongue..blood everywhere




It all comes down to how you ride it.....
- Nelso
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Re: Advice please
1st gear, clutch in with two fingers only, give it lots of revs and drop the clutch. Don't slip the clutch at all either, just let it off instantly. Also, lots of revs means WOT. Be ready to shut the throttle off when the front comes up the first few times, but as you get used to it, you will be able to control how high to get the front up and how long to keep it up. Once you can do it on a regular basis, try doing the same thing standing on the pegs.
Green '08 ZRX1200 Road bike
Green 2012 ZX10 Track/race bike
Green '89 H1 ZXR750 race bike
'89 RMX250 motard race bike
2015 YZ450
2017 KTM EXC300
Green 2012 ZX10 Track/race bike
Green '89 H1 ZXR750 race bike
'89 RMX250 motard race bike
2015 YZ450
2017 KTM EXC300