any help? I can sometimes do little ones under hard accelaration but I wana do a big one. I was thinking of clutching it a bit but my rev counter doesnt work so don't wana over rev it & go backwards.
any ideas anyone?
any help? I can sometimes do little ones under hard accelaration but I wana do a big one. I was thinking of clutching it a bit but my rev counter doesnt work so don't wana over rev it & go backwards.
any ideas anyone?
wanted: a tacho for GSXR 1100 1993 please Pm me if you have one.
No idea, but a GSXR1100 sounds like the perfect bike to learn to wheelie on. I'm sure you'll do fine, and it won't be at all expensive.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
get your mate to try it.. tell him to rev like smeg and drop the clutch...![]()
will prob go straight over backwards, but at least you wont get hurt!![]()
...find someone on here that can and get them to show you!
mines too heavy and puny to do that!!
"Speed has never killed anyone. Suddenly becoming stationary - that's what gets you."
Jeremy Clarkson.
Kawasaki 200mph Club
Try rigging up a side stand switch with aluminium rod from your number plate or similar, this will cut the engine out at your desired height prior to flipping. You can set it at low height to start with and once you are use to the way your bike pulls up you can adjust it to suit. I tried it out on a small capacity bike and worked to a certain extent I still ended up with gravel rash on top of the tank, but always hover the foot on the rear brake…good luck.
Should be pretty easy on an 1100. Here's how it's done on my RF (similar motor)
Get up to about 70km/hr in first.
Close the throttle. The front will come down. Open the throttle wide just before it gets to the bottom of the suspension.
The front will come up fast at first and then seem to float - be careful here - change up quickly into second or you'll loop the bike.
As for keeping it there I'll defer to those with much better control than me. I can't hold the front up for that long.
And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
have you wheelied anything else or is the 1100 the first bike you have attempted on?
be careful, its a big bike!
theres a good write up on DMNTD's home page:
http://sucking-bugs.blogspot.com/
theres alot of info out there:
http://www.google.com.au/search?q=wh...ient=firefox-a
take it easy, dont try too much too soon
Boyd hh er Suzuki are my heroes!
The best deals, all the time!
it's hard to get it up by just acelarting. because the rev counter doesnt work I don't know how hard i'm reving it. usually ride to 80km in first & 120km in 2nd. I can feel the bike strting to come off the ground when I accelarate hard but it's only a little wheelie. I wana do big oneswill have to try clutching it I think
wanted: a tacho for GSXR 1100 1993 please Pm me if you have one.
no comment.............![]()
wanted: a tacho for GSXR 1100 1993 please Pm me if you have one.
$2,000 cash if you find a buyer for my house, kumeuhouseforsale@straightshooters.co.nz for details
I can get it up no worries.....
as for wheelies..... I found giving it some decent revs at low speed, give it a pull and hope ya dont get flattened (or caught).
I'd never condone doing wheelies tho. The cost can easily outweigh the benefit if it all goes wrong. I agree that getting the feel of the bike is lots of experience and time on the bike is the key to learning new tricks..... something I should be doing myself.
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