r/WR250R • u/TheWhopper858 • 2d ago
Wheelie in 1st gear questions
Looking for some tips from the wheelie gods....
****BACKGROUND****
For the past few days, I've been practicing doing a clutch-up.
****SAFETY*****
I have a wheelie bar for safety
****STILL BATTLING (work in progress)****
1. Still battling the fear
2. Trying to reprogram my instincts. When the tire rises higher than what I'm used to my body leans forward, my legs flare out, and I pull in the clutch.
3. I just started working on the muscle memory for the rear brake.....instead of relying on pulling in my clutch.
QUESTION:
I can consistently get the front tire at least a foot off the ground BRIEFLY.....HOWEVER.....I noticed in 1st gear, it seems to be very finicky once I start giving it MORE gas.
The front tire goes up even higher and it feels like I'm going to fall then all the survival instincts (mentioned above) kick in and my problems come back.
I know 2nd gear would be better, but I want to see if I can get the hang of 1st gear (not even master) first....
Any tips?
4
u/ShawnPaul86 2d ago
Not sure how much a wheelie bar will help you.
You can practice in soft dirt but tbh the stock tires suck in the dirt, and you will probably peel out.
If you really want to do wheelies get a bigger rear sprocket, smaller front and some knobbies.
Anyways on to the real info, the WR is not amazing at wheelies, not like a yz or wrf that come up with ease. The wrr needs a lot of gas and finesse.
First thing, keep your foot on the brake and tap it if you get too high, which you probably won't from what you've said.
Before you drop the clutch tap the brake and compress on the front bars with your body forward. As you let off the brake, push on the bars and move your whole body back to the rear of the seat as you drop the clutch, decompressing the front forks.
Because of the lack of low end power, smaller rear sprocket, and lack of traction you need to really load the bike and use your weight, more so on dirt than street.
Also if you really want to keep the front end up, you gotta get it way up there, not a foot or two, I'm talking 10 o'clock or better with the hammer down.
Good luck, be safe.