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2007-02-20 19:35:29 · 11 answers · asked by tengkubenjamin 1 in Cars & Transportation Motorcycles

11 answers

you'll put your eye out Kid !

2007-02-20 21:31:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Hayabusa Wheelie

2016-11-13 21:29:54 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There are several ways...The easiest is to "bump" it. Give it a little throttle when the front end decompresess let off. The front will drop then use the rebound to help "bump" it up. When you feel the front end start coming back lay into it. This should give a little help. Although there should be plenty of power to "power wheelie". For this go in first gear slowly till the bike starts to pull. Then lay into the throttle. This bike should rise pretty easy. Another way is to clutch it. Maintain a slower speed (30mph0 pull in the clutch, give it some gas, and release the clutch. You don't have to dump the clutch. The bike will come up with a controlled release. One problem with the Busa is the wheel base. It is a long bike. Shorter bikes are easier to bring up and they corner better. What ever you do be safe. Practice away from traffic. Were a helmet. Trust me. I' ve been hit before. It sucks.

2007-02-21 02:36:37 · answer #3 · answered by wfsgymwear 3 · 0 0

First of all, if you don't know how to wheelie you have no business owning a Busa. However, I will still answer your question.
The safest way to do it is to clutch it up because it is way more consistent and predictable than the bouncing method. Clutch-ups also allow you to bring the bike up at a much slower speed in that gear, which gives you much more rpm and gear length to ride the wheelie. The drawback to clutch-ups is you will go through clutches much quicker, and it does put strain on the drivetrain.
Start rolling in 1st gear at about 35mph. Pull the clutch in with ONLY THE INDEX FINGER so you can keep the other four wrapped around the bars. Bring the rpm's up to about 10,000 and dump the clutch. Start low in the rpms and work your way up so you get a feel for it. The first time you clutch it do it at about 4500 just to get a feel for it, but it will take closer to 10,000 to get it up. It will come right up to the balance point. Cover the rear brake for safety when doing wheelies in case you are ever about to loop it.
Also, some people do them in second gear because they think first is just a little too jerky. However, I liked learning in first because you can do them at slower speeds. Just use throttle control and cover the rear brake.

2007-02-21 20:53:41 · answer #4 · answered by r1rider 1 · 0 0

If you don't know how to wheelie, you shouldn't be on a Hayabusa in the first place.

2007-02-21 00:56:14 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

I concur with the first reply. But if you twist the throttle vigorously from a standing start the front should come up easily. Just make sure you cover the rear brake and use it if the wheel comes up to high.

Perhaps you should try with something smaller first or is this some strange 150cc Hayabusa built for India?

2007-02-20 21:01:43 · answer #6 · answered by Ranjeeh D 5 · 0 0

Practice on a dirt bike in the dirt. Don't mess up that beautiful bike trying to do wheelie. Practice A LOT!!

2007-02-21 06:43:18 · answer #7 · answered by drubaby32698 3 · 1 0

I would gain experience just driving it before trying to wheelie. But all you have to do is gas it alot from a standstill, or while moving give gas and pull back on the handle bars. BE careful.

2007-02-21 03:56:55 · answer #8 · answered by emerica59069 2 · 1 0

LOL. He's gonna be on here next week with:

"Looped my Busa - Does anyone know a good body shop?"

2007-02-21 08:15:23 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

if you need to be told.you shouldn't be attempting to do it

2007-02-20 20:33:30 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

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