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When you pull a wheelie on a motorcycle (600cc or better) should you ride the rear brake?

My friend and i disagree, when i pull a wheelie i think finding the balance point and riding it out is all about throttle control, he thinks you should ride the rear brake, I think if you do this you risk hitting it to hard and slamming the front tire down, thus causing the shake that you see happen to all those idiots on you tube and than wreck the bike.

Update:

By better i mean larger, it's a common expression used in modern day america and many other english speaking cultures. I said that because there is NO WAY to pull a power wheelie on a 250cc ninja sorry always have to dump the clutch, which is the most dangerous way to do it Mr. "I've been riding for 30 years". My thanks to "tomcash" even though you don't own a bike and have never seen a crash other than on youtube while looking for porn on your computer. 'Never said i would be doing wheelies just trying to get an answer from a an actual rider and not a damn blogger on Y!A is like trying to pull teeth from a giraffe with arthritus without a step ladder. (if you don't get my metaphore your an idiot and need to watch more "house") First answer is the most articulate and i thank you for your well thought out response.

Update 2:

DON E!!! Thank god or whatever diety you worship that there are Intelligent and insightful people still roaming this earth! you proove to be the exception to the rule as you proove that not everyone on this website is an idiot. I thank you for your answer.

8 Answers

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    I'm with you as far as staying away from the rear brake. Granted it "could" save you in a pinch but I have never had to go there. When I ride a wheelie I get into "the zone" my concentration is all about balance and throttle control. I think riding the rear brake would be a sign of fear and a lack of confidence.

  • (A)
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    In the seventies,I could do 1/8th and 1/4 mile wheelies on a 1969 Honda 450 scrambler with TT pipes on it.It is important to keep a excellent working clutch as a slipping one is very dangerous doing wheelies.I only used the back brake to keep from going over backwards while I shifted gears.I would get moveing about20 miles per hour,rev it up and feather slip the clutch until It was up and taching about 9000 RPMs then shift to second gear.At 60 and 70 the wind can scare the hell out of you by pitching the machine to the back or the side.I`m 57 yrs old now and know I would have been killed or ruined for life if I ever fallen off.Always avoid bad road conditions.Be safe And good luck.

    Source(s): DE
  • 1 decade ago

    i can see, may be, using the rear brake carefully to bring you safely out of the wheelie but I would stay away from it all together. you would put your self at high risk to breaking traction and being on one wheel may likely cause a violent end to your wheelie, at least for that moment. Throttle control and clutch control are what you need to use, not the rear brake. The traction vs brake concept is similar when cornering. If you are cornering with a lean, then you're traction has been reduced considerably (the contact patch has less surface area) and if you brake in a lean then you're setting yourself up for some trouble.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    no.use throttle control.Tap the front brake to bring the front end down.I used to pro roadrace .I wrecked alot of bikes learning.To get the front end up snap the throttle twice back and then nail it.the slack in the chain will will snap the frontend right up .the looser the chain the more violently it;ll yank it off the ground.

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  • mn
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    my air cooled RD350 would stand up under power... & the RD250LC would as well,, so you don't need bigger/better .( but it does make it easier). & yes you use the rear brake to control the speed it comes up at & to stop it going to far .. but you only need to roll of the accelerator to bring it down,, rear brake is especially good for when your going up gears on the back wheel.. because if you get it high enough it makes it easier to change up...

    Source(s): 40 years riding & counting..
  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    Anything you put the brakes on ,should stop.

    Doing a wheelie is a balance, accel for lift, then balance . brake to stop raising higher accel to prevent drop. concentrated balance.

    Be careful and take safety foremost!

    "BRILLIANT"!!!!

  • 1 decade ago

    Don't use the brakes. Continue to ride dangerously until you crash and crack your skull open. Please stay off the main roads! I've seen way too many idiots pulling off wheelies on the freeway going 70mph!

  • 1 decade ago

    all depends on your experience , personally i always keep it covered.........and what do you mean 600cc or better , if you mean better for wheelies it doesn't have to be 600 or bigger/better (as you put it)

    Source(s): personal experience from 30 years of riding
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