I can do it but have a hard time explaining things...but BW is right about getting your weight behind your seat!
Hope someone will chime in with explicit details. It took me days to "get it"...keep at it!
I can do it but have a hard time explaining things...but BW is right about getting your weight behind your seat!
Hope someone will chime in with explicit details. It took me days to "get it"...keep at it!
I am a nobody; nobody is perfect, and therefore I am perfect.
Perhaps you need to learn a bit more of a wheelie technique to help lift that wheel? Or just not pulling up properly? I like instructional videos like this one.
http://westcoaststyle.net/mountainbiking.php
But for immediate gratification …..
I just think of lifting my front wheel as if I were actually going over an obstacle
http://www.mountainzone.com/videos/p...o.asp?vid=7623
Over even just bunnyhopping with no obstacle.
http://www.5min.com/Video/How-to-Bun...our-Bike-10142
More extreme is an actual manual or wheelie
http://ibikeride.com/Mountain-Bike-S...elie-drop.html
The big thing is learning each bike’s behavior. Some bikes are easier to bunnyhop evenly. It was easier to lift the front wheel on the hard and softtail bikes I’ve had. I have to think a bit more about keeping my front wheel higher on my FS bikes which means I should probably go practice more.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.
It's roughly 16 inches or so. And the ground does not slope down after I drop off the bridge.How much of a drop?
Yeah, I was pretty sore the afternoon I practiced riding off our deck. Congratulations by the way!It took me days to "get it"...keep at it!
Thanks Sadie! I have been watching a few You Tube videos but I think these will be more helpful. Thanks everyone for your tips. I've got to practice some more.Perhaps you need to learn a bit more of a wheelie technique to help lift that wheel? Or just not pulling up properly? I like instructional videos like this one.![]()
Here's one video that I thought clearly demonstrates one method. I thought because he's on a free-style bike that it was easier to do a drop.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExnEE...eature=related
If you play this video at work, turn the sound OFF. (Some of the lyrics are lewd.)
For something small (around a foot), you could probably get away with a little bunny hop (compress the suspension and explosively shoot up). Just be sure not to get overzealous or the bike may land awkwardly (one tire will go up much higher than the other).
The other option is a pedal kick. If you can wheelie, it's similar. I use it to get over high curbs or logs where you need a little umph that lifting the handlebars alone won't provide. I'm sure something posted above covers it, but basically you want to shift your weight back, and when your foot hits about 1:00, you want to quickly snap it, popping the front end up. Practice on the grass before moving your newfound mad skills to a drop. This will be a really handy skill for the trail and a way to get over most obstacles.
The motion of compressing your fork is important for lift, but the more important part of landing on your rear wheel instead of your front is get our weight WAY back off of your seat. Some people practically drag their butt on the tire - I am not that flexible, but what I think is happening to you is
that in your effort to weight your front fork you are weighting the front of your bike as well and not getting your butt shifted fast enough to get the weight over the rear end of the bike. Don't know how big the drop is, but maybe try not weight the fork at all - just get up a little head of steam, get way back off the saddle, relax your arms , ie. lots of bend in the elbows and you will probably land with more weight on the rear tire.
spoke
Yes, that is exactly what you do