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All About Dirt Bike Addicts
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New girl rider on yz125
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<blockquote data-quote="jimsowen" data-source="post: 183546" data-attributes="member: 2701"><p>Personally myself id reccomend fourstroke to learn to ride on, although thems are fighting words(4-stroke) lol. A yz125 is not a learners bike in my opinion unless you have a wide open flat paddoc with plenty of space. A fourstroke is way more forgiving when mistakes are made. For your size probably an old xr100 to 250 would be good but on a 250 your feet wouldnt touch tge ground, but I lernt to ride on bikes that I could only start with a street gutter or log of wood beside the bike. With the clutch practice is the only advice you can get. A little revs, let clutch out untill the bike jitters then increase revs while slowly letting out clutch. The more you let out clutch the m revs you give, also adjust clutch to give it more travel time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jimsowen, post: 183546, member: 2701"] Personally myself id reccomend fourstroke to learn to ride on, although thems are fighting words(4-stroke) lol. A yz125 is not a learners bike in my opinion unless you have a wide open flat paddoc with plenty of space. A fourstroke is way more forgiving when mistakes are made. For your size probably an old xr100 to 250 would be good but on a 250 your feet wouldnt touch tge ground, but I lernt to ride on bikes that I could only start with a street gutter or log of wood beside the bike. With the clutch practice is the only advice you can get. A little revs, let clutch out untill the bike jitters then increase revs while slowly letting out clutch. The more you let out clutch the m revs you give, also adjust clutch to give it more travel time. [/QUOTE]
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