Hello all,
I have a new 2005 KLR 650 that only has 400 miles on it. Coming
downhill off a bridge, the engine suddenly cut out and I was
coasting. I stopped at the red light I had rolled up to, and
because I had gone 214 miles on one tank of gas trying to see how
far it would go before reserve, I switched to the reserve tank and
tried to start it up. It wouldn't. Fortunately, a gas station was
right there, and so I filled up, and tried to start it again. Then
I wondered if I'd somehow managed to flood it? I'm a new rider, so
I'm learning as I go along. The problem was, however, that even
though I waited fifteen minutes for the bike to "unflood" if that
was the case, it still wouldn't start. Then, when I opened the
throttle all the way, got it to start, and then noticed gasoline
pouring out onto the parking lot... I figured it was time to push it
home. Phew! I have a Clymer and it suggest that the float in the
carburetor may be stuck. Anyone have this happen? Have any
advice? I'm going to take it into the dealer here in town when the
repair guy comes back from vacation next week. Oh, the gas seemed
to be flowing out of the red/pink hose, I think that is the overflow
hose? Thanks. --Valerie
re[2]: [dsn_klr650] torqueing jake's nut
-
- Posts: 1560
- Joined: Thu Jun 07, 2001 11:15 am
re[2]: [dsn_klr650] torqueing jake's nut
Thursday, August 19, 2004, 9:14:08 PM, Dave wrote:
DW> Why or for what reason would you say that there is no need to torque down
DW> the counter sprocket retaining nut? I understand the principal behind
Because if you torqued this nut down you'd never get it off in the
field. Not unless you carry around a 1/2 ratchet with a 4' breaker
bar (which is what I had to use to get the original one off)
If you never plan on swapping the sprockets - then torque away.
------------------------------------------
jim - A12 - somewhere in central NC
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 40 guests