--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Rico" wrote:
> About 10K miles ago, I installed a new DID x-ring chain and got a
> set of sprockets to go with it. Unfortunately the new
> countersprocket didn't work with the retainer plate on my '91 bike.
> Rather than buy another sprocket that would work, I just reused the
> old one. In retrospect that was probably not such a good idea.
>
> I was giving my bike a once-over the other day and noticed that
both
> the sprockets have a pretty good amount of wear on them. They've
got
> a sort of wave shape to them. Also, it looks like the metal on the
> face of the tooth has been pushed up into a flake on each tip.
> There's also evidence that the side parts of the links has worn
into
> the sprocket somewhat. I would imagine that improper alignment may
> be at fault for that in particular. However I can't explain the
> flakes of metal on the tips.
>
> The chain appears to be in good shape. The length is still good and
> there doesn't seem to be anything else wrong with it...
>
> Assuming my chain is in reasonable shape, Is it ok to change the
> sprockets and keep the same chain?
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 2
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 20:19:10 -0000
From: "Keith Saltzer"
Subject: Re: Weak Spark ?
--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, imperial-4776@w... wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My KLR won't start, it will back fire every now and then but that's
> about it.
>
> The spark is very weak.
>
> What should I be replacing / checking / fixing ?
>
> I did do the clutch lever switch thing, by conecting the two wires
to
> each and covering up the other one with tape.
>
> Thanks
> Dave
> imperial-4776@w...
Did it start after you disconnected the clutch safety? If not, you
did it wrong. Please try again. (striped wires together, solid wire
left alone)
If it did start and run after doing that, have you done anything else
recently that might be the cause?
If it just started doing this all of the sudden, check your coil.
Bill's bike did that exact same thing and after we switched out the
coil with another one it fired up instantly.
MrMoose
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 3
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 20:33:10 -0000
From: "dumbazz650"
Subject: Re: WHY WE DIE!
Too bad nobody has repeated the Hurt report.
'Cause statistical reporting like this is too easy to draw really
stupid conclusions. Its crap.
Since fewer fatalities occur in Dec and Jan, those are the best
months to ride, statistically provable by this study.
There is no control (mentioned) for number of miles ridden, number
of bikes registered, level of training/experience, etc.
If there were 1 million riders in 1990, and 5 million in 2000, then
even if the per capita fatality rate remained constant, there would
still be a 400% increase in fatalities. Even though nothing changed
per helmets, miles ridden, skill set, etc.
Likewise if the the number of fatalities also controlled for the
number of miles ridden.
So the research is crap, because idiots designed the study, and may
have had the objective or outcome firmly in mind when doing the
study (we know the answer we want, now lets get the numbers to back
it up).
I think the inexperienced riders are the real issue, but I flunked
the class on grant writing (grant riding?) so I wont be doing a study
to show this.
Like others said, drive sober, wear good gear, and keep your frikking
wits about you, until your parked and off the bike. It's a dangerous
world out there, and not even Teddy Kennedy can change that.
MarkB DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "nakedwaterskier"
wrote:
> FATALITY FACTS:
> MOTORCYCLES
> 2002
> Other Institute documents on motorcycles
>
>
> Motorcycles are less stable and less visible than cars, and they
> have high performance capabilities. For these and other reasons,
> motorcycles are more likely than cars to be in crashes. And when
> motorcycles crash, their riders lack the protection of an enclosed
> vehicle, so they're more likely to be injured or killed. Per mile
> traveled, the number of deaths on motorcycles is about 26 times the
> number in cars.1
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 4
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 21:02:46 -0000
From: "MAMDOOH"
Subject: WHY WE DIE
I would like to see a study done on asian drivers. But in today's
politically correct environment I bet the study might even be
illegal. What if there is really something to the urban legend?
Till then I will just stay at least 2 lanes away from asian men and
3 lanes away from asian men.
Yak
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 5
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 17:02:56 EDT
From: klrdon@...
Subject: NKLR - Suz DR350 SE for sale w/lots of farkle
Since the KLR arrived in the garage I've got one too many 2 wheelers. If
anyone has interest, please contact me off list at the email shown below. I would
entertain selling without the bags and racks after a run on Ebay. It's a sweet
bike, the only one I ever got a ticket on!
TIA,
Don Montgomery
Atlanta, GA
1994 Suzuki DR350 SE
Electric start, Headlight modulator, Fiamm horns, Answer aluminum handlebars,
hand guards, O-ring chain, seat by Sargent, Acerbis fenders & tank 4+ gals,
Givi 28L saddlebags, Race Tech Gold valve emulators and fork springs, Race Tech
rebuild of rear shock, Kouba rear spring & link, oversize front brake disk,
stainless steel brake line, Dynojet kit, OEM oil cooler, no maintenance
battery. Range - 200 miles / tank. Top mph - 88mph @ 200 rpm below redline.14K mostly
street miles, very clean, never crashed. $2200 Contact DEMonty@...
Photos at -
http://hometown.aol.com/demonty/myhomepage/photo.html
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 6
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 14:09:12 -0700
From: "George Basinet"
Subject: Re: WHY WE DIE
I think they will appreciate that.
George
Escondido, Ca
----- Original Message -----
From: "MAMDOOH"
To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2004 2:02 PM
Subject: [DSN_klr650] WHY WE DIE
> Till then I will just stay at least 2 lanes away from asian men and
> 3 lanes away from asian men.
>
> Yak
>
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 7
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 21:09:52 -0000
From: "Keith Saltzer"
Subject: Re: Sprockets wearing before chain?
--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Rico" wrote:
> About 10K miles ago, I installed a new DID x-ring chain and got a
> set of sprockets to go with it. Unfortunately the new
> countersprocket didn't work with the retainer plate on my '91 bike.
> Rather than buy another sprocket that would work, I just reused the
> old one. In retrospect that was probably not such a good idea.
Your right, that was NOT the thing to do with such an awesome and
expensive chain.
>
> I was giving my bike a once-over the other day and noticed that
both
> the sprockets have a pretty good amount of wear on them. They've
got
> a sort of wave shape to them. Also, it looks like the metal on the
> face of the tooth has been pushed up into a flake on each tip.
> There's also evidence that the side parts of the links has worn
into
> the sprocket somewhat. I would imagine that improper alignment may
> be at fault for that in particular. However I can't explain the
> flakes of metal on the tips.
Learn to give your chain and sprockets the "once over" at least every
week. Come on now, it's not that hard.
>
> The chain appears to be in good shape. The length is still good and
> there doesn't seem to be anything else wrong with it...
>
> Assuming my chain is in reasonable shape, Is it ok to change the
> sprockets and keep the same chain?
Yes, that's what I would do. But make sure your chain is
in "reasonably" good shape. How many times have you had to adjust it
in the ten thousand miles that you have put on it? Take it off and
see how bad the arc is. (when you lay it on the floor, on its side,
see how close both ends will come together) My DID X ring chain has
7000 miles on it (no chain lube) and I have adjusted it
once.......and I'm hard on chains. I'm using Sunstar sprockets that
I got from Fred and they rock.
I don't believe in this "replace chain and sprockets" stuff. It's a
good idea to start out with that when you can but if like in your
case you have a good expensive chain on there and the sprockets go
bad, only the rich are going to throw the chain away. It's a KLR
with 36 HP at best, not a GSXR with 130 HP. I had a $97 alluminum
rear sprocket on my bike that saw 2 different (semi good) front
sprockets switched back and forth and 5 cheap chains on it for 21,500
before it went bad. But I checked it every week, kept it lubed, and
had it adjusted correctly, both the slack and the alignment.
Don't get me wrong here, I do believe that one part going bad will
wear out the other more quickly, BUT replacing the bad part with new
stuff stops that excellerated wear too. You just need to check it
often to catch it soon.
I have also learned that to have everything wear uniformly as
possible you should have the same quality stuff. If you buy cheap
ass sprockets and an expensive chain, your going to see your
sprockets get ugly way before the life of your chain. (as in your
case) On the other hand if you get cheap ass chains and put it on
good sprockets, you'll be changing your chain alot more often. (as
in my case)
Now I am very happy with my DID X-ring chain and Sunstar sprockets
from Fred at Arrowhead. It's all really good stuff that will last a
long time and I'm having to do almost nothing to it.
MrMoose
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 8
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 21:18:22 -0000
From: "nakedwaterskier"
Subject: WHY WE DIE
Now you guys have done gone done it. Geez, the gates of hell have
opened.
Jeffrey
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 9
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 14:32:22 -0700
From: "WEST HOVLAND"
Subject: Re: Weak Spark ?
I'm putting money on the carb. Try full throttle with no choke, then full
choke with "no" throttle. Blow low pressure air into your fuel line and then
up the vent. I had something stuck in my air cutoff valve. The bike would
only run at 1/2 throttle and above.
West
----- Original Message -----
From:
To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2004 10:50 AM
Subject: [DSN_klr650] Weak Spark ?
>
> Hi,
>
> My KLR won't start, it will back fire every now and then but that's
> about it.
>
> The spark is very weak.
>
> What should I be replacing / checking / fixing ?
>
> I did do the clutch lever switch thing, by conecting the two wires to
> each and covering up the other one with tape.
>
> Thanks
> Dave
> imperial-4776@...
>
>
>
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 10
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 22:01:47 -0000
From: "rther9491"
Subject: just picked'er up
and its a 2003 green klr with good power and accceleration . it was
about a hundred miles or so on a 2 lane hiway going through beach
towns and some stop and go to get to my residence . the only thing i
will improve soon is brakes because i see a need for more bite in
traffic . the exhaust note takes some getting used to as the last
time i rode something that sounded like this klr was when i was
riding a brit twin that was running on one cylinder . yeah , the
bike is lightweight , handles and runs good and seems to be pretty
simple and functional . ----- i didn't see another klr but harleys
and clones were all over the place . yep , i like this bike and i'm
thinking that i'll have it for a long time !!!
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 11
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 17:54:56 -0400
From: "james"
Subject: Re: Cheap motorcycle lift NKLR
----- Original Message -----
From: "Scott"
To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2004 8:51 AM
Subject: [DSN_klr650] Cheap motorcycle lift NKLR
> I don't know about the rest of the country, but right now the Target
> stores in the Houston area are clearancing their AC/Delco
> motorcycle/atv lifts for $39.99. I got one and it seems to work
> great. These are usually about 80 bucks so I figured it was a
> pretty good deal. Good luck,
> Scotty
Here too in Pittsburgh Pa. saw an ad at the local PepBoys & they have the
cycle lifts for 59.88 1500 lbs. capacity.
Jim
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 12
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 22:41:05 -0000
From: "James A III"
Subject: 1999 KLR on ebay
Thought give folks a heads up - My KLR is up on the block on ebay.
I'll miss it, but I think I'm needin' a dresser. How's that for one
extreme to another?
She's got 5800 miles and is in fine shape. Auction ends in a couple
hours and is up to 2500.00.
Later,
Jim
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 13
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 17:52:50 -0400
From: "james"
Subject: Who was that?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mntn Man"
To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
> My wife and I are looking for a good place to ride our KLR650s. If
> anyone has a second home or cabin which they rent out in the middle
> of a bunch of dirt roads somewhere, I would be interested in trading
> places with you for a few days. I own a real nice 2-bedroom rental
> cabin in the Pisgah National Forest in Mortimer, North Carolina. If
> you want to look it up on your mapping software the coordinates are
> N35 59.82 W81 44.83. My cabin is surrounded by forest roads, dirt
> roads and paved twisty back roads. There is plenty of dual sport
> riding to keep you busy for several days. Email me at
> mtnman1989@... if you are interested and I will give you all
> the details of my place.
>
> Mountain Man
> 2000 KLR650
> Mortimer NC
Saw a red KLR650 today at RT 60 near Cochran pontiac out in Moon Twp (near
Pittsburgh, Pa.) today. Red bike, black guards, guy had on a black helmet
sittin' there waiting for the light to change (left lane) and wearing
glasses. Dark jacket..... Anyone on the list?
Jim
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 14
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 19:35:40 EDT
From: kdxkawboy@...
Subject: Re: WHY WE DIE!
In a message dated 2004-08-22 9:50:58 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
russell_dixon@... writes:
>
>
> Wonder how the fatalities correspond with the type of motorcycle ridden?
> One would assume most would be the sport bikes (crotch-rockets), but it
> would be interesting to see what the statistics say...
>
>
>
In the last few years the under 30 motorcyclist on a crotch rocket has been
supposed by over 40 crowd cruiser as the demographics group most likely to have
a fatal accident on a motorcycle. The most common way for the over 40 crowd
to bite it is a single bike accident where they fail to negotiate a turn.
BTW, its starting to look as if there is a rational explanation has to why
motorcycle deaths have been on the rise. Statisticians have been comparing
numbers, It looks as if the increase in motorcycle deaths has been paralleled by a
similar increase in pedestrian accidents, bicyclist accidents and the rise in
SUV registration. So some accident experts started looking at some collision
test data and the latest word indicates that the blocky nature of an SUV causes
more damaged to the human body than a sedan does. The article was reading
pointed out that if you took all the motorcyclist against SUV data out, we are
still seeing a decline in the number of accidents, and when you look at just the
SUV fatality data its like 2X - 3X the rate of motorcyclist against sedans.
So it looks as if SUVs are the cause of the increase.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 15
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 00:02:11 -0000
From: "Pat Schmid"
Subject: NKLR, My First MSF Class
Today I just finished teaching my first me as the instructor (as
opposed to my first as an instructor trainie) and I am stoked. I think
the average is that 20% of your students will not successfully
complete the skills test and we had 11 for 11 pass! I was real lucky
in drawing one of the better, more experienced instructors, whose lead
I followed most the weekend, Between the two of us we managed to to
help even the weakest rider get through the skill test. You know how
neat it is to runing the final test knowing that as long as no one
drops their bike they will pass! But oh, did we play it up. Walking
over to brief the class after that last rider cleared the last test we
decided to walk over looking dejected, like the bottom had dropped
out. We told them we had some tough news to tell them, but first they
had to get in a circle and put their hand on each other's shoulder,
pat their each other's backs and repeat after me, congratulation, ...
you have passed the course.
I helped put eleven new motorcyclst on the road and my co-instructor
said he would teach with me again, any time, and I'm jazzed.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 16
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 20:14:24 EDT
From: kdxkawboy@...
Subject: Re: just picked'er up
In a message dated 2004-08-22 3:30:31 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
sidneyfeather@... writes:
> and its a 2003 green klr with good power and accceleration . it was
> about a hundred miles or so on a 2 lane hiway going through beach
> towns and some stop and go to get to my residence . the only thing i
> will improve soon is brakes because i see a need for more bite in
> traffic . the exhaust note takes some getting used to as the last
> time i rode something that sounded like this klr was when i was
> riding a brit twin that was running on one cylinder . yeah , the
> bike is lightweight , handles and runs good and seems to be pretty
> simple and functional . ----- i didn't see another klr but harleys
> and clones were all over the place . yep , i like this bike and i'm
> thinking that i'll have it for a long time !!!
>
yea, the bike is lightweight, handles and runs good and seems to be pretty
simple and functional ... sounds like we have another KLRista.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 17
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 20:16:59 EDT
From: kdxkawboy@...
Subject: Re: Re: Weak Spark ?
In a message dated 2004-08-22 1:20:04 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
k.saltzer@... writes:
>
> If it did start and run after doing that, have you done anything else
> recently that might be the cause?
>
> If it just started doing this all of the sudden, check your coil.
> Bill's bike did that exact same thing and after we switched out the
> coil with another one it fired up instantly.
>
>
and if not the coil, if you are not using a new plug, try a new plug.
pat
g'ville,nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 18
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 10:30:43 +1000
From: john@...
Subject: RE: WHY WE DIE!
Am I the only one who hates SUV's ? Here in Oz we call them four wheel
drives or urban assault vehicles . I can respect that in some situations
they are necessary esp. if you live out in the country.
It makes me so mad all these city rambos in giant 2 tonne trucks who
only use them to drive down the shops or take the kids to school. The only
off road use they get is when it gets parked on the footpath to get
polished.
We've had quite a few kids squashed by mothers reversing out of
school car parks after dropping their kids off safely.
They aren't appropriate for city driving , should be taxed off the
road and to drive one should require a truck licence.
All they are is a yuppie phallic symbol and another way to keep up
with the Jones'' .
And for goodness sake can't the government ban their sale Asian
drivers ? Apologies to any Asian listers but you guys just aren't meant to
be behind the wheel.
Bit agro for a Monday morning
" Tell me why I don't like Mondays... "
Regards
John
-----Original Message-----
From: kdxkawboy@... [mailto:kdxkawboy@...]
Sent: Monday, 23 August 2004 9:36 AM
To:
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] WHY WE DIE!
In a message dated 2004-08-22 9:50:58 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
russell_dixon@... writes:
>
>
> Wonder how the fatalities correspond with the type of motorcycle ridden?
> One would assume most would be the sport bikes (crotch-rockets), but it
> would be interesting to see what the statistics say...
>
>
>
In the last few years the under 30 motorcyclist on a crotch rocket has been
supposed by over 40 crowd cruiser as the demographics group most likely to
have
a fatal accident on a motorcycle. The most common way for the over 40 crowd
to bite it is a single bike accident where they fail to negotiate a turn.
BTW, its starting to look as if there is a rational explanation has to why
motorcycle deaths have been on the rise. Statisticians have been comparing
numbers, It looks as if the increase in motorcycle deaths has been
paralleled by a
similar increase in pedestrian accidents, bicyclist accidents and the rise
in
SUV registration. So some accident experts started looking at some collision
test data and the latest word indicates that the blocky nature of an SUV
causes
more damaged to the human body than a sedan does. The article was reading
pointed out that if you took all the motorcyclist against SUV data out, we
are
still seeing a decline in the number of accidents, and when you look at just
the
SUV fatality data its like 2X - 3X the rate of motorcyclist against sedans.
So it looks as if SUVs are the cause of the increase.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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________________________________________________________________________
Message: 19
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 00:38:06 -0000
From: "nakedwaterskier"
Subject: WHY WE DIE!
Don't even try and split fwy lanes between two SUVs!
JPG
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 20
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 01:06:00 -0000
From: "johnsondesigns2004"
Subject: fried the wiring
took my bike to the dealer this past week (because its still under
warrenty) to see if they had any ideas why the thing wouldnt start
and not charge once i got it push started. after 3 days of the
dealer "looking" for the problem they finally called me to tell me
the new. It would seem that i somehow fried the main wire harness. i
asked them what would cause this, and, the response was that they
didnt know, never seen anything like it before, the harness was so
fried that they cannot even locate where the short (if this was why
it fried) had originated from. They have ordered a new harness and a
bunch of other "stuff" for replacement when it comes in.
Have any of you listers ever fried your main wireing harness in such
a mannor that it was not repairable, or in such a way that you have
no idea what happened?
my bike is un-modified. i could understand if i had change some
wiring stuff and it fried but this is bizzarre.
A17 Circus Bear
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 21
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 01:09:43 -0000
From: "jjonz47"
Subject: K270 first impressions
Howdy listers,
Based on my reading of the FAQ, I ordered a new set of K270s front
and rear to replace my worn Duro rear/Trailwing front. I used
swmototires.com and got the usual excellent service - $95.90 for both
and they arrived in 2 days. I purchased Moose racing HD tubes at the
local m/c shop. The HD tubes are just enough stiffer it makes
getting the valve stem through the hole on the rear rim a bitch. The
rear 270 was the tightest tire I've ever installed on a motorcycle -
you could have strummed a high C on the bead it was so taut. I
thought it was going to snap cause I was prying/pushing so hard. I
used lube, 15" irons, and a liberal dose of grunts/cuss words before
the tire finally gave up and went on. The front was tight but not
nearly so bad. The Moose HD tubes with the Kenda 270's don't fit
well - the valve stems point to the sides. I got the front valve
stem to sit straight but the bead wouldn't fully seat until I pushed
the stem back in, seated the bead, and then left the stem canted
slightly to the side - my estimate is 10 - 20 degrees.
Question 1 - should I just keep cranking down down on the stem nut to
try to fully pull the tube into the bead so the stem is flat? It's
fairly tight but I can make it tighter (nervously).
Very squirrely at first, either the tires got better or my brain
adjusted. I took surface streets to a dirt road which parallels to I-
10 east of Indio and the tires felt untrustworthy. But once on dirt,
the front end seems better behaved - I didn't have to stay so hard on
the gas to keep the front end from pushing. I took I-10 back down the
Indio grade at 70 - 75, and there was a new high frequency vibration
which tickled my feet and made my hands tingle. Hmmm. The tires
felt better on the side roads on the way home but still not as good
as the prior tires. The "nubs of shame" were gone from all but the
outside nobs on the rear tire but the front will need some more work.
Question 2 - anyone else notice the increaded vibration at highway
speeds?
Jeff Jones
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 22
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 01:14:03 -0000
From: "nakedwaterskier"
Subject: K270 first impressions
glad I ordered the Kings instead!
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 23
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 18:13:46 -0700
From: "PauL M. Bober"
Subject: RE: NKLR, My First MSF Class
Pat .... Congrats on your first class. I remember my first class. I still
get kinda tingly when I see a student do well, even after 602 BRC / MRS/Rss
/ Rider Edge / Experienced / dirt bike classes.
Please never lose the feeling you get from your first class. Never lose
sight of the fact that they can teach monkeys and bears to ride bicycles.
What you do is teach riders to be SAFE! They could watch the videos and read
the book by themselves and probably figure out the basics of how to ride by
themselves. The student's goal is to pass the class. You provide the
guidance to a safer motorcycle world. Lastly, remember that you are teaching
people who want to learn. Never berate them. They are adults with feelings
that are trying to learn a difficult skill.
Remember how hard your RCP was and hold that close to your heart. Students
want to do well, give them the chance to excel!
PauL M. Bober
MSR# 23201 - cerified in 1989.
-----Original Message-----
From: Pat Schmid [mailto:kdxkawboy@...]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2004 5:02 PM
To:
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [DSN_klr650] NKLR, My First MSF Class
Today I just finished teaching my first me as the instructor (as
opposed to my first as an instructor trainie) and I am stoked. I think
the average is that 20% of your students will not successfully
complete the skills test and we had 11 for 11 pass! I was real lucky
in drawing one of the better, more experienced instructors, whose lead
I followed most the weekend, Between the two of us we managed to to
help even the weakest rider get through the skill test. You know how
neat it is to runing the final test knowing that as long as no one
drops their bike they will pass! But oh, did we play it up. Walking
over to brief the class after that last rider cleared the last test we
decided to walk over looking dejected, like the bottom had dropped
out. We told them we had some tough news to tell them, but first they
had to get in a circle and put their hand on each other's shoulder,
pat their each other's backs and repeat after me, congratulation, ...
you have passed the course.
I helped put eleven new motorcyclst on the road and my co-instructor
said he would teach with me again, any time, and I'm jazzed.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
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Message: 24
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 18:49:58 -0700
From: Eric Lee Green
Subject: Re: Kings KT-966
Krgrife@... wrote:
>In a message dated 8/22/04 12:30:36 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
>ericnospam@... writes:
>
>
>
>
>>Anybody using these guys?
>>
>I'm on my second front and third rear, I'm happy with the tire for the riding
>I do which is mostly hard pack when off pavement. They handle much better
>than the Kendas I used to run and have high load ratings. I ran a rear flat for
>15 miles with no damage so they seem pretty sturdy. I think it is a good all
>around tire if you don't need a more aggessive knobby. I use the 5.10 rear,
>no clearance problems.
>
>
>
Excellent! I have a set on order, along with heavy-duty tubes. They
should be in on Wednesday.
Ironically, it appears that my rear Metzeler Tourance figured out that
it's about to get booted for a more dirty tire -- today it went flat. As
I was screaming down the freeway at 65mph, the bike started vibrating
severely and squirming around, so I took the next exit, pulled into a
McDonald's parking lot, and yeppers, the rear was flat. I didn't happen
to have a tube or patch kit with me, just one of those fix-a-flat
canisters, and I tried that but of course it didn't work (they rarely
work on tubes, 'cause tubes, unlike tubeless tires, don't try to
automatically pinch off the puncture... same reason that "slime" stuff
rarely works). So I called AMA Mo-Tow and had'em haul me home. I'll
remove the rear wheel and take the tire off shortly just to see what
caused the flat, but I'm not going to try to fix the flat since I have
new tires and tubes coming. In any event, the Tourance is toast, but its
fairly stiff sidewall at least kept me from wiping out on the freeway.
Good tire, even if not the tire I'd buy myself for the KLR.
Now I understand why tubeless tires are so great. Sigh. A tubeless tire
doesn't just go kerFLUFF like this one did.
-E
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Message: 25
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 01:58:31 -0000
From: "nakedwaterskier"
Subject: fried the wiring
sounds fishy to me...esp. if stock...the fuses should keep any major
amount of wiring from frying...also, if that much wire fried you
should have smelled something
dealer might be just conning you and kawasaki
jpg
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