Page 1 of 10
handguards
Posted: Wed May 31, 2000 10:03 am
by John Huber
I have broken a stock handguard on my A7 and was wondering if I should buy another stock one or go with aftermarket hand guards? If I go with aftermarket, what is the best fit and who makes them? I am still new in the replacement part world for KLR's. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
John
A7
PS. Thanks for the post about the fuel tank mod.
handguards
Posted: Wed Sep 27, 2000 3:32 pm
by marvin mudflap
About a year ago I bought some new Acerbis handguards for the KLR because they looked pretty and looked like they would protect the levers in case of a spill. Well I can tell you that they certainly don't protect the levers! I had a mild crash the other day going slow over some ruts and the guard on the left side snapped in two which also broke the clutch lever. I went back to the old reliable solid aluminum Bark Busters and bolted the stock brush guards to them after trimming the ends. Wonder if anybody out there has had the same problem with the Acerbis? Later, MM
Signup for your FREE ZenSearch E-MAIL account at
http://www.zensearch.net and win a Notebook PC
handguards
Posted: Wed Sep 27, 2000 4:00 pm
by Weaver, Mark
sounds like you may have the plastic ones (Rally?). i have Rally Pros, which
are plastic molded around metal, and i've dropped my bike 3-4 times on them
so far. since it's such a heavy bike, they sometimes get knocked out of
place a little, and i have to take a couple minutes to loosen the bolts and
straighten everything out, but otherwise, they've been ok. i think a normal
sized dirt bike might be easier on guards.
mw
> -----Original Message-----
> From: marvin mudflap [mailto:pistonslap@...]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2000 1:30 PM
> To:
DSN_klr650@egroups.com
> Subject: [DSN_klr650] handguards
>
>
> About a year ago I bought some new Acerbis handguards for the
> KLR because they looked pretty and looked like they would
> protect the levers in case of a spill. Well I can tell you
> that they certainly don't protect the levers! I had a mild
> crash the other day going slow over some ruts and the guard
> on the left side snapped in two which also broke the clutch
> lever. I went back to the old reliable solid aluminum Bark
> Busters and bolted the stock brush guards to them after
> trimming the ends. Wonder if anybody out there has had the
> same problem with the Acerbis? Later, MM
>
> Signup for your FREE ZenSearch E-MAIL account at
http://www.zensearch.net and win a Notebook PC
Visit the KLR650 archives at
http://www.listquest.com/lq/search.html?ln=klr650
Support Dual Sport News... dsneditor@...
Let's keep this list SPAM free!
Visit our site at
http://www.egroups.com/group/DSN_klr650
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
DSN_klr650-unsubscribe@egroups.com
handguards
Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2000 8:19 am
by TLrydr@aol.com
Anyone know if the short levers will fit the KLR, Brake & clutch,
Saw some on a Honda XL 500, Looked way cool.................
Mike
handguards
Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2001 6:41 pm
by jirvine78@hotmail.com
Phantom wrote: It finally happened...
Finally? 250 miles? Might as well get it over with. I just bought
some Maier bark busters from Comp Access for about $26.
Just the aluminum, I'll add plastic when I get to it. I have them
mounted on the KLR250 and will get to the 650 later tonight (big
Saturday night huh! They seem sturdy. Figure this won't be the last
drop so scrap those stock units and get something more substantial.
I also went to the moto graveyard today and picked up a couple of
of metal pegs with teeth. Have no idea what type of machine
they spent their 1st life on but they seem like they will
fit.
handguards
Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2001 10:51 am
by RM
On Fri, 22 Jun 2001, Devon Jarvis wrote:
>#3- metal reinforced hand guards (cheaper than replacing a lever perch
>once)
This reminds me of a question I've been wanting to ask...
Are there any "convertible" hand-guards on the market that have a
removable brush-guard? I recently removed my stock brush-guards for
improved airflow up the jacket sleeves (it works, but watch for bees).
I'd like to have something that's just an aluminum bar in the summer and
then add-on something for wind protection in the winter.
Another option would be to own two sets of hand-guards and swap them for
the summer, but that seems like a pain in the butt...
RM
handguards
Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2001 11:53 am
by Mark
At 11:53 AM -0400 6/22/01, Walter Lesnowich wrote:
> > Are there any "convertible" hand-guards on the market that have a
> > removable brush-guard? I recently removed my stock brush-guards for
> > improved airflow up the jacket sleeves (it works, but watch for bees).
> > I'd like to have something that's just an aluminum bar in the summer and
> > then add-on something for wind protection in the winter.
> >
> > Another option would be to own two sets of hand-guards and swap them for
> > the summer, but that seems like a pain in the butt...
> >
> > RM
> >
>
>Moose has aluminum bar handguards that can be used with
>or without their add on plastic handguard protectors.
>
Or modify your stock guards to fit onto Moose or Bark Busters, etc.
Mark
B2
A2
A3
handguards
Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2001 12:00 pm
by Tobin Slide Lampson
RM,
I got the Pro Maier woods guards.
The 'new' ones have different contour than the old....theoretically
greater room for levers. Perhaps. But still less wind blockage than the old
style.
I opted for the old style plastics.....still enough room, slightly better
cold air coverage.
To go with either of those style plastics....are the new style/contour
aluminum bark busters(metal bands). Both new and old style
plastics fit fine.
If desired the plastic can be removed easy enough via threaded screws.
(You might want to do something so the threads in the aluminum won't
get damaged, when running w/o the plastic.)
Lots of other guards are out there.......many more popular.....
yet with less wind blockage.
UFO's are prolly the most similar ones, with wide wind blockage out
there.
They use the aluminum bark buster band too......
Slide
RM wrote:
handguards
Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2001 12:17 pm
by John Irvine
I mounted Acerbis bark busters and then slightly
modified the existing stock hand gaurds and screwed
then the the bark busters. I've never been inclined to
remove them but it would be easy enough. The Bark
Busters are pre-drilled and I just drilled a hole in
the originals. Looks stock but is not.
--- RM wrote:
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail
http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/
handguards
Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2001 9:01 pm
by Dan Oaks
RM wrote:
>
> Another option would be to own two sets of hand-guards and swap them for
> the summer, but that seems like a pain in the butt...
>
> RM
>
If it results in a pain in the butt, you're installing 'em wrong.
--
bierdo