klr 650 for sale in socal

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Weaver, Mark
Posts: 205
Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 3:03 pm

[dsn_klr650] breaking beads

Post by Weaver, Mark » Mon Jun 19, 2000 4:56 pm

i can only speak for myself, but was surprised to not have too much trouble with my first tire change on my klr (my first ever on a motorcycle too). i used 3 foot-long levers, squirted some diluted dishsoap along the bead, then stuck the pointy end of the levers in there (2 at a time) and pried towards the tire for all i was worth. i tried in 3-4 different spots before it finally broke loose and moved away from the rim. once that first point gave way, the rest was easy. it's possible that since my stock tire was only 6 months old, it hadn't had time to really set on there too well. possible also that since i don't ride in alot of muck, there's less crap and dried mud and decomposing banana slugs in there to gum it up. i have had much more difficulty on bicycle tires that were ridden in lots of mud and then dried. i think the key may be to give the soap (or simple green) a few minutes to soak in before attacking it with the levers. mw
> -----Original Message----- > From: aches@... [mailto:aches@...] > Sent: Monday, June 19, 2000 2:38 PM > To: KLR List > Subject: [DSN_klr650] Breaking beads > > > OK what's the secret for breaking the tire bead on the trail. The > changing out of my stock KLR rear tire was a tuff job on getting the > bead broke until I rigged up a bead breaker. After that it's > a piece of > cake. I generally use Simple Green to lube the tires and rim for re > inflation. Think it may be a good idea to buy a bead breaker for the > trail or get a good C-clamp? > > -- > Best Regards & Happy Trails > Andy Chesley @ 57 and ticking > Y2KLR650 @ 5.4K sMiles > 97 R11RA (Amiga) @ 14K Miles > So Many Roads, So Little Time > http://members.deltech.net/aches/ > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------- > ---------- > Old school buds here: > http://click.egroups.com/1/5545/5/_/911801/_/961450896/ > -------------------------------------------------------------- > ---------- > > 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 > >

k650dsn@aol.com
Posts: 965
Joined: Wed Apr 05, 2000 1:35 pm

[dsn_klr650] breaking beads

Post by k650dsn@aol.com » Mon Jun 19, 2000 5:18 pm

In a message dated Mon, 19 Jun 2000 5:42:29 PM Eastern Daylight Time, aches@... writes: >>
Many schools of thought on this one. Some say you can just keep rolling until the bead gives, but you may pinch the tube. Some say use your side stand, but if your bike is on a stump with the wheel pulled off, that would be a nice trick I'd like to see. I suggest you just practice at home and learn to use small compact tire irons. I used to believe it was impossible to repair a tire with nothing less than 3 18" tire irons, a bead breaker and air compressor. The I watched Fred Hink change tires with 3 9" irons and that was it, usually one handed while talking on the phone. So I bought three 9" irons and practiced. You simply work the bead a little at a time and in a couple of minutes, it's broken. Now I'm confident I can do the same plus I save a lot of room in my tool pack. When I mounted my stiff walled Dunlops, I timed myself for the tire changing contest. 18 minutes for the front and 27 minutes for the rear. Gino, practice makes perfect.