brake pads oops! (nklr)

DSN_KLR650
jim7j7
Posts: 4
Joined: Sun Jan 06, 2002 2:02 pm

gearing down for off-road

Post by jim7j7 » Wed Jan 16, 2002 12:05 am

I was wondering if anyone has changed the sprockets on their bikes to gear them down for better off-road performance? What parts were used and how the performace changed? Jim A16

dooden
Posts: 3355
Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2001 3:37 pm

gearing down for off-road

Post by dooden » Wed Jan 16, 2002 5:59 am

Hey Jim, To reply, I ordered for my bike a 14T front and 45T rear steel sprocket, I have not installed them as of yet, (winter set in) however I do expect the smaller front to give me the extra power/slower speed in 1st gear. My first thoughts were they shoulda used a 6 speed box or 5 speed set more like a Trial tranny, first gear is WAY too high for any serious offroad excursions. To me offroad is just that, no road, no trail, no excuse. As for the rear sprocket, 1 extra tooth should really make no effect compaired to the 1 tooth in the front, however I mostly wanted the "Hot Slots" which are grooves at the base of the teeth, that allow mud to squeeze out when in the heavy stuff, instead of packing into the chain. Figured with simple thoughts loose a tooth in the front add one in the back and chain should stay basically some length right ? ( Here where the link counters and experts pipe in ) http://www.sprocketspecialists.com Is where I got them from, prices are fair IMHO, by far the front sprocket will make a big difference to me, this I know. I do expect to loose MPG to drop, and top end to drop, but to me top end is way more than I need as it is. Front sprockets are cheap at $12.99, so its not like an expensive change, can always put the orginal back on. Oh they included a cool Sprocket Specialist Sticker with the rear sprocket. You can use "Gear-Calc" to run the numbers, the un-registered version you have to manually punch all the gearing into, but shows the different speeds in each gear when changing sprocket sizes. If I was serious about the gearing I would register the software, since you can import the settings file for the bike and save changes its nice same as Shim-Calc, but I was just tinkering. Why else do we buy a --- In DSN_klr650@y..., "jim7j7" wrote: > I was wondering if anyone has changed the sprockets on their bikes to > gear them down for better off-road performance? What parts were used > and how the performace changed? > > Jim > A16