--- In DSN_klr650@y..., RM wrote:
>
> On Tue, 23 Jul 2002, gpokluda wrote:
>
> >Oh puleeez. Give me a break. Out of the box, the KLR is a good
bike.
> >Not a great bike, but a good bike that can do a lot of things well.
> >Sure it has shortcomings, so does every bike. I also know lots of
KLR
> >riders who have done nothing to their bikes and have accumulated
> >thousands of trouble free miles.
>
> ...and just how are they using their bikes?
>
> If you treat your KLR like a Harley, meaning that you ride 20 miles
on
> pavement on Saturday, polish it on Sunday, and park it for the rest
of the
> week, then of course it's going to be trouble-free and reliable.
>
> As an example, how do you think those short-lived Galfer
organic/kevlar
> pads ever became the darling of the list? It's because, in general,
> people aren't doing real mileage on their KLR's. A pad that dies in
4000
> (or less) miles won't get any notice if it takes a year to reach
that
> figure.
>
> When you do 2000+ miles a month for 18 months and you USE the KLR as
a
> dual-purpose motorcycle (as was intended), you become very aware of
> something new breaking every 1-2 months and you aren't happy about
it.
>
> Better brakes cost real money, so maybe I can understand that one
since
> KHI wants to keep prices down and all. Many of the other problems
are
> just plain chickenshit engineering and a lack of desire to pay one
> engineer about three days wages to redesign a faulty part. We
should
> probably consider ourselves lucky that KHI bothered to ditch the
two-part
> counterbalancer sprockets and give us a better clutch basket in the
90's.
> There were probably some considerable re-tooling costs involved, and
I'm
> not sure that the old clutch basket had anything wrong with it
anyway.
>
> If bikes were cars, none of this would ever be acceptable. KHI
foists
> this garbage on us because the motorcycling public, who has been
> marginalized since day one, accepts it.
>
> Gino, I don't know what kind of mileage you put on your KLR or how
you
> used it, but I'd gather that your tolerance for mechanical woes is
fairly
> high, or else you didn't stress your KLR very much.
>
> RM
Is this passion or am I reading between the lines?
Love it!.............I love it!
That's why all the others call us 'a cult'. We get passionate about
our 20year old, outdated design, KLR.........
So, how long have we been a Bic disposable throw away society now?
The world isn't ready for indestructable anything anymore.....
.....especially since that meteorite is supposed to hit us in about
2008......read all about it in Dual Sport News(just kidding)....
Give me a Massey-Ferguson!..... and no that's not a hand weapon,
or a particular breed of cow.

Toby