transport question: got a nklr...finally!

DSN_KLR650
Paul Dent

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Post by Paul Dent » Thu Jul 24, 2003 12:26 am

> Either you had cold tires, or you hit a patch of something slippery- > sand, oil, coolant etc. The stock Dunlops are close to race wets,
when
> warmed up I could lean over to the edge of the outside knobs. They
stick
> really well.
This is interesting. After all the tire threads (I've only been subscribed for a couple months) I haven't heard of anybody replacing the stock knobs with same. But I don't think they're so bad myself. I have gone pretty fast on some cool roads around here. Of course I'm looking to replace them after ~4000 miles. So, what's wrong with the 270's? Paul in SF

TM1669@cs.com
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Post by TM1669@cs.com » Thu Jul 24, 2003 1:36 am

They are discontinued I believe.

kdxkawboy@aol.com
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Post by kdxkawboy@aol.com » Thu Jul 24, 2003 7:16 am

In a message dated 2003-07-23 10:27:42 PM Pacific Daylight Time, phdarch@... writes:
> > This is interesting. After all the tire threads (I've only been > subscribed for a couple months) I haven't heard of anybody replacing > the stock knobs with same. But I don't think they're so bad myself. > I have gone pretty fast on some cool roads around here. Of course > I'm looking to replace them after ~4000 miles. So, what's wrong with > the 270's? > > Paul in SF > >
Comapred to what's out there for tires the OEM rubber is only so-so for street performance and sub par in the dirt. Pat G'ville, Nv [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Devon Jarvis
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Post by Devon Jarvis » Thu Jul 24, 2003 8:11 am

kdxkawboy@... wrote:
> > Comapred to what's out there for tires the OEM rubber is only so-so for > street performance and sub par in the dirt. >
Interesting. I would have said the OEM rubber performs very well on road, has crap durability, and sup par in the dirt. -- "It's a troublesome world, all the people who are in it, are troubled with troubles almost every minute" Dr. Seuss

Devon Jarvis
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Post by Devon Jarvis » Fri Jul 25, 2003 9:13 am

RONN VOLLBRECHT wrote:
> What I am looking for is a 80 on 20 off tire but don't want to give > up the street reliability because i still commute on the bike in heavy > highway traffic. If anyone has a good tire in mind let me know. >
IRC GP110 were suggested to me when I asked the same question two years ago. As good as the stock tires onroad, better offroad (but still not good in wet sand or mud), good durability, more noise at highway speeds. Devon
>

ceb
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Post by ceb » Sun Aug 03, 2003 11:05 pm

Devon, In '98 I crashed a V65 sabre by forgetting to put up the kickstand. I was going about 75mph and grounded the stand in a sweeping left turn; it was a "life flashes before my eyes" event. I ended up with a broken little toe, and scuffed up jacket and pants, bent handle bars, and a vow to never ride motorcycles again. I ended up compromising later, and got a smaller bike with a sidestand switch: KLR650! BEAN

davidlwilhite
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Joined: Thu Dec 13, 2001 11:44 am

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Post by davidlwilhite » Mon Aug 04, 2003 9:31 pm

I've gone down twice on the street on my KLR. The first time was a couple of years ago. I had lowered the bike and in tight curves I was scraping the pegs. All was fine at first, because the pegs would fold up as they touched the ground (and yes, I was hanging way off the bike in the curves). When I got a little too aggressive, I was over far enought to where the pegs would not fold up anymore, and I lifted the rear tire off the ground. Fortunately, no cars were coming as I went sliding across the road and into a ditch. Suprisingly, the bike sustained nothing but a few scrapes. My Joe Rocket gear was toasted, but saved by hide. I was sore the next few days, but okay otherwise. After getting back home, I returned the bike to it's proper height. The second time, just here recently, was kind of created by somebody else, but was still my fault. I was following too closely behind a buddy. He kind of lost control while we were in a downhill lefthander and I was coming up on him quick. Since he was in the middle of the road, I had to choose between cutting the curve shorter and crossing the yellow lines, or going for the all out stop. Since I couldn't see around the curve, due to a hill, I went for the all out stop. Needless to say, I needed about four more feet of asphalt to stop (we were coming in about 60-70 mph). The bike sustained damage this time, but I was able to ride it home. After having wrecked twice on the road with the KLR, and never having wrecked with any other street bikes, I've come to the conclusion that I need a bigger, badder, more powerful motorcycle again. One that will itimidate me and cost a lot, so I won't be so prone to go out and be so agressive. For some reason, my wife doesn't understand the logic (lol). As much as I hate to do it, I may end up selling the KLR before long, but who knows?

HAULNA4814@AOL.COM
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Post by HAULNA4814@AOL.COM » Mon Aug 04, 2003 9:48 pm

U dont do a hole lot of dirt HuH? [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

rm@richardmay.net
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transport question: got a nklr...finally!

Post by rm@richardmay.net » Tue Aug 05, 2003 3:44 am

On Tue, 5 Aug 2003, Chris wrote:
>I have a short-bed pickup with a box in the back, I'm not licensed >anymore so the pickup of the bike will be in the truck or on a trailer. >I'm pretty sure the bike will wind up resting on the tailgate of my Ram >and was pondering making a 2x4 brace for the bed of the truck to keep the >bike from wandering side to side. If you can imagine two "C"s back to >back with enough room for the tires and then four ratchet tiedown straps >to hold it still.
Sounds like a great idea, but I've never had a need for anything like this. I use four tie-downs - many use two. Maybe that helps? RM

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