I grew up with bikes that had no switch on the sidestand and I
guess the switch can be a asset but if it becomes defective away from
home one should be able to disable it till a replacment can be
instaled. I had that happen on my Yamaha SRX6 and it took 3 weeks to
get a replacment. I was glad to still be riding while I waited. Also
it's nicer to drive home than to be trailered.
Sopwith
recall example from kawasaki website. if this qualifies for a
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a few questions please
From: "sopwithv"
Subject: Re: A few questions please
I grew up with bikes that had no switch on the sidestand and I
guess the switch can be a asset but if it becomes defective away from
home one should be able to disable it till a replacment can be
instaled. I had that happen on my Yamaha SRX6 and it took 3 weeks to
get a replacment. I was glad to still be riding while I waited. Also
it's nicer to drive home than to be trailered.
Sopwith
------------
Hi Folks,
I'll put my oar in in favor of disabling both the clutch cutout and the
kickstand cutout "safety" switches. Not only can a fault in either leave
you scratching your head at the side of the road, but they can leave you
unable to start your own bike and I, for one, cannot bump start a KLR
without a hill.
Anything that keeps you from pulling the clutch in while starting the bike
becomes an issue, be it a broken clutch cable, broken clutch lever, or
munched left hand. BTW -- the side-of-the-road-quick-fix is to by-pass all
that and short the terminals on the starter relay with a 14 or 17mm wrench
while the ignition is on. (Just don't weld your wrench onto the terminals,
ok?)
Similarly, anything that doesn't allow you to start the bike while in gear
is at least frustrating -- consider you coming to a stop on a hill (up to
left, down to right). You stop in gear and for whatever reason, the engine
dies. Your left foot's on the ground, you're right is hanging over thin
air. For some of us that doesn't even take much of a hill. How do you
shift to neutral to start the bike? I disabled my switches so long ago I
can't remember if that was a KLR trait or not. I know some of the Suzuki's
required the engine in neutral to start. Perhaps the KLR can't be started
in gear with the sidestand down? Can't remember.
In any case, I'd rather be my own safety switch. I do generally start the
KLR with the clutch in -- false neutrals made that a habit on earlier
bikes. But I class such safety nazi add-ons as part of the liability tax
on modern motorcycles. Sheesh, next I'll be saying that any trouble I get
in to is my own fault.
BTW -- I'm a late add to this list so wonder if with a 1993 KLR650 do I
need to be concerned with Doohickeys? 38k miles.
J
(A7)

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- Joined: Tue Oct 22, 2002 10:12 am
recall example from kawasaki website. if this qualifies for a
My first guess would be that it's a cheap fix and only affects 3,000
units. That's a far cry from an internal engine part replacement for
every registered KLR from 1985 on. Strictly economics I'd bet.
Matt
--- In DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, Douglas Dick wrote: > > The following is a recall order taken from the Kawasaki website. > > With only three reported malfuncions and one minor injury, Kawasaki has recalled a Quad. One has to wonder why they would not do > such a thing for the doohickey. > > > /30/03 > Name of product: Kawasaki KFX700 "V-Force" ATVs > Units: 3,000 > Distributed by: Kawasaki Motors Corp., U.S.A. > Hazard: The throttle cable adjuster on the carburetor can loosen during operation, causing it to stick, which can cause the rider to > lose control and possibly crash. snip > > Douglas Dick > Winnipeg, MB CA > mailto:ddick2@s... > > KLR650 A16 > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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