Sorry for repeating this post but the potential buyer changed his mind and
my need to sell the bike is now even more urgent.
I joined here in April after buying a 2002 KLR because I was
becoming too ill to safely ride my street bike, and I wanted to get
off the roads here in New Mexico. Thanks for the many helpful
suggestions you posted about lowering it to fit my 29" inseam and so
forth. I lurked here for a while and learned a lot, while waiting a
month to receive the lowering links and short stand. By the time I
had the bike sized for me, the cancer thing was making it too hard
for me to ride, and I have put less than 50 miles on the bike since
I bought it. Be that as it may.
I am still getting around some, but there's no way I can ride the
bike and I'd hate to see my wife stuck with the burden of selling it
when I die, which may be in the next 1-3 months.
It's a 2002 with 6K miles, and has Progressive suspension, a large
plastic gas tank, fork brace, Corbin seat, metal-reinforced
handguards, a steel skid plate, baqs, and other improvements which I
can't recall but will refresh. As I recall, the doohickie has been
done also. As I said, I rode it only a few miles, mostly home from
the seller's house via back streets and a dirt road, so I didn't
shake it down for any problems. As far as I can see and hear it
appears very healthy. I do have all the original parts as well as the
add-ons,
and there are receipts for much of them and for service visits. It
does seem to have been well cared-for.
Obviously the bike is in Albuquerque and would need to be ridden or
shipped to you. I know nothing of the costs for shipping a bike
like this, but I was quoted $750 to ship my huge Valkyrie street
bike 1350 miles, professionally crated and loaded by a freight
service. At half the weight I'd expect the KLR to be less.
I am posting it here first because you're familiar with the brand
and may be interested. If it doesn't sell here, can you suggest
other methods? I'd appreciate any tips.
As I recall, I paid $3700 for it, and about $200 for the lowering
links and shortened stand. My wife will probably insist on recouping the
price on resale, so the asking price is $3900.
PS I'll also selling my 98 Honda Valkyrie Standard with extras.
Great road bike but I can't ride it anymore. Please forward this to
anyone who might want a nice, fast, healthy street bike.
Thanks for your help and advice so far. Too bad I didn't get to
plug into the community and find some fellow riders before becoming too ill,
but so it goes.
We make the best we can, and I can't complain much at all. Thanks again.
David Covell
klr for sale in albuquerque
-
- Posts: 1083
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 6:16 pm
solution to oil dependence? nklr
Caltech, MIT Chemists Look for Better Ways to Use Chemical Bonds to Store
Solar Energy
PASADENA, Calif.-With gasoline prices hovering at $3 per gallon, probably
few Americans need convincing that another energy crisis is imminent. But
what precisely is to be done about our future energy needs is still a
puzzle. There's talk about a "hydrogen economy," but hydrogen itself poses
some formidable challenges.
The key challenge is, of course, how to make the hydrogen in the first
place. The best and cheapest methods currently available involve burning
coal or natural gas, which means more greenhouse gases and more pollution.
Adopting the cheapest method by using natural gas would merely result in
replacing our dependence on foreign oil with a dependence on foreign gas.
"Clearly, one clean way to get hydrogen is by splitting water with
sunlight," says Harry Gray, who is the Beckman Professor of Chemistry at the
California Institute of Technology.
Gray is involved with several other Caltech and MIT chemists in a research
program they call "Powering the Planet." The broadest goal of the project is
to "pursue efficient, economical ways to store solar energy in the form of
chemical bonds," according to the National Science Foundation (NSF). With a
new seed grant from the NSF and the possibility for additional funding after
the initial three-year period, the Caltech group says they now have the
wherewithal to try out some novel ideas to produce energy cheaply and
cleanly.
"Presently, this country spends more money in 10 minutes at the gas pump
than it puts into a year of solar-energy research," says Nathan S. Lewis,
the Argyros Professor and professor of chemistry. "But the sun provides more
energy to the planet in an hour than all the fossil energy consumed
worldwide in a year."
The reason that Gray and Lewis advocate the use of solar energy is that no
other renewable resource has enough practical potential to provide the world
with the energy that it needs. But the sun sets every night, and so use of
solar energy on a large scale will necessarily require storing the energy
for use upon society's demand, day or night, summer or winter, rain or
shine.
As for non-renewable resources, nuclear power plants would do the job, but
10,000 new ones would have to be built. In other words, one new nuclear
plant would have to come on-line every other day somewhere in the world for
the next 50 years.
The devices used in a simple experiment in the high school chemistry lab to
make hydrogen by electrolysis are not currently the cheapest ones to use for
mass production. In fact, the tabletop device that breaks water into
hydrogen and oxygen is perfectly clean (in other words, no carbon
emissions), but it requires a platinum catalyst. And platinum has been
selling all year for more than $800 per ounce.
The solution? Find something cheaper than platinum to act as a catalyst.
There are other problems, but this is one that the Caltech group is starting
to address. In a research article now in press, Associate Professor of
Chemistry Jonas Peters and his colleagues demonstrate a way that cobalt can
be used for catalysis of hydrogen formation from water.
"This is a good first example for us," says Peters. "A key goal is to try to
replace the current state-of-the-art platinum catalyst, which is extremely
expensive, with something like cobalt, or even better, iron or nickel. We
have to find a way to cheaply make solar-derived fuel if we are to ever
really enable widespread use of solar energy as society's main power
source."
"It's also a good example because it shows that the NSF grant will get us
working together," adds Gray. "This and other research results will involve
the joint use of students and postdocs, rather than individual groups going
it alone."
In addition to the lab work, the Caltech chemists also have plans to involve
other entities outside campus--both for practical and educational reasons.
One proposal is to fit out a school so that it will run entirely on solar
energy. The initial conversion would likely be done with existing solar
panels, but the facility would also serve to provide the researchers with a
fairly large-scale "lab" where they can test out new ideas.
"We'd build it so that we could troubleshoot solar converters we're working
on," explains Gray.
The ultimate lab goal is to have a "dream machine with no wires in it," Gray
says. "We visualize a solar machine with boundary layers, where water comes
in, hydrogen goes out one side, and oxygen goes out the other."
Such a machine will require a lot of work and a number of innovations and
breakthroughs, but Lewis says the future of the planet depends on moving
away from fossil fuels.
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