I am curious if there is a setup in place for borrowing the tools
required to do the doohickey. Of course I would pay the shipping both
ways, as I am certain I would still be money ahead versus buying the
tools myself.
08 klr in prescott arizona
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doohickey time
On Sun, 13 May 2007, heavensrep wrote:
Not really (as far as I know). First step is to let us know where you are. The easiest is if somebody is close enough for you to pick up / return the tools in person. -- Doug Herr doug@... A16 in Oakland, California> I am curious if there is a setup in place for borrowing the tools > required to do the doohickey. Of course I would pay the shipping both > ways, as I am certain I would still be money ahead versus buying the > tools myself.
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- Joined: Sat May 12, 2007 8:19 pm
doohickey time
Good suggestion. I am located in Northern California, Chico to be more
exact. This will be my first doo, and I'm looking forward to gettin'
inside the klr a little more. Should be a good experience.
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doohickey time
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "heavensrep" wrote:
Your best bet would be a tech day. There are several a year in your area. have the use of the special tools, along with experienced coaching. Meeting other KLRists is a fringe benefit.> > Good suggestion. I am located in Northern California, Chico to be more > exact. This will be my first doo, and I'm looking forward to gettin' > inside the klr a little more. Should be a good experience.
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08 klr in prescott arizona
On May 16, 2007, at 6:31 PM, jonblak12321 wrote:
Hi John, This is from the FAQ--great reading if you haven't already: Balancer chain tensioner ("Doohickey") prone to failure The counterbalancer tensioner arm (clamped down by the small bolt on the bottom left engine cover) has a tendency to get brittle and break. This has happened on bikes of all years and mileages, while many other bikes (of all years and mileages) are fine. If anything, later bikes seem to be more prone to failure, perhaps because of the change to solid balancer sprockets. If this system fails and the balancer chain jumps, it can sieze the engine. Eagle Machine makes a machined adjuster arm (available from Arrowhead) that is vastly superior to the stock unit. (Both units are of equal quality, although they offer different spring lengths.) In addition, the adjuster bolt and spring were upgraded in 1996; earlier models can be upgraded by replacing the bolt and spring, and adding the washer. The required parts are: Idler spring, 92144-1860; 7mm O-ring, 670B1507; washer, 92200-1263; idler adjuster bolt, 92150-1923. See the links section for a way to report balancer failures. -- Blake Sobiloff http://sobiloff.typepad.com/blakeblog/> http://sobiloff.typepad.com/klr_adventure/> San Jose, CA (USA) [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]> What is a doohicky > I never got an answer.
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