>
> Hola Jake,
>
> I'm still a bicycle guy and I won't be changing that. I'm still working on the whole KLR idea and one important element will be deciding how it fits into my life without taking away from my pedal biking.
>
> I'm about to get rid of my old Ford Ranger 4x4 pick up. I replaced it with a F150 Supercrew which is awesome except it takes a lot more gas than the Ranger. I don't mind the $$ when I have 4 people on board headed to the coast to surf or if I'm going to Baja for 2 months with my camping gear in the winter to kiteboard/surf and ride my pedal bike.
>
> What I don't want to do is drive it a lot by myself. The question is how much of that do I need to do that I can't pedal bike? My business mailbox is a 8km round trip from where I live which is easy bicycle distance. OTOH I have been driving my Ranger 2hrs down a forest service road to a remote lake to kiteboard - up to 20 times a summer. I'm not keen on beating up my new F150 on the rough road just to get me there. If I can leave my gear stashed at the lake I could KLR there which would turn part of the current trip I don't love [bouncing down a dirt road] into a fun activity.
>
> I've also got quite a few friends up and down the west coast I would like to see more and my job allows me to be flexible I just run into the cost and wear and tear on my F150. Racking up 2000-5000kms on my F150 for a visit gets expensive. On the KLR the trip would be cheap and fun.
>
> Finally I have had some pedal bike tours that I wanted to do that just don't seem like they are going to happen due to lack of time vs other interests. I'd like to pedal down to Argentina, but taking off 1.5 - 2yrs isn't happening given I want to surf/kiteboard mtn bike, etc... My GF is into shorter bicycle tours, but not that sort of epic haul. I'm okay with that, but I still want to see those areas from a bike and on a KLR I can cover 5 - 10 times the distance/day that I can on a pedal bike. So in a month I can hit Costa Rica and come back home with a bit of surfing when I am down there. That would work in my life at the moment. I could even see getting 6 months off to ride down to SA and back as long as the GF could fly down to a couple prime spots and meet me for a bit of a holiday.
>
> I knew I would get another bike at some point. I kept all my KLR stuff in a couple large bins - including my Ortlieb soft panniers and my Aerostich tank panniers - score!. One thing I learned from my last KLR life was soft luggage and going minimal are the way to dualsport! So my bike will see only minor tweaks and I'll keep it simple & light.
>
> Anyways....I still haven't settled on getting a KLR 100%. I need to think about it some more and check out the other dualsport options. I won't be buying another motorcycle for a long time - possibly ever so I want to cast a wide net. Having said that at first glance the KLR seems to be the best combo of performance/cost/fun as always.
>
> Glad to see some of the old crew still rocking and rolling....=-)
>
> Vik Banerjee
> threeohm@...
>
www.thelazyrando.com
>
> On 2011-05-20, at 12:15 AM, sh8knj8kster wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > ~~~Vik, I thought you were strictly a bicycle guy, dumping your KLR ions ago never to return...what happened, did you find religion?
> >
> >
> > Best,
> >
> >
> > Jake
> > Reddick Fla.
> > A flute w/o holes is not a flute, a donut w/o a hole is a Danish
> > ...Ty Webb quoting Zen philosopher Basha
> >
> >
> >
http://www.shakinjake.blogspot.com/
> >
http://www.flickr.com/photos/26137108@N04
> >
> >
> >
> > --- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Vik Banerjee wrote:
> >>
> >> Thanks!
> >>
> >> Ya I hadn't included the bar end weights which is why grabbing a number off a website can be a problem. There is no way I'll get a KLR650 in the backyard as is. I'll have to reno the fence and gate. Not a show stopper, but given how darn slow I am about such things it will give me a decent amount of time to ponder a new bike!
> >>
> >> I appreciate you taking the time to measure your bike Daniel...=-)
> >>
> >> Vik Banerjee
> >> threeohm@
> >>
www.thelazyrando.com
> >>
> >> On 2011-05-19, at 8:45 AM, Daniel wrote:
> >>
> >>> Why waste a perfectly fun thread on an accurate and to-the-point answer?

> >>>
> >>> On the 2008, about 3 ft 1" including the bar end weights. You may need to fold your mirrors in if it's tight.
> >>>
> >>> I now have a set of Barkbusters on the bike, making the width around 3'4".
> >>>
> >>> Daniel
> >>>
> >>> --- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Vik Banerjee wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> It's not just a gate or I'd do that.
> >>>>
> >>>> If someone can tell me how wide the bars are on the current generation KLR650 I can see if I have a problem and if so how much of one.
> >>>>
> >>>> safe riding,
> >>>>
> >>>> Vik Banerjee
> >>>> threeohm@
> >>>>
www.thelazyrando.com
> >>>>
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
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