I live in the Pacific Northwet so find the stock KLR cooling system more
than adequate. I almost never hear the fan come on and when it does come on
the fan brings down the temp quickly. Come to think of it, I had no issues
with overheating riding mid-July last year in Moab with ambient temps in the
low 100s. I was riding rather slowly with my daughter (who had limited off
road experience) but still saw no issues.
But if I found need to add additional airflow I'd try something free first,
then something cheap next before spending big money. I'd start by digging
through my computer junk box and select a "muffin fan" from a desktop
computer case and wire it in parallel with the stock fan, fix it in place
with bandiron strapping (a/k/a plumbers tape) and see to what extent it
helped. These fans are nominally 12v (not 13.8 v nominal like the KLR)
but function just fine at voltages from 5 volts or so to 15 volts or so. If
you don't have an overflowing computer junk box like I have then you can
spend a whopping $7 at a computer store (e.g
http://www.frys.com/product/5598230 ) and fit one of these new fans. Maybe
the computer fan would even add some "glamour and character" to your
bike.as promised by the Fry's ad copy! (My KLR has an abundance of
character but is woefully short on glamour J)
Call it redneck engineering if you must but I can't even begin to imagine
spending% 600 or so to add some additional airflow unless or until I tried
several no cost to low cost alternatives first.
From:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of boulder_adv_rider
Sent: Sunday, July 08, 2012 7:59 PM
To:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Re: increasing KLR 650 fan cfm plus coverage
Interesting. I didn't think you had an overflow res. I'm amazed it can fit
in that location. And I always thought you had dual fans. Clearly, at speed
you have quite an efficient cooling system; however, under slow, demanding
conditions, it's only marginally better without a second fan. It sounds like
it serves you very well which is what matters. You don't need a reservoir if
your marginal cooling rate is satisfactory. In fact, I have never blown my
rad cap into the reservoir using a 50/50 mix even with one rad/stock setup.
As far as prices I was throwing out, merely I priced an OEM radiator ($310)
and OEM fan assembly ($313) sans relay, sensor, etc. So even if you could
simply mount a second stock rad and fan, it'd be over $600 just for these
two parts retail alone (my point). But it's not a plug and play scenario
anyway. You'd need different hoses, connections, routing and a manifold
design to optimize the cooling. For example, dumping one hot radiator into
another to cool it further isn't as efficient as distributing one source
into to two independent radiators with fans. Now, Jessie Jame's Monster
Garage might be able to cobble something together over a weekend (not one
day, for sure), but it would not be engineered/optimized. Just relocating
the reservoir (keeping a stock look) would be a challenge. It's big. Plus
reconfiguring wires, relays, horn, etc.? It'd take me more than a
weekend...I'm certain.
--- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com ,
Jeff Saline wrote:
>
> On Sun, 08 Jul 2012 07:30:36 -0000 "boulder_adv_rider"
> writes:
> > Jeff--With nerf bars, the coffee maker, mini-frig, 25"
> > plasma...simply for me there is no room for a 2nd radiator. I take
> > it with your duals, you have no overflow reservoir? I've always
> > envied your dual rads, but it'd be over $600+ just to add the rad
> > and fan not to mention the cost to get it fit and rigged. $1,000
> > all-in???
> <><><><><><>
> <><><><><><>
>
> I do have an overflow reservoir but it's from a KLR250 (same as my right
> radiator) and located where the side stand switch is on a stock bike. A
> couple of guys that I've heard from that are also running dual radiators
> don't think the overflow is needed. The radiators do such a good job of
> removing heat the lack of overflow capability doesn't matter.
>
> I spent much less buying parts than your suggested $600. I have no idea
> what it would cost if a guy was to hire out the work to make the dual
> radiator setup happen. It could probably be done in a day if a guy
> didn't care what it looked like and didn't want to add a fan on the
> right radiator. The fan takes up lots of room and in my opinion isn't
> needed with two radiators. The first (right) radiator removes a bunch of
> heat from the coolant and the second radiator removes a bunch more. The
> stock electrical system can handle two fans no problem. I think mine
> have turned on twice in the last 4-5 years.
>
> Best,
>
> Jeff Saline
> ABC # 4412 South Dakota Airmarshal
> Airheads Beemer Club
www.airheads.org
> The Beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota
> 75 R90/6, 03 KLR650
>
> .
> .
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