[dsn_klr650] backfiring
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[dsn_klr650] nklr dirt tips?
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> are there real techniques for dirt riding?'
That reminds me..when I bought my brand new A-13 about a month ago, it came with this wonderfully informative "How to ride your dirt-bike" type book. Did anybody else read this? Did it seem a little strange to anyone else that they would try to teach you how to ride a dirt bike with a book? I think I might file a claim against Kawasaki, I read that booklet cover to cover and it didn't improve my skills one bit, I'm still lousy in the dirt.
[img]cid:003b01bfb608$55b852c0$3ed91104@calis[/img]
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[dsn_klr650] nklr dirt tips?
From: "Thomas Keener"
on> Another newbie here. I've got a ton of street miles under me and a fair > amount of 4WD miles, but hardly any 2-wheel dirt miles. I've only had this > '98 KLR650 for a few months now and I love it. Since 98% of my riding is
Your problem is not tire tread. You have a heavy motorcycle with a relatively narrow front tire. When you ride in soft sand, the tire sinks, the contact patch moves forward, trail is reduced -- perhaps to negative -- and you are pushing a caster backwards. If it were me, I would slow as much as possible when I see the sand coming, downshift as needed, stand on the pegs, get my weight back and cross with the throttle on, keeping the front end light. You can handle the steering much more effectively if you are standing and using body-English. I can't recommend this technique, though, because it doesn't work in all situations. Do it wrong or in the wrong place and you can easily go over the handlebars. As someone else said: practice, practice, practice. Your best traction device is your right wrist -- a hard lesson to learn and perhaps not intuitive. Verle Nelson Cedaredge CO '97 R1100R '99 KLR650> pavement, I put Gripsters on it and they're great on the mountain roads > here in San Diego County. Last weekend I went up to Joshua Tree National > Park with some sportbike friends. It was a treat blasting down hiway 243 > from Idyllwild to Banning. The rough surface gave some of the sportbikes > fits, but the KLR just flew over the bumps.... > So, what can I do to make it easier? Dirt tires would help, I'm sure, but > are there real techniques for dirt riding?
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[dsn_klr650] nklr dirt tips?
In a message dated 5/4/00 4:25:22 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
carls@... writes:
>
Best advise I've heard.
Will add that working out whenever time. Exercise will make things come
easier. (cardiovascular stuff is best, running, ect..the benefits of weight
training for riding are debatable.
The KLR is a beast to muscle around off-road in the technical stuff. Great
workout though.
And will make you into another Bob Hannah when jumping on a two-stroke.
Best thing that happened to me skills wise off road, was practicing on a
heavy four stroke.
Find a riding area you like, get to know it, ride it every opportunity,
start to think not about the upcoming turn, but the one after that, and next.
Remind yourself to relax your grip at every opportunity. (death grip tires
your arms quickly)
Block out everything except for Your line, trail, ect. Is racing advise I
suppose, but will hone your skills. Geeze, it's getting late again.
All best!
Scott
A14
Sorrento

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[dsn_klr650] nklr dirt tips?
On Thu, 4 May 2000 21:45:02 EDT, InWoods13@... wrote:
easier. (cardiovascular stuff is best, running, ect..the benefits of weight training for riding are debatable.> Will add that working out whenever time. Exercise will make things come
Great workout though.> The KLR is a beast to muscle around off-road in the technical stuff.
In the event of a crash on or off road, the stronger you are the better your chance for survival IMHO. dat brooklyn bum _______________________________________________________ Get 100% FREE Internet Access powered by Excite Visit http://freelane.excite.com/freeisp> > Scott > A14 > Sorrento
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[dsn_klr650] nklr dirt tips?
In a message dated 5/6/00 3:01:58 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
guymanbro@... writes:
<< In the event of a crash on or off road, the stronger you are the better
your
chance for survival IMHO.
dat brooklyn bum >>
Very true, strength and flexibility are your friends. The debate as I
remember it is mostly over doing lots of curls. And that making your arms
pump up/tire out more quickly when riding off road. Never found benching or
working legs to be a bad thing.
Scott
A14
Sorrento
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[dsn_klr650] backfiring
I agree with the professor on this one. I live just outside of Boston and
ride Scared to work every time...
Good luck on your travels.
Rich
A12 "Beast"
----- Original Message ----- From: Jim Hyman To: DSN_klr650@egroups.com> Sent: Saturday, May 06, 2000 5:40 AM Subject: [DSN_klr650] Re: BACKFIRING > > Bum, > > If you're going to be in the Boston area, WARNING: > > The golden rule there is: > > Do unto others BEFORE they do unto you. > > I know, I grew up there. RIDE SCARED and expect the unexpected > from other drivers. > > Have a safe trip. > > Professor > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > --- In DSN_klr650@egroups.com, guymanbro@e... wrote: > > > Next weekend I'm heading to Massachusetts to see the in-laws... > > > dat brooklyn bum > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > You have a voice mail message waiting for you at iHello.com: > http://click.egroups.com/1/3555/5/_/911801/_/957606051/ > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Visit the KLR650 archives at > http://www.listquest.com/lq/search.html?ln=klr650 > Support Dual Sport News... dsneditor@... > Let's keep this list SPAM free! > > Visit our site at http://www.egroups.com/group/DSN_klr650 > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > DSN_klr650-unsubscribe@egroups.com > >
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[dsn_klr650] nklr dirt tips?
I pays in more areas of your life and the lives of others when you work out.
Arm pump can be reduced with lots of power grip exercises. Curling and
reverse curls build forearm and wrist stamina as well as strength. I'm not
interested in a debate. Another really wonderful muscle group to work for
dirt riding as well as road racing is shoulders. Abs are without
saying. One must have a strong platform from which to build. Your abs
will also keep your lower back from taking too much punishment. Running or
stair-master is the best for your legs (for motorcycles anyway) stamina is
typically more important for legs. Additionally if your heart can't keep
up with all that adrenaline then your sucking wind. Keep your heart
healthy with beer, steak, real potatoes and plenty of exercise.
I've played hockey all my life, been on bikes for roughly 15 years, worked
out religiously for most of my life and it really pays.
I had a partial discectomy the day before Thanksgiving '99. If I wasn't in
shape nor was committed to remaining in shape I'd be on the fast tract to a
wheel chair. Got the clean slate from the Neurosurgeon two weeks ago. He
plays hockey too so he was excited to have me back to 110%.
I saved a man's life by lifting his full dresser Harley off his
chest. Adrenaline was the key factor for that burst of strength, I'll
admit. However, I firmly believe that If I didn't work out and was a
fairly strong young man, I would have never lifted that bike. He was
pinned so that I had to lift straight up and then walk it three feet to my
side to clear his head. He was unconscious and I was alone. I used to get
cards from that man every year on the anniversary of his crash, much
gratitude and an incredible feeling inside.....
SOB SOB..... WHATEVER!! Go to sleep you freak.
LaterZ
Dash
>your > chance for survival IMHO. > > dat brooklyn bum >> > > Very true, strength and flexibility are your friends. The debate as I >remember it is mostly over doing lots of curls. And that making your arms >pump up/tire out more quickly when riding off road. Never found benching or >working legs to be a bad thing. > >Scott >A14 >Sorrento
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