Odd. I have a rather early '96 KLR and it uses the single nut arrangement. There might have been a transitional period very early in the production run. As for the rest of the bike, I wonder how much of it is old and how much new? -Tom '96 KLR 650> Hello > While riding around Ellensburg WA last weekend with my brother on his 00 > klr and me on my '96 I noticed that his front sprocket is held on by one big > bolt and mine by two smaller bolts. It's the first time I did a side by side > on the two years....does this difference signify the change over between the > "reworked" klr? I bought my bike used, runs great and have no complaints. > But was wondering if their is anything else I should know about maybe having > the antique model?![]()
front sprocket wobble
-
- Posts: 156
- Joined: Thu Apr 13, 2000 6:00 pm
[dsn_klr650] 96 klr
EdgyDrifter wrote:
-
- Posts: 25
- Joined: Thu Apr 13, 2000 9:38 pm
front sprocket wobble
Yes, it's part # 11060-1108. It's a copper gasket that crushes when
torqued down so it is best to replace it. Be real careful not to over
tighten the pipe flange, it will crack, got the weld on mine to prove
it. I replaced the nuts with crimped lock nuts (nylocks will melt)
and more caution with the wrench. Sprocket wobble can be shimmed but
it is floating by design. In theory letting it float takes some
stress off the seal and bearing when the chain is flopping around off
road and helps correct any misalignment in the chain run. The
downside may be increased spline wear on the shaft. A compromise,
shaft replacement or bearing/ seal replacement. When the kawasaki
engineers designed it they chose to let it float? The only shaft
spline/bearing/seal problems I have ever seen have been from
overtightened chains not sprocket tightness.
One more thing, is there a replacement gasket available for the stock
> exhaust pipe connection with the cylinder head? > TIA, > Eric > A 8
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 25 guests