DSN_KLR650
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Alan L Henderson
- Posts: 712
- Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2000 9:10 am
Post
by Alan L Henderson » Sat Oct 11, 2003 10:52 pm
At 02:17 PM 10/11/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>Why would you not want quicker response? I like it myself (being an old 2
stroke rider).
>
>Criswell
>
You need to go back and read the original letter. It all depends on riding
style. Old two stroke trials bikes had very heavy flywheels to slow
response so the rear wheel had less of tendency to break traction, engines
were very mildly tuned for the same reason. The heavy flywheel also meant
the engine was harder to stall. Seems to me that trials riding started to
change during the late 70s.
Alan Henderson A13 Iowa
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Jim The Canoeist
- Posts: 136
- Joined: Thu Sep 11, 2003 11:43 am
Post
by Jim The Canoeist » Sat Oct 11, 2003 11:45 pm
Picture this: You go over the lip and down a 20' loose gravel descent into
a wash and you know the climb back out is a u-turn out of deep sand and up
an old mining road. The turn exit is obscured by some overhanging branches
and you know the bike will be nearly impossible to get rolling again if you
stall it in the turn. The climb is nastily steep - two well-eroded ruts
with base-rock showing through and littered with decomposed granite gravel
and larger rocks. The right hand rut can be ridden with speed but the left
hand has very large boulders lodged in it. Mid-way up the right-hand side
however, there is a huge step that should not be tried but there is room to
get by on the left. A precise maneuver will be needed at the base of the
step.
Flywheel effect assists to negotiate this in several places. In the
descent, the clutch can be left out and the mass of engine rotating parts
will be reluctant to chuff-out if too much rear brake is applied. Then in
the turn, if the rear tire starts to break traction in the sand, the
throttle can be carefully modulated in that sweet zone between dig-in and
last gasp. On the climb, the throttle will need to be shut off at the top
of the right-hand burst and carefully applied in the small s-turn to change
lanes around the step. Forward momentum will be lost and the engine will be
asked to gather rev's once again in that sweet spot - no tire spin or
'looping' and gradual, traction finding acceleration.
Does this seem familiar?
I think the KLR has either quite satisfactory flywheel effect or else it is
just so strong that, at minimum bangs per second, it seems like it. At the
same time, it accelerates nicely without the feel of heavy flywheel and
shuts off right now. It reminds me of my last bike (SV650) where I always
warned fellow riders to watch out for big time deceleration without brake
light warning.
I'm very satisfied and, although it has limits, the big bike does what is
asked of it in tough situations.
-Jim in AZ
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan L Henderson"
To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, October 11, 2003 8:53 PM
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Re:more carb jetting NKLR
> At 02:17 PM 10/11/2003 -0500, you wrote:
> >Why would you not want quicker response? I like it myself (being an old 2
> stroke rider).
> >
> >Criswell
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Ted Palmer
- Posts: 1068
- Joined: Sat Apr 08, 2000 7:09 am
Post
by Ted Palmer » Mon Oct 13, 2003 9:20 am
Jim The Canoeist wrote:
[...]
> I think the KLR has either quite satisfactory flywheel effect or else it is
> just so strong that, at minimum bangs per second, it seems like it.
Plenty of times when I have had my bike tilted right over at near idle
speed I could feel the back end twitch out a bit with each power
pulse once the throttle was opened up. It is what a 600 single does,
original big-bang theory.
If you routinely get into trials situations then it might be useful
to disable the KACR to reduce the chance of stalling at below-idle
revs.
You can ride through an activated KACR, I have done it, but it takes
a lot of throttle and the exhaust valve and seat under the KACR
won't thank you if you do it a lot.
Mister_T
Melbourne Australia
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Volker Traudt
- Posts: 85
- Joined: Fri Jul 25, 2003 3:12 pm
Post
by Volker Traudt » Tue Oct 14, 2003 10:46 pm
Is there an easy and reversible way to disable the KACR?
Volker
-----Original Message-----
From:
sentto-488385-84360-1066054832-vtraudt=compuserve.com@....c
om
[mailto:sentto-488385-84360-1066054832-vtraudt=compuserve.com@...
.yahoo.com] On Behalf Of Ted Palmer
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 10:17 AM
To: 1KLRlist
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Re:more carb jetting NKLR
Jim The Canoeist wrote:
[...]
> I think the KLR has either quite satisfactory flywheel effect or else
> it is just so strong that, at minimum bangs per second, it seems like
> it.
Plenty of times when I have had my bike tilted right over at near idle speed
I could feel the back end twitch out a bit with each power pulse once the
throttle was opened up. It is what a 600 single does, original big-bang
theory.
If you routinely get into trials situations then it might be useful to
disable the KACR to reduce the chance of stalling at below-idle revs. You
can ride through an activated KACR, I have done it, but it takes a lot of
throttle and the exhaust valve and seat under the KACR won't thank you if
you do it a lot.
Mister_T
Melbourne Australia
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Ted Palmer
- Posts: 1068
- Joined: Sat Apr 08, 2000 7:09 am
Post
by Ted Palmer » Wed Oct 15, 2003 8:08 am
Volker Traudt wrote:
>
> Is there an easy and reversible way to disable the KACR?
[...]
Just removing the spring should be a good start.
Maybe something a bit more involved would be to move the weights out
as far as possible and drill a hole through each weight and into the
plate underneath, the put a small rollpin through each hole.
Mister_T
Melbourne Australia
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Jim The Canoeist
- Posts: 136
- Joined: Thu Sep 11, 2003 11:43 am
Post
by Jim The Canoeist » Sat Oct 18, 2003 1:15 am
I'm confused. Isn't the KACR only energized when the starter is engaged?
Are we learning that it also releases compression at low engine rev's?
Are you telling me I am damaging something by going real slow with the
clutch out and then applying throttle? Is the automatic compression release
energized during this?
I want to be sure of this.
Is there somewhere where we can read the theory and operation of the KACR?
-Jim in AZ
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ted Palmer"
To: "1KLRlist" DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 7:16 AM
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Re:more carb jetting NKLR
>
> Plenty of times when I have had my bike tilted right over at near idle
> speed I could feel the back end twitch out a bit with each power
> pulse once the throttle was opened up. It is what a 600 single does,
> original big-bang theory.
>
> If you routinely get into trials situations then it might be useful
> to disable the KACR to reduce the chance of stalling at below-idle
> revs.
> You can ride through an activated KACR, I have done it, but it takes
> a lot of throttle and the exhaust valve and seat under the KACR
> won't thank you if you do it a lot.
>
> Mister_T
> Melbourne Australia
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kdxkawboy@aol.com
- Posts: 1442
- Joined: Tue Jan 21, 2003 7:59 pm
Post
by kdxkawboy@aol.com » Sat Oct 18, 2003 8:47 am
In a message dated 2003-10-18 4:48:16 AM Pacific Daylight Time, a14@...
writes:
>
> The KACR is located on the end of the exhaust cam. It is controlled
> by weights which must overcome spring tension with centrifugal
> force. In it's static position there is a pin which is located next to
> the right exhaust cam lobe which causes the valve to open earlier
> thus releasing compression. It stays this way at starter motor speeds
> and once running the weights swing out pulling the pin out of the way.
> If you let the engine speed drop too low the weights will be pulled in
> by the spring and the pin will begin to release compression. This will
> cause hot exhaust gases to pass by the right exhaust valve seat excessively
> which can overheat the seat in the head and on the valve, allow deposits
> to form and eventually can cause them to burn.
>
> Walt
> A14 "War Horse"
>
>
How low is too low? I wouldn't think the weights would swing in until some
where well below idle speed if the weights swing outward with anything over
starter speed.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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kcuf_oohay_666
- Posts: 587
- Joined: Sat Dec 08, 2001 11:52 pm
Post
by kcuf_oohay_666 » Sat Oct 18, 2003 10:27 am
The KACR is activated by centrifical (sp?) force. Like the old
Mechanical advance on your cars distributer. Its a mechanical device
that starts working at low RPM when centrifical force is low. Without
taking a look at it. A guess would be to remove the springs to
disable it.
--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Jim The Canoeist"
wrote:
> I'm confused. Isn't the KACR only energized when the starter is
engaged?
> Are we learning that it also releases compression at low engine
rev's?
>
> Are you telling me I am damaging something by going real slow with
the
> clutch out and then applying throttle? Is the automatic
compression release
> energized during this?
>
> I want to be sure of this.
> Is there somewhere where we can read the theory and operation of
the KACR?
>
> -Jim in AZ
>
>
-
Jim The Canoeist
- Posts: 136
- Joined: Thu Sep 11, 2003 11:43 am
Post
by Jim The Canoeist » Sat Oct 18, 2003 10:45 am
This is exactly my point (how slow?) but I read where others warn about the system energizing at low speeds and having experience 'driving through it', etc.
I have often gotten the engine below idle speed in tight situations. That was not low enough for the engine to chuff-out of course but I'm wondering if low enough for a compression release to mess with things. Obviously, I am very worried and must learn the real story & no guessing. It appears that this device is digital, i.e., it is either in or out, depending if those weights are rotating fast enough to disengage a pin or allow it to return to its static position.
The issue is whether or not this occurs at operating rev's (albeit, below the idle speed). The engine should not be operated with the compression released because exhaust gasses are being released where they can do damage.
Does anyone know what the symptoms are for when the compression release activates while the engine is running at very low RPM? If there were some detectable sound or other signal, I could experiment with a running engine and the idle stop.
-Jim in AZ
----- Original Message -----
From: KDXKawboy@...
To: a14@... ;
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com ; jwalsh21@...
Sent: Saturday, October 18, 2003 6:46 AM
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Re:more carb jetting NKLR
In a message dated 2003-10-18 4:48:16 AM Pacific Daylight Time, a14@... writes:
The KACR is located on the end of the exhaust cam. It is controlled
by weights which must overcome spring tension with centrifugal
force. In it's static position there is a pin which is located next to
the right exhaust cam lobe which causes the valve to open earlier
thus releasing compression. It stays this way at starter motor speeds
and once running the weights swing out pulling the pin out of the way.
If you let the engine speed drop too low the weights will be pulled in
by the spring and the pin will begin to release compression. This will
cause hot exhaust gases to pass by the right exhaust valve seat excessively
which can overheat the seat in the head and on the valve, allow deposits
to form and eventually can cause them to burn.
Walt
A14 "War Horse"
How low is too low? I wouldn't think the weights would swing in until some where well below idle speed if the weights swing outward with anything over starter speed.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Jim The Canoeist
- Posts: 136
- Joined: Thu Sep 11, 2003 11:43 am
Post
by Jim The Canoeist » Sat Oct 18, 2003 10:47 am
Thank you Walt. How do you know the compression is released at 800 RPM?
What is the indication?
-Jim in AZ
----- Original Message -----
From: "Walt"
To: ; DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, October 18, 2003 7:22 AM
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Re:more carb jetting NKLR
> > How low is too low? I wouldn't think the weights would swing in until
some
> > where well below idle speed if the weights swing outward with anything
> over
> > starter speed.
> >
> > Pat
> > G'ville, Nv
> >
> >
>
> Well on my bike it is around 800 RPM but I would suppose
> every bike is a bit different due to build variations and wear.
> Believe it or not but I can get my bike that low without lugging
> or shaking until the KACR kicks in when I want to be in stealth
> mode even with a 16 tooth front sprocket. I can even pull a
> moderate hill with a heavy load at 1000 RPM which is usually as
> low as I go but only in first gear of course since when in a higher
> gear I can downshift and otherwise keep it above 2000 RPM.
> Keep in mind that this is with applying very light throttle and when
> acceleration is needed or at the first hint of lugging I pull in and
> feather the clutch while applying the throttle to speed up.
>
> Walt
> A14 "War Horse"
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