(nklr) helmet cam question
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klr rear tire
I am looking for a rear tire that will last at least 8K. My stock
Dunlop is to the wear bars at 6000. I have considered the King, some
German made on ebay, Metzler, and ofcourse the original Dunlop. Any
suggestions, or should I just live with the 6K tread wear.
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klr rear tire
I've been lurking in this group and enjoying both the humor, and the
info. I have a 06 with 2700 miles. My stock back tire is almost worn
out. My riding has been mainly on the street. Does this seem like
normal wear for the stock tire? And what would be a good replacement
for an 80% street tire ? Thanks Mike
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- Joined: Wed Nov 26, 2003 3:07 pm
klr rear tire
Hi Mike
Wow! 2700 miles! How did you get it to last that long?
Sadly, that seems about right from what I have read over the past 2
years, maybe even more than some have gotten from the OEM. Actually I
got about 3500 out of mine, which was a few too many. Tire opinions
vary here, a lot. Someone will pony up with the "source" of tire
comparisons, but one thing is for sure, if you go with a heavily street
oriented tire, you will not be having much fun if you go where there is
anything less than hard pack. If you don't go off road, even that 20%,
by all means, get that street tire and amaze the rice rockets what a
single cylinder machine will do in the twisties. It freaks them out to
be bested by a 38 hp thumper on the right tires.
Many have a favorite, and for the price, I like the Kenda 270, (my
third consecutive set) but it has more dirt orientation than your
suggested 80% street use. Easily 1/2 of my riding is gravel roads, or
straight dirt farm trails, interspersed with boulders and badger
holes. This tire works well for me and the companions I ride with.
Some find the side-knobs a little disconcerting during the transition
from straight and level to full lean in the turn. Others suggest this
feature keeps them honest, ie, not to fast, but fast enough to still be
plenty of fun. As for mileage, I will get about 5000r/10000f miles out
of this newly installed K270's.
Mike, identify where you live and what trails you are going to ride.
Maybe someone on the list can give a favorite, more clearly defined
tire based on where you ride.
The good news is, if you don't like the tire, you won't have to ride it
long...most don't last much more than 5000 miles, and some a whole lot
less if there are sharp rocks involved.
Do your self a favor (IMHO), and install HD tubes. The added insurance
of no flats is worth the extra price. Not completely failsafe, but
definitely helpful.
and, Don't forget to change the gas as soon as possible, exchange gas
for miles of smiles, as often as possible.
Question for you: What kind of riding gear are you using? Jean jackest
and flip-flops? Just kidding of course, but I hope the answer is
something with armor in it, pads, plastic. Regardless of your age, if
you ride the KLR, you will fall down, and armor is good. At my age
(51) armor is very, very good to me. Numerous testimonies here about
falling down and glad for the armor. Armor is cheap, and skin, well,
its only skin deep.
ATGATT
revmaaatin.
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "zornsklr" wrote: > > I've been lurking in this group and enjoying both the humor, and the > info. I have a 06 with 2700 miles. My stock back tire is almost worn > out. My riding has been mainly on the street. Does this seem like > normal wear for the stock tire? And what would be a good replacement > for an 80% street tire ? Thanks Mike >
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- Joined: Fri Nov 11, 2016 12:58 am
klr rear tire
Take a look here, (scroll down to comments). http://www.mindspring.com/~mssilverstein/motorcycles/klr650/tires/ My $0.02 .... based on what you said it depends on how hard you push the bike on the street and what the other 20% is> I've been lurking in this group and enjoying both the humor, and the > info. I have a 06 with 2700 miles. My stock back tire is almost worn > out. My riding has been mainly on the street. Does this seem like > normal wear for the stock tire? And what would be a good replacement > for an 80% street tire ? Thanks Mike

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- Posts: 459
- Joined: Wed Oct 09, 2002 4:32 pm
klr rear tire
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "zornsklr" wrote:
Kenda's, Duro's, TKC80's, and last but not least the Mefo's. The
Mefo's are pricey, but I have a couple of friends that actually were
able to use them for about 17K miles. The tread design of the Mefo
looks pretty good for general KLR dual sport use.
all the best,
Mike
Mike, What pressures are you running on the street? Tire life goes down dramatically if the pressure is lower than appropriate for conditions, even when the tire is only 4 psi low. Some listers carry a small compressor so they can air down for dirt, and back up for the street. The life of your stock rear tire is not unusual as reported here, but some people have gotten more out of a rear tire by running anywhere from 30 to 36 psi, depending on load and riding conditions. Some people runing the (owner's manual) recommended pressures have gotten only 1500 to 2000 miles out of a stock rear - big rider, lots of hiway. Experiment some, read the replies, run a search, decide what works for you.> > I've been lurking in this group and enjoying both the humor, and the > info. I have a 06 with 2700 miles. My stock back tire is almost worn > out. My riding has been mainly on the street. Does this seem like > normal wear for the stock tire? And what would be a good replacement > for an 80% street tire ? Thanks Mike >

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klr rear tire
My OEM rear was toast at 4400 kms, or about 2650 miles, mostly paved at 35 PSI!
Ed
PS I replaced w/ a Kenda K270, 5.10 x 17. Already 14,000 kms and it still has tread... and
a REALLY loud whine going straight down the road!
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- Posts: 330
- Joined: Fri Nov 19, 2004 12:03 pm
klr rear tire
Wow Ed, that's quite interesting. You and I have ridden together and ride similarly, and I went 9,009 miles before replacing my stock rear tire. 35 psi as well, lots of commuting on asphalt. Go figure.
I've become accustomed to hearing that 4,000 is pretty common for most riders, and the aggresive riders have been known to cut that number to 1,500. I would have pinned you for 6,000 miles or more on the stocker...
Bill Watson
Phoenix
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From: "fasteddiecopeman"
Subject: Re: klr rear tire
My OEM rear was toast at 4400 kms, or about 2650 miles, mostly paved at
35 PSI!
Ed
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(nklr) helmet cam question
Sonny,
You'd hate yourself if you dropped it on one of the Neumanns, but if
you've got one of the stereo ones it might be worth it...
Sorry about the over-the-top reply, but it sounded as though you
weren't going to be happy with what is possible with the camcorder
mics. I would at least try the cheap Radio Shack dual-lavalier
setup -maybe have them in a *big fuzzy* sweatshirt in your tank bag-
plugged into the mic input of the camera...
Given your location and occupation, do you ever run into Ritchie
Owens? He's a bandmate of mine from back in the day...
John

--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Sonny Bulla wrote: > > > "scarysharkface" writes: > > > > My inclination would be to mount a couple of fairly bullet-proof Shure > > SM-58's out of the slipstream and put 15db pads in-line to your > > camcorder's input(s). > > Well,....I was really just wondering about how the mic that came with > the units worked but, if you want to get all technical...let's just > figure out how to carry my laptop, ProTools hardware, strap some > Neumanns all over the beast (my studio buddies would KILL me!), run a > SMPTE track, sync it all up in post and mix for best effect! > > ,,,or maybe, a Nagra and a "Big Fuzzy"...> > Sonny > '02 KLR650 >
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