klr rant.
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lower c of g?
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lower c of g?
I keep thinking of the approach taken in many bike designs and wondering about applying to the KLR. Part of the issue is long suspension travel & such but the fact that it is easier to lift a dropped 680 pound Honda ST1100 than a 420 pound KLR is interesting.... One advantage to many bikes is that the fuel tank is placed lower in the bike. I keep thinking of the ST approach in which the carbs and air box sit in the fake tank (turtle shell) with the fuel sitting down behind the engine. Anyone happen to have the air box and carb off a KLR and can take some dimensions & photos. I keep forgetting to do this when things are apart. It would require a carb swap but how about a down draft carb with air box above and the fuel tank down in the frame? The Honda fuel pump only requires 1.1 amps so that would be doable.On Jul 7, 2014, at 8:37 PM, "'Norm Keller' normkel32@... [DSN_KLR650]"DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
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lower c of g?
I keep thinking of the approach taken in many bike designs and wondering about applying to the KLR. Part of the issue is long suspension travel & such but the fact that it is easier to lift a dropped 680 pound Honda ST1100 than a 420 pound KLR is interesting.... One advantage to many bikes is that the fuel tank is placed lower in the bike. I keep thinking of the ST approach in which the carbs and air box sit in the fake tank (turtle shell) with the fuel sitting down behind the engine. Anyone happen to have the air box and carb off a KLR and can take some dimensions & photos. I keep forgetting to do this when things are apart. It would require a carb swap but how about a down draft carb with air box above and the fuel tank down in the frame? The Honda fuel pump only requires 1.1 amps so that would be doable.
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klr rant.
There are few moving parts to a carb. Most of the rest are fixed orifaces. Keep the carb clean, and it won't give you any trouble. I have operated equipment with 100+ year old carbs. Clean them, and they work fine. Jeff -----Original Message----- From: Stephen North stephennrth@... [DSN_KLR650] DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com> To: DSN_KLR650 DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Tue, Jul 8, 2014 5:10 pm Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Re: KLR Rant. I like the line "the simplicity of a carb has merit". Simplicity? Sure looks like a lot of little parts in there to me, and if they aren't all marching to the same tune she runs like crap. My WR250R has fuel injection (plus wide ratio 6 speed, 350 watt stator, 26,000 mile valve checks, tunable suspension front and rear but I digress) and it just goes. Turn the key and ride off. No choke, no warm up, just go. Long trip?, just pack another pump body (eBay $35.00!) if you are that worried about it. Carburetors should join the manual typewriter, points and condenser and buggy whip pile but that's just me.
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