widget verse apps & differance???? (nklr)
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2000 11:54 pm
tires
Hope this doesn't require an NKLR as I usually lurk in the background
and only come forward on occasion. I have purchased a set of MT70's
for my A2, along with some heavy duty tubes (I'll find out what brand
when I pick 'em up). I, too, am curious as to the best pressure for
street would be, I ran 32psi on my Cheng Shin 858's without any
obvious problems, that was recommended pressure stamped on the
sidewalls. I certainly hope these will be satisfactory for the type
of riding I do, 70% street. These appear to be less aggressive than
the 858. I guess I'll soon find out.
Craig Highline
88 KLR650A2
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- Posts: 412
- Joined: Sat Apr 15, 2000 2:58 am
tires
--- In DSN_klr650@egroups.com, cehighli@a... wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Craig, In most cases, the tire pressure stamped on the tire's sidewall is the MAXIMUM allowed pressure. For road riding, the following procedure will yield the best safety & tire mileage: Start out with 22-24 psi for the front tire and 24-28 psi for the rear tire (measured "cold", not after a ride). Go for a 30 minute ride and immediately measure the tire pressure for both tires. If each tire's pressure is 2-4 psi higher, you're right on the money. If the pressure rises more than 4 psi, the tire is under- inflated and is building up excess heat. This is potentially unsafe! If the tire pressure rises less than 2psi, the tire is over-inflated, and this will greatly shorten the tread life of the tire. You'll need a good quality tire guage for these tests. Don't buy a $2-3 el cheapo model, plan on spending $6-8 for a good guage and $15-20 for a top of the line quality tool. Buying a good tool pays for itself in safety & savings for all your vehicles. Keep in mind that adding significantly more weight over the everyday weight will require somewhat higher tire pressure. You will have to adjust the 'normal' tire pressure depending on the time of year (summer vs winter, etc). Hope this helps. Professor '95 KLR650 A9 Federal Way, Wa [USA]> Hope this doesn't require an NKLR as I usually lurk in the > background and only come forward on occasion. I have purchased > a set of MT70's for my A2, along with some heavy duty tubes > (I'll find out what brand when I pick 'em up). I, too, am > curious as to the best pressure for street would be, I ran > 32psi on my Cheng Shin 858's without any obvious problems, that > was recommended pressure stamped on the sidewalls. I certainly > hope these will be satisfactory for the type of riding I do, 70% > street. These appear to be less aggressive than the 858. > I guess I'll soon find out. > > Craig Highline > 88 KLR650A2
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri May 05, 2000 3:59 pm
tires
I just wore out my first rear tire on my KLR650. Any suggestions for
a tire that will have some longevity on the street but still do a
decent job in the dirt?
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- Posts: 103
- Joined: Fri Apr 14, 2000 9:08 am
tires
Has anyone ever tried King tires? Saw some today and they don`t look to bad
but I don`t know anything about them. I checked the archives and gave up.
Skip
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- Joined: Sat Apr 29, 2000 5:51 pm
tires
Hey gang,
I've been following the list for some time concerning tires, and I have
looked at the archives somewhat, but I still have some curiosity concerning
the type of tire I would like to find, if it exists that is. I would like to
find a tire that allows extremely brisk street riding (in the twisties) as
well as providing decent off road traction. I spend more time on the road, in
the back country, than I do in the dirt. Yet, when I do go in the dirt it is
usually a middle grade or lower forest type of trail, preferably with water
crossings and medium sized hills. The problem is that I usually find these
trails while riding on the road, then I explore the trail, and then head home
on the road again. Another dilemma, is that I like to play games with
sport-bikers, and myself. I have been know to drag/scrap the pegs or outside
of my boots on plenty of occasions. (The KLR makes a better sport bike than
many people know) My question is, are there any tires out there that can
truly meet my desires, or do I need two KLR's? One to find the trails, then
another to go back and ride them ;-} As we all know, the stock tires are
pretty good on the street, actually stick pretty good, but they stink
something bad in the dirt. I know I am probably asking the impossible, with
the laws of physics and all, but perhaps someone can get me close. Appreciate
the help. Thanks, and keep the shiny side up.
Jim Sherlock
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- Posts: 13
- Joined: Tue Apr 11, 2000 6:20 pm
tires
oops. sorry, with regard to the post on tires, obviously the mt21's are
pirelli's and not dunlop's....
_pete
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- Posts: 7
- Joined: Tue Oct 24, 2000 7:48 am
tires
Rev. I've run Metzler ME88's on the back and lazer 33's on the front
on two KLRS. they are a street tire but will do just fine on a fire
road or two.I can almost scrape the foot pegs in a good turn. You
should get about 10 to 15K miles on them with the light KLR.PS you
should list the Four Stroke Single National Owners Club on your links
list. I've been a member since I got my first KLR in 1988
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- Posts: 66
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 7:39 pm
tires
Well, I'll add my . 02 to the tire thread, started out with MT70's liked the
tires went to more aggressive Dunlop D606, great offroad wears fast on road,
rubs the chain guard,
K139 front, terrible on and offroad, the MT70 front was better. The Pirelli
MT21 are great tires, started chunking on me on heavy rock climbs though.
Finally went back to stock tires, found that I drove 3-400 miles on trips to
do 50-100 miles offroad and the compromise had to go to the dirt section.
The stocks are quieter feel good and are cheap if you use takeoffs from
DualStar.
Larry
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- Joined: Wed Apr 05, 2000 1:35 pm
tires
--- In DSN_klr650@egroups.com, LPetty4585@a... wrote:
liked the> Well, I'll add my . 02 to the tire thread, started out with MT70's
on road,> tires went to more aggressive Dunlop D606, great offroad wears fast
Huh? My D606 doesn't rub anything on the rear. K139 terrible offroad??? On road is leaves much to be desired and in the rain the K139,D606 combination is suicidal, but offroad there is nothing better that is DOT legal. I beg to differ. Gino> rubs the chain guard, > K139 front, terrible on and offroad
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Mon Nov 20, 2000 11:13 pm
tires
Hello ladies and gentleman Good morning, it Sunday, kind of ugly outside. I want to ask you one more big favor. Please give me your opinion on tires. what works for you on trips that are both pavement and dirt? and how long do they last (I mean tires
thanks a lot,for all the answers I got so far and have a good day, Mariola

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