Please advise me on some tips that allows taller folk to safely stand on the
pegs. I have replaced my rubber ones with the Titanium ones sold by IMS but
I still don't feel in control. I'm 6'2" in sneakers. I'm almost 6'3" in my
work boots. I'm almost 6'4" with all my gear on. I have a long torso (and
kind of round one, to be honest). The length of my arms doesn't seem to
match my body, they need to be just a bit longer. What do I do? What is
comfortable for me right now is sitting on the seat, gripping the bike with
my legs, holding on to the handlebars and try to make myself a piece of the
machine. Which is why I get to pick the bike up a lot. How can taller riders
become proficient in standing and riding rough terrain.
Jim
Cedar Creek, Texas
rebuilding stock shock
-
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Tue Nov 21, 2000 9:12 pm
standing up on the klr
I'm 5'6 and standing on the pegs doesn't seem natural to me either. I went
through the MSF Dirt Bike school and after 4 hours of standing on the pegs I
started to get a feel for it. The proper way is to have your head just in
front of your handlbars and over the front tire. Of coarse you need to
adjust if you are go up or down a hill. If you stand for any amount of time,
you will be sore because your legs are now being used as shock absorbers. It
may seem unnatural but when the going gets rough, you are better off having
your weight on the pegs down low than having it high up on the seat.
Dennis, A15
Concord, NC
-----Original Message-----
From: jimsherlock [mailto:jimsherlock@...]
Sent: Saturday, July 27, 2002 2:29 AM
To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Standing Up On the KLR
Please advise me on some tips that allows taller folk to safely stand on the
pegs. I have replaced my rubber ones with the Titanium ones sold by IMS but
I still don't feel in control. I'm 6'2" in sneakers. I'm almost 6'3" in my
work boots. I'm almost 6'4" with all my gear on. I have a long torso (and
kind of round one, to be honest). The length of my arms doesn't seem to
match my body, they need to be just a bit longer. What do I do? What is
comfortable for me right now is sitting on the seat, gripping the bike with
my legs, holding on to the handlebars and try to make myself a piece of the
machine. Which is why I get to pick the bike up a lot. How can taller riders
become proficient in standing and riding rough terrain.
Jim
Cedar Creek, Texas
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- Posts: 750
- Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2002 5:07 pm
standing up on the klr
Any tips for shifting and braking while standing up? I can't figure out
how to do that right.
-Lujo

went> I'm 5'6 and standing on the pegs doesn't seem natural to me either. I
in> through the MSF Dirt Bike school and after 4 hours of standing on > the pegs I > started to get a feel for it. The proper way is to have your head just
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]> front of your handlbars and over the front tire. Of coarse you need to > adjust if you are go up or down a hill. If you stand for any > amount of time, > you will be sore because your legs are now being used as shock > absorbers. It > may seem unnatural but when the going gets rough, you are better > off having > your weight on the pegs down low than having it high up on the seat. > > Dennis, A15 > Concord, NC
-
- Posts: 543
- Joined: Mon Apr 10, 2000 5:18 pm
standing up on the klr
Hey Jim,
At 6' (barefoot), all I'll say is repetition...repetition will get you more
comfortable standing, off road on the KLR. I know what you mean about
standing on the KLR though, feels kinda awkward when compared to other, more
dirt oriented machines.
I stand alot on trails out of old habit & to get more exercise in easier
areas. We also have a Good deal of whooped out sandy stuff here, so alot of
the time, it's either stand or crash.
Taller bars/handlebar risers are the only solution I see, to make the KLR
feel more natural for standing. Bill Whalen's at least 6'2", & stands alot
for offroad stuff. He came up with an economy handlebar riser setup that he
seems to like alot, think he got the parts from a cycle salvage place. He may
have unsubbed from the list temporarily, can let you know exactly what he did
when I see him again. -Scott
A14 "thunderdog"
Sorrento, Fl
In a message dated 7/27/02 2:31:04 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
jimsherlock@... writes:
<< Please advise me on some tips that allows taller folk to safely stand on
the
pegs. I have replaced my rubber ones with the Titanium ones sold by IMS but
I still don't feel in control. I'm 6'2" in sneakers. I'm almost 6'3" in my
work boots. I'm almost 6'4" with all my gear on. I have a long torso (and
kind of round one, to be honest). The length of my arms doesn't seem to
match my body, they need to be just a bit longer. What do I do? What is
comfortable for me right now is sitting on the seat, gripping the bike with
my legs, holding on to the handlebars and try to make myself a piece of the
machine. Which is why I get to pick the bike up a lot. How can taller riders
become proficient in standing and riding rough terrain.
Jim
Cedar Creek, Texas >>
-
- Posts: 139
- Joined: Wed Jul 24, 2002 7:55 pm
rebuilding stock shock
Gotcha covered there. Contact "Precision Concepts" in El Cajon, California.
Elden Carl turned me on to them, had them do my shock and I'm smiling from
ear to ear. The telephone number is (619) 593-7473. Tell them Jim Sherlock
sent you and you guys can discuss how you want it done. I had mine done with
the Elden Carl treatment. He frequently rides offroad on the KLR two up. So
I knew that that rebuild would work for me. Plus, they have other choices as
well and its cheaper than an aftermarket shock. They can do the forks, too.
They take them apart, hard anodize the lower legs, install Race Tech Gold
Valves, or cartridges, tune it for the KLR, and spring it to your desire.
Diane is very sweet to talk to, Bob is almost impossible to get on the
phone. Yet somehow, between the two they get it right. I highly recommend
this shop.
Jim
Cedar Creek, Texas
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