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nklr garmin gps 376c
Posted: Wed Dec 06, 2006 9:00 am
by Bill Fargusson
Hello Group
I am a long time lurker absorbing all of the worthy data for improving
the functionality of my A19. My farkel improvements are almost
complete. The last was the Doo-hicky which was still intact. I did
replace it and used the short spring. I'll be moving to the Clear
Lake area of Northern California, Elk Mountain Road to Lake
Pillsberry. This area is great for Dual Sport and Off Road riding.
The reason for my coming out of the woodwork is to get some idea of
the reliability of the Garmin 376C. I am now using the the 3 Plus
that has limited capability. Has anyone have any input that would
help with my decision to purchase or not. Thanks in advance.
Bill Fargusson
Puyallup WA
nklr garmin gps 376c
Posted: Wed Dec 06, 2006 10:16 am
by Blake Sobiloff
On Dec 6, 2006, at 7:00 AM, Bill Fargusson wrote:
> The reason for my coming out of the woodwork is to get some idea of
> the reliability of the Garmin 376C.
Hi Bill! I'm not sure I've heard of anyone using the 376C here;
several of us (including myself) have the 76Cx or 60Cx and have found
them to be very well suited to the bike. The SiRF chipset does
wonders for lock time and accuracy.
You can search the archive and see several lengthy posts about Garmin
units if you're curious.
Enjoy!
--
Blake Sobiloff
http://sobiloff.typepad.com/blakeblog/>
http://sobiloff.typepad.com/klr_adventure/>
San Jose, CA (USA)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
you don't know how lucky you are
Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 10:47 pm
by Ian Schoenleber
Great post. I've been preaching the same thing to my friends and family
who like to talk about buying some exotic bike, usually a KTM. Heck, my
dad can hardly work on a KLR, how is he going to deal with the KTM? My
advice to other KLR riders is always the same: you don't know how good
you have it. The ease of running and maintaining this bike is amazing;
once the versatility of the KLR is considered (and I really do think
it's the most versatile bike in the world), we have a real winner here.
My other bike is a DRZ400S, it's pretty easy to live with, but still I
think the KLR takes the cake for simplicity of maintenance.
I'll be leaving in a week or so for my third run through death valley.
Hundreds of miles of 80 mph highway, hundreds of miles of 60 mph dirt
roads, sand, rocks, you name it - the KLR will do it. It won't break,
and if the muffler falls off, I can fix it with bailing wire and
zipties. I can't take the DRZ because it doesn't have the fuel range or
the highway capability, and I can't take a bigger bike because I need
decent off road capability.
I really like this bike.
-Ian "maniac" S.