I agree completely. If it is cracked, it is telling you 1) It has been
overstressed/overused, 2) It is now weaker than before, due to the cracks.
Get a new wheel for the street, as remember the tube could be punctured,
which will result in instant flat. If you want the damaged rim for off-road
abuse, then go for it.
But I would also like to know if the rims that have cracked were from bikes
that have seen a lot of off-road use, or if they were also on-street miles.
Jeff A20
In a message dated 2/16/2008 10:02:51 A.M. Pacific Standard Time,
mjearl@... writes:
--- In _DSN_KLR650@yahoogroDSN_KLR_ (mailto:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com) ,
Dave Svoboda wrote:
>
> At 03:58 PM 8/16/2007, Jeff Saline wrote:
>
> >On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 17:57:46 -0400 Tengai Mark Van Horn
> >
> > > Today, I was changing my rear tire. When I cleaned it up, I
noticed a
> > >
> > > small crack radiating from almost every spoke hole in the wheel
on
> > > the outside of the rim.
>
> Probably work-hardening, like what brought down the DeHavilland
Comet
> jetliners.
>
> >One other possibility is to just ride it like it is and watch the
cracks.
> >If they don't get worse don't worry about them and if they do get
worse
> >then do something about them.
>
> I agree. It's not like completely broken wheels are a common KLR
> complaint, and if the cracks
> don't go all the way through, well, it's not a jetliner, you
> know? I've seen similar cracks on
> mine, but until a spoke threatens to pull through, I'm not about to
> spend time and money on it.
>
> I wouldn't worry about it overmuch.
>
> - Dave Svoboda, Sandy Eggo
>
Hello Dave,
I would agree, sort of, and disagree vigorously. I would offer the
caveat, 'Where are you riding it?" But first, a 'story' from a
parallel universe, cough.
Helicopters kill people when the pilot-operator (notice: there is a
difference) kill the occupants when the principle operator, the
guy/gal at the controls, ignores the helicopters' invitation to
land. That invitation is usually vibration, stiff controls, howling
noise, (other than the nurse complaining about the pilots flight
technique, etc). Continued flight under those circumstances can
result in a messy landing.
Likewise, your KLR is inviting you to fix a pending failure by first
showing you a crack before it completely fails. Ignoring an
invitation to fix a problem as significant as a cracked wheel could
be just as catastrophic for the KLR operator as a pilot ignoring the
helicopter symptoms that suggests a near-immediate landing is prudent.
Back to the caveat: Maybe, if your KLR is a 'farm-pig' or an
trailered ORV-pig, maybe, I would ride it, but if it is a go-to-town-
KLR-pig, ride 100's of miles from home KLR-pig, or ride your kid on
the back KLR-pig, the cracked rim takes on an entire new dimension
for your personally, and for those whose impact zone your ride
through.
revmaaatin.
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