Page 1 of 2
klr questions
Posted: Thu Jul 31, 2003 12:10 pm
by desert_denizen
Question for anyone..I have 90' KLR 650. Can someone tell me the
ideal amperage for the fuses located under the seat (what a poor fuse
system.) Currently, I have a 20a for main and 15am for lighting. I
am noticing intermittent problems with starter where when key is
turned it will hesitate at times before turning over. I have check
sidestand and think it is possible short around fuse area. Plus, is
procedure to change cooling system easy? Anybody got any links to
this procedure for flushing and changing radiator fluid?
Brian
90 KLR 760
wish bike: 01'Triumph Bonneville
klr questions
Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 5:32 pm
by robert7ii
I finally bought a nice Craftsman torque wrench, one that goes low
enough in inch-lbs to be useful in day-to-day bike maintenance and
repair. It's a 3/8 inch drive, and my sockets and extensions are
generall 1/2 inch drive. If I use an adapter or an extension to use my
1/2 inch sockets, will the torque wrench still register correctly? (I
guess you could call this "necking up".)
With one exception, have owned strictly sportbikes over the years. I
have some racetrack experience; the KLR is my entry into the dual
sport world. I remember reading on this forum that a fellow had
mounted Continental Conti-Tours on his KLR and took it to a track for
a track day (among a sea of sportbikes). Now, I can't seem to find the
post--doesn't show up when I search on the tire name. Anybody have
any experience with this tire? Any tire recommendations for
supermoto-type applications?
The KLR is oscillating a bit at speeds above 80mph. It has its stock
nobbies mounted, with just 1400 street miles on them. Is this
oscillation to be expected? It's not a tank-slapper by any means, but
there is some front end hula going on, and it can get unnerving.
Thanks in advance for your time.
klr questions
Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 5:50 pm
by Stu
--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "robert7ii" wrote:
> I finally bought a nice Craftsman torque wrench, one that goes low
> enough in inch-lbs to be useful in day-to-day bike maintenance and
> repair. It's a 3/8 inch drive, and my sockets and extensions are
> generall 1/2 inch drive. If I use an adapter or an extension to use my
> 1/2 inch sockets, will the torque wrench still register correctly? (I
> guess you could call this "necking up".)
>
It will work correctly.
For a lot of the stuff that needs low torque (cam cap bolts, etc.) a
1/2" drive socket won't fit in there in the first place.
Better off to go buy a set of 3/8" sockets, they can be had from
Cratsman for what, $15 or so?
> With one exception, have owned strictly sportbikes over the years. I
> have some racetrack experience; the KLR is my entry into the dual
> sport world. I remember reading on this forum that a fellow had
> mounted Continental Conti-Tours on his KLR and took it to a track for
> a track day (among a sea of sportbikes). Now, I can't seem to find the
> post--doesn't show up when I search on the tire name. Anybody have
> any experience with this tire? Any tire recommendations for
> supermoto-type applications?
>
Whatever tire fits an XR 650 R
> The KLR is oscillating a bit at speeds above 80mph. It has its stock
> nobbies mounted, with just 1400 street miles on them. Is this
> oscillation to be expected? It's not a tank-slapper by any means, but
> there is some front end hula going on, and it can get unnerving.
Very common, loosen all the front end bits (axle, fork pinch bolts),
check the tightness on the steering stem nut, then retorque everything
after making sure it's all lined up correctly. I reckon a stock KLR
will always feel a bit unstable at high speed*.
*KLR "high speed" being anything over 70 or so.
I put a Happy Trails K9 fork brace on my '99 and the front end feels
rock solid at any speed.
> Thanks in advance for your time.
De nada, amigo!
Thanks
CA Stu
klr questions
Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 5:54 pm
by Devon
robert7ii@... wrote:
>The KLR is oscillating a bit at speeds above 80mph. It has its stock
>nobbies mounted, with just 1400 street miles on them. Is this
>oscillation to be expected? It's not a tank-slapper by any means, but
>there is some front end hula going on, and it can get unnerving.
>
>
There is some variation among KLR front ends (the tooling is 17 years
old after all). That's why some people insist the KLR has a decent front
end, some swear it's crap and desperately needs a fork brace. They're
both right!
I had to replace the forks due to crash damage, and the second set of
stock forks I had were MUCH better than the first, and required
completely different oil weight to get the same feel and performance.
It sounds like you could use a fork brace. But before you spend the
money (the happy-trail.com "K-9" was my favorite) do all the usual
stuff- check the front axle torque, steering bearings, wheel bearings,
swingarm bearings, rear axle torque, etc.....
Devon
klr questions
Posted: Sat Oct 09, 2004 11:00 pm
by JJNeet1@aol.com
I've been thinking about going from my 2001 KLR250 to a KLR650.Since I
sold my big street bike, I'm pushing my 250 pretty hard to make my commute of 65
miles round trip-most on the freeways at 65-70 mph at 7000-7250 rpms.So I
have a couple of questions on the 650.What does it get in gas mileage in mpg?
Whats the range, at said gas mileage, before hitting resrve for listers? How
comfortable/uncomfortable is the seat for longer rides?
Thanks, Jon Neet
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
klr questions
Posted: Sun Oct 10, 2004 12:17 am
by Eric L. Green
On Sun, 10 Oct 2004 JJNeet1@... wrote:
> I've been thinking about going from my 2001 KLR250 to a KLR650.Since
> I sold my big street bike, I'm pushing my 250 pretty hard to make my
> commute of 65 miles round trip-most on the freeways at 65-70 mph at
> 7000-7250 rpms.So I have a couple of questions on the 650.What does it
> get in gas mileage in mpg?
I average about 50mpg in the city, about 45mpg on the highway at 75mph.
(It's a tall bike with alot of frontal area).
> Whats the range, at said gas mileage, before hitting resrve for listers?
I've never actually hit the reserve. I usually fill the tank back up at
200 miles, and it usually takes a little over 4 gallons at that time. I've gone 220-230 miles
without hitting reserve, but I'm not particularly interested in pushing things. Having to reach
qdown and flip that little lever is not something I'm interested in doing, for one thing I can
never remember which way it needs flipping for reserve :-}.
> How
> comfortable/uncomfortable is the seat for longer rides?
It depends on your buns. My buns apparently are well suited to the stock
seat, I have ridden 400-mile days with no real discomfort caused by the
seat. (On the other hand, I discovered every seam in the seat of my
pants, and am now considering wearing bicycle shorts under my protective
gear for any future trips of that length). Other people report that they
get "monkey butt" from the stock seat, and recommend seats by Corbin,
Russel, or others. So apparently buns differ in what they can tolerate.
I'd suspect that if you have no issues with the KLR250 seat, you'd have no
issues with the KLR650 seat.
-E
klr questions
Posted: Sun Oct 10, 2004 11:34 am
by mwl_95623
--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Eric L. Green"
wrote:
>I've gone 220-230 miles
> without hitting reserve, but I'm not particularly interested in
pushing things. Having to reach
> qdown and flip that little lever is not something I'm interested
in doing, for one thing I can
> never remember which way it needs flipping for reserve :-}.
>
The easy way to remember is ... drum roll please ... you turn it
in the direction you want to go; FORWARD!
Matt
klr questions
Posted: Sun Oct 10, 2004 2:04 pm
by Eric L. Green
On Sun, 10 Oct 2004, mwl_95623 wrote:
> --- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Eric L. Green"
> >I've gone 220-230 miles
> > without hitting reserve, but I'm not particularly interested in
> pushing things. Having to reach
> > qdown and flip that little lever is not something I'm interested
> in doing, for one thing I can
> > never remember which way it needs flipping for reserve :-}.
>
> The easy way to remember is ... drum roll please ... you turn it
> in the direction you want to go; FORWARD!
Hey look, when I'm driving and my passenger tells me to turn right, I
always have to ask him or her, "Which right?". Uhm, yes, I'm a bit
directionally-impaired

.
-E
klr questions
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2009 12:40 am
by Joel Maiorano
I became a KLR 650 owner (2004) for the first time last month. Joined the listserv and have been watching and learning. I have two questions regarding some challenges I have having with my bike.
1. In order not to get my KLR to not back fire with popping noises when I down shift, I have to run it rich (keep the choke up on it).Any thoughts on how this can be addressed.
2.Also, I am getting alot of chirping noises out of my muffler (making a funny sound). I was wondering what may cause this or is the muffler shot. Are these two problems connected?
Thanks for your thoughts. Much appreciated.
Joel
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
klr questions
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2009 6:30 am
by Tengai Mark Van Horn
At 10:39 PM -0700 6/1/09, Joel Maiorano wrote:
>1. In order not to get my KLR to not back fire
>with popping noises when I down shift, I have to
>run it rich (keep the choke up on it).Any
>thoughts on how this can be addressed.
Your coasting enrichener diaphragm may be torn,
but unlikely. Instead, try pulling the aluminum
plug at the bottom of the carb to access the
pilot screw and turn the screw out maybe 1/2
turn. Or, you may also have an exhaust leak, most
likely where the header meets the cylinder head.
>2.Also, I am getting alot of chirping noises out
>of my muffler (making a funny sound). I was
>wondering what may cause this or is the muffler
>shot. Are these two problems connected?
That's what we in the industry call an "undocumented feature" of the bike.
Mark