No doubt! I had the same (almost humiliating) experience riding home on my KLX after rocketing around on the 1000 all day. I remember thinking "Is this thing running? Is the motor turned on?" And I agree, I could ride the Gixxer as my main bike. My buddy commutes to work on it regularly. Ed Duvall, WA> After the GSX-R I got back on my KLR, which felt like tank with a > lawn-mower engine. > > Arden Kysely > A11 "Mr. K"
gs defending and gsxr's- nklr
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Duvall Ed
- Posts: 255
- Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2001 12:37 pm
gs defending and gsxr's- nklr
--- In DSN_klr650@y..., "Arden Kysely" wrote:
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klr@planet-equipment.com
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2001 11:02 am
nklr slow riding
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I'd recommend you practice riding as slowly as you can, before the
test.
Get someone to walk beside you and see if you can ride SLOWER than
them by
using a combination of throttle, clutch and front brake. Once you've
mastered this the test will be a piece of cake.
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Slow riding: We used to have "slow" races at times in the SoCal
desert. Two long lines would be scratched in the dirt about 100
yards apart. Everyone would line up on one line. At the start,
everyone would head for the finish line. The last rider to the
finish line won. You had to travel in a (more or less) straigt
line. If you dabbed (put a foot down), you were out. It's quite a
sight to see 30 or 40 guys wobbling around on desert bikes at almost
a standstill.
Ron
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