nklr v-strom correction was accessing archives nklr "other" l
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				JJNeet1@aol.com
 - Posts: 145
 - Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2000 9:32 am
 
klr250 stuff
Just got back from another one of my "break-in" rides on my 2001 KLR250.It 
 now has 475 miles.One more little back road ride under 4000 rpm till I hit 
 500 miles, and I'll do the first oil and filter change.Then I can rev the 
 mighty 250 to 6000 rpm for the next 500 miles.At least then I should be able 
 to go about 50 mph, and I can try commuting with it.Just got my two shop 
 manuals yesterday and verified that the 250 does have screw type valve 
 adjusters.The mechanic where I bought the bike told me, when I mentioned that 
 I'd heard it had screw type, had told me that, no, it has shim-under-bucket 
 valve adjustment.Guess he hasn't worked on one of these.He told me to run 
 premium gas, and I said maybe that's because it has a higher compression 
 ratio than the Super Sherpa, and he said it didn't.But thats incorrect too.I 
 have a brochure that says the SS runs 9.3 to 1, while the KLR runs 11.0 to 1.
     But I have found that, over the years, most of the time I know more about 
 motorcycles than most dealership employees.Sometimes I get some strange 
 reactions from salesmen when I start spouting spaec from memory , or 
 information on mechanical designs or features on the different bikes.Maybe I 
 should get a job in a motorcycle shop cause I can B.S. on this subject with 
 anyone(I should be able to after 37 years of exposure to motorcycles).
     Now for some gloating.During my breakin so far(revving no higher than 
 4000, and trying to vary the rpm as much as possible), I am averaging 86.5 
 miles per gallon!!!I may be able to make my 65 mile commute and use only 3/4 
 of a gallon of gas.
     I would like to bring up an incident that happened to me in the hopes it 
 may help someone avoid an accident.In 31 years of street riding, this is the 
 first time this has happened to me.I was riding along on a two lane rode with 
 several cars in my lane both ahead of, and behind me.I was going to make a 
 left turn and had had my turn signal on for plenty of time for other drivers 
 to get the message.It was clear in the oncoming lane, so I started to make my 
 left turn.Then for some reason, I happened to turn my head to the left and 
 kind of glance behind me only to see a car had decided to pass the whole 
 string of us.I came very close to becoming a hood ornament on a Buick.I was 
 able to swerve back into my lane and let the idiot pass.This was a country 
 road with a 35 mph speed limit, and I was not holding up traffic.Anyway, it 
 only takes one time.Maybe everyone else is already doing this, but I'm dam 
 sure going to look behind and to the left before I make any more left turns 
 to check for passers.
      Thanks, and be careful.
      Jon Neet
      Bonney Lake, Wa. USA
      2001 KLR250
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				Alan L Henderson
 - Posts: 712
 - Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2000 9:10 am
 
klr250 stuff
Snip!
 
			
			
									
									
						I look behind no matter what vehicle I'm driving whether it be my KLR or the 26,000lb+ truck I drive at work. Always a good idea. Alan Henderson A13 Iowa That's why we were made with heads that turn.>left turn.Then for some reason, I happened to turn my head to the left and >kind of glance behind me only to see a car had decided to pass the whole >string of us.I came very close to becoming a hood ornament on a Buick.I was >able to swerve back into my lane and let the idiot pass.This was a country >road with a 35 mph speed limit, and I was not holding up traffic.Anyway, it >only takes one time.Maybe everyone else is already doing this, but I'm dam >sure going to look behind and to the left before I make any more left turns >to check for passers. > Thanks, and be careful. > Jon Neet
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				Susan Moorhead
 - Posts: 318
 - Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2001 10:10 pm
 
klr250 stuff
Alan,
 
 Amen brother, I too drive a truck for a living, (25000 lb mixer truck) and
 can't count the number of times some moron has decided to try and pass me
 and the traffic behind me while I am preparing to make a left turn off the
 highway onto the county road that leads to our batch plant.  Seems almost
 everyone is out of patience and in too big a hurry to get where they are
 going.  I know that when I started driving big rigs, it changed my driving
 style no matter what type of vehicle I happen to be wheeling.  Just my .02
 worth.
 
 Marshall in Afton, Ok
 '95 KLXC3 "Blackhorse" (in honor of those who served)
 
			
			
									
									
						----- Original Message ----- From: Alan L Henderson To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Saturday, August 04, 2001 12:51 PM Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] klr250 stuff > I look behind no matter what vehicle I'm driving whether it be my KLR or > the 26,000lb+ truck I drive at work. Always a good idea. > Alan Henderson A13 Iowa That's why we were made with heads that > turn.> >
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				JJNeet1@aol.com
 - Posts: 145
 - Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2000 9:32 am
 
klr250 stuff
Does anyone with a KLR250 or Super Sherpa own the tank bag shown in the 
 Kawasaki catalog of 2001 off-road motorcycle accessories?I think it's also 
 for sale at www.buykawasaki.com.It looks kind of puny, but maybe its because 
 it has to fit that odd shaped tank.Also they show some plastic handguards for 
 sale that I am interested in.I think they may help to keep my hands from 
 freezing this winter.
     I have reached 850 miles on my 2001 KLR250 now.I'm doing a bit of freeway 
 riding, and revving it more now.I changed my oli at 500 miles, and it looked 
 relly clean with no disturbing chunks in it.My bike is doing about 57-58 mph 
 at 6000 rpm.My gas mileage has gone down a bit with the higher revving.I'm 
 getting76.0-76.5 mpg riding back and forth to work.I can live with that-I was 
 getting 86.6 for the first, easy 500 miles.I'm trying to decide what oli to 
 use.The bike came with Torco oil, and I put that in at the 500 mile chang.I 
 bought enough of that for the next two oil changes too.It's the "racing" oil 
 for about $4.50-$4.95 per quart.I've read articles that say that something 
 like Castrol GTX 10w-40 is as good as anything.I can get Delo 400 15W-40 oil 
 made for diesel or gas engines for $1.00 per quart from work, and one article 
 I read said this grade of oil is excellant too.
     I haven't ridden a bike this small for awhile, and its a little slow on 
 the streets fighting with the commuter traffic, but it runs and handles 
 really well.Over the coming 3-day weekend  a friend and I are going to go and 
 do some offroad exploring, so I'll get to see how it is offroad.I'm looking 
 forward to riding a bike that isn't too heavy offroad for a change.
     Jon Neet
     Bonney Lake, Wa. USA
			
			
									
									
						- 
				JJNeet1@aol.com
 - Posts: 145
 - Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2000 9:32 am
 
klr250 stuff
I'm the guy whose brand new KLR250, with only 1600 miles, started 
 knocking badly.It's still at the dealer's.It's going to take a long time.They 
 have to communicate with Kawasaki at each step of diagnosis and tear down.I 
 had hoped that the knock was from the automatic decompressor, but they say 
 no.They have pulled the cylinder head and the cylinder, and say that they 
 cylinder is not scored, and apparently the piston pin fit is still okay.They 
 are going to split the cases today (Saturday).They think the main bearings 
 may have gone out.They found the hard facing already worn off the cams.So, it 
 seems the engine has an oil supply problem.I asked them if the so-called cam 
 bearings were destroyed due to lack of oil supply(on about all Japanese 
 motorcycles they use a bolt-on cap, and the cylinder head surface as the 
 "bearings"-meaning if the cam bearing goes out, you throw your cylinder head 
 away.Exceptions were the old KZ1000 and 900 cc engines, and the old single 
 cam Honda CB750.), but they said no.This bike had an oil and filter change at 
 500 miles, and again at 1325 miles (wanted clean oil in it for a two day 
 playtime on fire service roadsnear Olympic Rain Forset in Washington State).I 
 used high quality motorcycle specific oil at $5.00/quart.
     People from this egroup had told me they had 20,000 miles on their KLR250 
 with no problems.Man, I guess I just picked a lemon. I'll let everyone know 
 how it comes out.
     Jon Neet
     Bonney Lake, Wa. USA
     2001 KLR250
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				JJNeet1@aol.com
 - Posts: 145
 - Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2000 9:32 am
 
klr250 stuff
Well, I finally got the word today on mu 2001 KLR250, just 6-weeks old 
 and with 1600 miles.It developed an oil supply problem to the top end, and 
 destroyed both cams and the cylinder head.They found sign of gasket sealer in 
 the oil supply system. My complaint about Japanese bikes for the last 35 
 years has always been that the camshafts, instead of riding in replaceble 
 bearings of some sort(either roller, or split plain bearings like a car uses 
 on the crankshaft), they insist in using the bare cylinder head AS THE 
 BEARING! So if you wear out or oil starve the cam "bearing", you get to throw 
 away your cylinder head.This is exspensive on a thumper-imagin what it could 
 cost on a high performance four cylinder.If Kawasaki used a replaceable 
 bearing, my cylinder head could have been reused. And yes, your KLR650 is 
 made the same way. I know of a few discontinued egines that did have 
 replaceable bearings as follows:The original Kawasaki KZ900-100-1100 ; The 
 original Honda CB750 SOHC engines; The older twin cylinder Honda engines such 
 as the CB305, and the 350 SOHC engines.
     Kawasaki has a policy of replacing parts on a warranty engine, and do not 
 replace the engine itself, even if it costs more in parts than the cost of an 
 engine. The parts will be here in about a week or so.
     Jon Neet
     Bonney Lake, Wa USA
     2001 KLR250
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				JJNeet1@aol.com
 - Posts: 145
 - Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2000 9:32 am
 
klr250 stuff
By the way, some of you may remember that my 2001 KLR250, bought brand 
 new at the end of July, developed an oil supply problem and destroyed the 
 cylinder head, cams, rocker arms, etc. I had done the 500 mile service 
 myself, and later, at about 1000 miles, had checked the valve 
 adjustments.Kawasaki did all the warranty work, and it was never mentioned by 
 them, about who did the 500 mile checkup.Of course, in this case, no matter 
 who did the checkup, it wouldn't have changed the fact that, at 1650 miles, 
 the engine started a serious knock due to gasket sealer plugging an oil 
 supply line.This sealer was from the factory assembly of the engine.I figure 
 that if the warranty had expired, this little job would have cost me 
 $1500.00-$2000.00.Some people had mentioned that, since the 500 miler wasn't 
 done by a dealer, that I could lose my warranty.Just wanted to let people 
 know that nothing of the sort happened.
     Jon Neet
     Bonney Lake, Wa. USA
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				JJNeet1@aol.com
 - Posts: 145
 - Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2000 9:32 am
 
klr250 stuff
I'm wondering how many miles some of the KLR250s have reached.My 
 2001,bought new in July of last year,now has 4500 miles.And the dealer had 
 the bike for at least a month fixing two seperate warranty problems.The most 
 recent was a leaking water pump/oil seal.It had been slightly leaking for a 
 while,but on an 85 mile ride up around some forest service roads it started 
 leaking badly.
     Jon Neet
     Bonney Lake, Wa.
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				gpokluda
 - Posts: 406
 - Joined: Wed Dec 05, 2001 8:50 am
 
nklr v-strom correction was accessing archives nklr "other" l
--- In DSN_klr650@y..., "gpokluda" wrote: ... In less than two weeks I've had two flats > on the rear. I have a new Distanzia on the way since riding with two > plugs in a tire is not a good idea. > Gino Correction. I have a TX66 coming for the rear tire. Gino
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