For those with experience in both, at what point on the street/dirt
 spectrum would you "break even".
 
 In other words, if you were to drive 80% street and 20% dirt, you'd
 take a the Strom 650. At 70%/30%, you'd switch to the KLR.
 
 Keep in mind, someone who rides dirt 20% of the time probably defines
 dirt as fire trails. Someone who ride dirt 80% is probably doing
 jumps, pretending to be a submarine and comes home is a complete color
 obscuring coat of mud, etc.
how much shock oil? used 130cc and it seems too little
- 
				Samuel Hudson
- Posts: 88
- Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 6:46 pm
vstrom vs. klr, part the second
Depends on how serious you want the 10% dirt to be also.  I'm willing to 
 push the klr pretty hard off road, to the point that it being less 
 breakable than a strom rules out the strom as a option for those sorts 
 of rides.
 --sam hudson, san antonio tx.
- 
				John
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Mon Jan 31, 2005 10:15 am
vstrom vs. klr, part the second
I can't say about the DL650 because I have the 1000 and I will keep it
 for street riding which is 95% of what I do on the strom. I wanted to
 do more off road so I got a KLR which seems like a good dual sport. I
 haven't ridden dirt in decades so I am still in the refreshing stage.
 If I was going to have one bike and did mostly short trips, dirt and
 one up I would probably get the KLR. If you want to do long trips,
 little off road or two up I would go with the strom but I would stay
 with the 1000. Both bikes have issues but nothing that can't be taken
 care of. 
 The seat on the strom needs tweeking, it has a hesitation at DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "thailine"  wrote:
 
			
			
									
									
						> > For those with experience in both, at what point on the street/dirt > spectrum would you "break even". > > In other words, if you were to drive 80% street and 20% dirt, you'd > take a the Strom 650. At 70%/30%, you'd switch to the KLR. > > Keep in mind, someone who rides dirt 20% of the time probably defines > dirt as fire trails. Someone who ride dirt 80% is probably doing > jumps, pretending to be a submarine and comes home is a complete color > obscuring coat of mud, etc. >
- 
				revmaaatin
- Posts: 1727
- Joined: Wed Nov 26, 2003 3:07 pm
vstrom vs. klr, part the second
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Samuel Hudson  
 wrote:
 
			
			
									
									
						willing to> > Depends on how serious you want the 10% dirt to be also. I'm
sorts> push the klr pretty hard off road, to the point that it being less > breakable than a strom rules out the strom as a option for those
Sam and others, I never met a motorcycle that I did not like, some more so than others. However, I could never imagine riding the STROM AKA a dual sport (and I have never ridden one, only judging from the pictures) to check fences or chase cows. However, I could imagine sitting at the edge of a road, looking across the prairie fields while astride a STROM, imagining how much fun it would be to own a motorcycle that could be used for checking fences or chasing cows. For ranch work, Neither the STROM nor the KLR650/250 etal is useful if you need a 4x4 hoof-drive quarter horse. Why? Sometimes a KAWboy (or KAWgal) needs a riding companion with brains..."Boss, you got to be kidding...I ain't going to take you over there!" and then spits you out (=bucks, crow-hops, bites or rolls), leaving you in "2x2 shoe- leather-drive" before you get to a point that neither of you can get out. revmaaatin. who lives where dual sport is checking fences and chasing cows PS. we have a lot of prickly pear cactus here, which wreck havoc on m/c and 4-wheeler tires and I have yet to have the quarter horse get a 'flat-hoof' from cactus. and the horse has better leg-warming characteristics than either the STROM or the KLR> of rides. > --sam hudson, san antonio tx. >
- 
				Wayne
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Sat May 22, 2010 6:47 am
how much shock oil? used 130cc and it seems too little
I don't post here much but read this and had a thought. Rarely 
 happens I know but it's winter in Winnipeg and I have lots of spare 
 time now.. 
 
 Anyways, I wonder if the KLR shock works like a front fork? That is, 
 adding more oil to the shock would increase bottoming resistance. I 
 don't think this happens with a bladder type shock (ie. remote 
 reservoir). On those you put in as much oil as the shock will hold. 
 But on the stock KLR shock the oil and nitrogen are not separated 
 (just like in the front fork). Would adding more oil decrease the 
 air space and in turn increase bottoming resistance? If so, it sure 
 wouldn't take much more oil since there's only 130cc to begin with. 
 
 Any thoughts?
 
 Wayne
 
 --- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Analog Aardvark  
 wrote:
 
			
			
									
									
						> > Matt-- > > Thanks for the reply. 130cc = 4.395 oz so I guess I'm > alright. The more I play with this thing the more I > want to do.... now I'm daydreaming about plumbing an > external WP reservoir to the thing. I think I need a > reality check. > > Thanks for the confirmation. > > -Luke > >
- 
				Mike Peplinski
- Posts: 782
- Joined: Wed Jun 09, 2004 8:55 pm
vstrom vs. klr, part the second
There are a lot of 99% paved road KLRista out there. I'm one of them. The 
 riding position, handling and simplicity of the KLR make it an easy choice. 
 If I went for the road worthiness aspect of the Strom, I probably would just 
 go with the SV650 or the Kawa 650- twin road bike. One more thing. The "SUV" 
 look of the KLR is hard to match with any other road bike. Katoom?
 
 
 
			
			
									
									
						_________________________________________________________________ Share your latest news with your friends with the Windows Live Spaces friends module. http://clk.atdmt.com/MSN/go/msnnkwsp0070000001msn/direct/01/?href=http://spaces.live.com/spacesapi.aspx?wx_action=create&wx_url=/friends.aspx&mk>From: "thailine" >To: DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com >Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Vstrom vs. KLR, part the second >Date: Wed, 29 Nov 2006 22:54:32 -0000 > >For those with experience in both, at what point on the street/dirt >spectrum would you "break even". > >In other words, if you were to drive 80% street and 20% dirt, you'd >take a the Strom 650. At 70%/30%, you'd switch to the KLR. > >Keep in mind, someone who rides dirt 20% of the time probably defines >dirt as fire trails. Someone who ride dirt 80% is probably doing >jumps, pretending to be a submarine and comes home is a complete color >obscuring coat of mud, etc. > > > >Archive Quicksearch at: >http://www.angelfire.com/ut/moab/klr650_data_search.html >List sponsored by Dual Sport News at: www.dualsportnews.com >List FAQ courtesy of Chris Krok at: www.bigcee.com/klr650faq.html >Member Map at: http://www.frappr.com/dsnklr650 >Yahoo! Groups Links > > >
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