I have a suggestion.  
 
 Just about two years ago, riding through B.C. towards Alaska, I rode 
 a stretch with a couple of KLR guys all through Vancouver island 
 (fantastic, highly recommended) including one Bryan Townsend.  He was 
 running MT21's and kept on saying how well they were handling on the 
 pavement.  I was skeptical, and later decided to go with a Gripster 
 as I headed toward Mexico, hoping to get a tire that wouldn't fall 
 apart in the first thousand miles as did both the Kenda I had as well 
 as an even more 50-50 tire (can{t remember which that was, like the 
 bridgestone TW 42 but chafa (a knockoff.  got my money back though.)  
 
 In the town of Mulege in Baja California, with 2500 miles on the 
 gripster and about 55% tread left (I don't know how all these people 
 get 9000 miles out of theirs, perhaps it has something to do with my 
 need for speed and my heavy luggage.  Of course, everyone seems to 
 get 50mpg too, and the only time I ever got 50 was when I crawled 
 back at 35mph from Prudhoe to Fairbanks with some other riders who 
 loved to trod) I was lucky enough to notice a gaping hole, a half 
 inch in diamater, just off-center of the tire.    Luckily the monster 
 tube was holding form, not expanding through the whole and holding 
 shape and pressure.  Talk about a long history of tire problems!  I 
 blamed this one on the route from el Paraiso to Mission San Javier, 
 they say it's the roughest of the Baja 1000, and I believe it.  
 
 I dare anyone to try and find a suitable 17 inch motorcyle in 
 Mulege.  After asking around all over town (the classic Latin 
 American scavenger hunt, an endless succession of people who send you 
 to another who they are sure has exactly what you need), one guy said 
 he had a couple of old used motorcycle tires, and I could at least 
 take a look.  I must have been the luckiest man on Earth, for upon 
 arriving to his house I saw it, dusty, half-worn, and sitting in the 
 sun atop a pile of random junk.  A Pirelli MT21.  The motorcycle gods 
 were smiling upon me that day.
 
 This MT21 was at least half used and pretty-well sun-baked, but I 
 mounted it and ultimately didn't have to mount another for three 
 thousand miles.  And Bryan was right, it handled surprisingly well in 
 the curves for such an aggressive tire.  Not bad, I thought.  
 Durability and true dual-surface performance.  And luckily for me, 
 availability.  It was the only decent tire I could find in all of 
 Guadalajara, save for a very streety Dunlop for a hundred and sixty 
 bucks.  And what did it cost me?  Seventy-five bucks.  
 
 One year and six thousand, four hundred miles later, here I am in 
 Guatemala finally ready once again to replace the only dual-sport 
 tire that ever did me right.  Of course, I rode it 500 miles more 
 than I should have, for in the last couple hundred miles I succeeded 
 in erasing all trace of the center knobs.       
 
 Admittedly I am a madman in the twisties. Without my luggage I drag 
 the footpegs, and with it and all its 175 well-placed pounds, I grind 
 my happy-trails aluminum panniers (too lazy to remount them higher... 
 anyone have some nice nylon corner pieces to use as sliders?) on 
 these windy Mexican and Guatemalan roads.  (highly suggested is the 
 carretera between Tuxtla Gutierrez and San Cristobal de las Casas in 
 Chiapas, as well as the route from Ciudad Cuauhtemoc (the border) to 
 Quetzaltengao on highway 190, the Panamerican Highway.  Alot of 
 smooth fresh asphalt through alot of that route...)  I have no doubt 
 I will surely die before reaching Tierra del Fuego, but I just can't 
 slow down, though I've tried many times. The temptation in tight 
 twisting roads is just too powerful for my weak constitution.  
 
 I say all this not to make you aware of my probably impending trip to 
 the never-ending twisties in the sky, but rather to point out the 
 road-worthiness of the MT21.  Of course, it doesn't track quite as 
 well as an 80/20 tire, but it's not so far off.  
 
 As far as off-road goes, they're far, far superior to an 80/20 tire.  
 I have three dirt road volcano summits that support this 
 supposition.  And while I must admit I have yet to really test them 
 in deep mud, with their aggressive tread I imagine they will handle 
 it pretty well.
 
 All this, and it's quiet too.  
 
 I haven't tried the D606's but with the performance I've had from the 
 MT21's, I doubt I ever will unless I find myself with an unexpected 
 gaping hole in my tread and a used D606 is the only tire 
 availabe...    
 
 A lot of words for a little advice, I realize, but nonetheless 
 there's my cent and a half.
 
 Oh, where's my camera?  As I type here in this internet cafe, next to 
 me there's a teenage girl in a brightly colored traditional Mayan 
 Huipile saving her Word file to disk and surfing the net.  What a 
 fantastic juxtaposition and commentary on modern Mayan life. 
 
 
 Ryan Bock
 KLR650A12
 SF - Prudhoe Bay - Ushuaia   May 2002 - ?
 Currently in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala
alaska tires / tires in general
- 
				squasher_1
 - Posts: 400
 - Joined: Sun Apr 25, 2004 6:13 pm
 
low beam going dim??????
I finally got my KLR running (MIA Nov, 2003). Thanks Bill M for 
 selling me your spare motor.
 
 I rode it up and down the street for a test ride. when I got back I 
 noticed the headlight was burned out. I replaced it and started the 
 bike. The beam was shining against a wall and was bright. When I 
 reved the motor the head light went dim, almost as if it were out. 
 when I let go of the throttle the light got bright again. Everytime I 
 blipped the throttle the light went dim. I switch it to high beam and 
 the light got brighter when I blipped the throttle
 
 anyone know whats wrong???????????
 
 I dont feel like taking the bike apart again 
 
 Thanks
			
			
									
									
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