--- In 
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, Ms Fran  wrote:
 
 >
 > Again many thanks
 >    
 >   After hearing so much about this doo hicky thingy, and while 
  
doing my first Oil change on my P/O 99... I decided to see for myself 
 what this thing is... Took the side cover off and using a borescope 
 light, it was obvious it was broken....
 
 >    
 >   1st Amazment - Fred Hinks.... A two day turnaround from order to 
  
receive date is unheard of this day and age.... Fred will continue to 
 get any business I can give him....
 
 >    
 >   2nd Amazement - Russ Coley of Kissimee FL... I inquired of the 
  
list if anyone would lend me the tools.... A couple of days later, a 
 brand new, never been used set of Doo tools showed up and all he 
 wanted was postage..... A complete stranger..... Then he called and 
 offerred to assist me in changing it....Now he wants to meet 1/2 way 
 between the Fl West Coast and h is place.... He'll get his postage, 
 his tools and dinner....
 
 >    
 >   3rd Amazement - Changing the doo is pretty much straight forward 
  
and being careful, can be done by anyone.... BUT only after 
 reading/studyiing Eagle Mike's explanation and the explanation and 
 pictures of several others on other forums.
 
 >    
 >   The Green Thing and I will head to Alaska, the very end of May 
  
for about a month. Then we'll return to our place on the Blue Ridge 
 Parkway in NC for a month. Then it and I are headed back to my home 
 town in the Adirondacks where I'm going back and ride dirt roads out 
 in the puckerbrush that I hiked/camped and fished along as a kid.
 
 >    
 >   If there are any on the list that I can help in any way... Do not 
  
hesitate to call... If the majority of folks who ride Klr's are like 
 the few I've already come into contact with, then I'll be a happy 
 camper for a long time.
 
 >    
 >   Again, many thanks to all
 >    
 >   Wayne Barcomb
 >   352-597-5854 Home (Fl West Coast in Winter) (Who knows in Summer)
 >   352-428-0100 Cell (on the road)
 > 
 >  
 > ---------------------------------
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 > with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started.
 > 
 > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
 >
 
 
 
 
 
  
Thank You for posting that Wayne!. 
 I can not speak for anyone but myself, so here I go...Your experince 
 is what motorcycling should be, a Fellowship/Brotherhood&Sisterhood.
 Whiteheadian, rather than Newtonion.
 
 I would like to think that the H-D riders who passed by me when my 
 Triumph quit running are in the minority. However, there IS hope...A 
 young women went WAY out of her way to turn around and come back to 
 pick me up. She could not stop talking about her trip to Sturgis. 
 While it is not unusual for a young person to be impressed by an 
 event that size, it is encourging to learn that she took away an "old 
 school" lesson that stuck with her.
 
 After going on for quite some time about her experience, she 
 explained to me that she turned around to pick me up because...
  
 "My boy friend and I stopped and helped anyone who was broke down, 
 all the way there and all the way back. My boy friend said that his 
 Dad rode a bike and he told him that you NEVER EVER pass by a broken 
 motorcycle without offering help."
 
 Upon arriving at a gas station, I was able to contact my wife. As I 
 opened the door after making the phone call, the young lady asked if 
 I needed anything else. I replied that my wife would be along shortly 
 and I would be fine. At this point, she insisted that I sit in her 
 car, where it was cool. I took that oppertunity to try and give her 
 all the cash I had with me, and as you can imagine...she refused.
 
 My wife arrived in minutes, as I opened the door, I shoved the cash 
 into her glove box and told her to take her boy friend out to a nice 
 dinner. 
 
 My Dad rode as well, and he instilled in me this same type of 
 kindness and caring. 
 I stop, do you?. More importantly...will your son or daughter stop, 
 as long as it is safe to do so?.
 
 F.Y.I. The young lady and her boy friend rode two up from central 
 Illinois to Stugis South Dakota on a Sportster...solo. Since they 
 didn't have much money, they camped. She told me that they... 
 "Made it to Sturgis in two days. Then rode every where to see the 
 sites everyday". Because they needed to get back home, they rode home 
 in two days as well.
 
 Ohhhh...To be that young again!.........
 
 Tom,
 Central IL.