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is to make bigger tank by yourself. |
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My new KLE500
[I've just posted this somewhere else, but it may be more relevant here]
I've recently purchased a brand new '06 KLE500 and I'm extremely impressed with it. Alright, I'm not a very experienced biker and it is only the second bike I've ever owned, but don't take my word for it - my father who has 30 odd years of biking experience liked it too and he competes in trials competitions and lives and breathes classic Triumphs. So far I've clocked up 1400 miles in 6 or 7 weeks which included my daily 2 mile commute and a trip from London around Dartmoor and I can confidently say it handles traffic, motorways and rough trails with relative ease. It can cruise at 90mph although the windblast gets quite tiring over 70mph. The screen doesn't do much over 60mph and seems to direct the wind directly into your face so goggles or a full face helmet are advisable. The front brake is woeful and I've managed to knacker the front pads in only 800 miles around London, although I can't help really hammering them anyway. The more sensible amongst you might be able to resist that particular temptation and I can still get another 1000 or so miles out of the current pads. The major problem with this bike from a design point of view is its lack of identity. It can't decide whether it's a commuter bike or a trailie which in some ways is in its favour as it seems to handle both with relative ease although surpasses in neither category. The new model is down on power on previous versions due to tighter emissions regulations, however it still has plenty of usable grunt, especially around the 5,000 rpm mark. Two-up is a bit of a hassle (especially with the high exhaust), but 30-40kg of luggage shouldn't be too much of a problem. A big issue for me is the lack of a centre stand. This means I'll probably get a scott-oiler and an old rug to make servicing easier as there seems to be no obvious place to fit a centre stand as it has a large bash-plate and the exhaust ports run right under the bottom of the frame. I still haven't worked out how to service many aspects of the bike yet, but pads and oil seem easy enough. Stock tyres are Dunlop Trailmax which seem OK and have the benefit of being tubed type which made my first puncture easy enough to repair. This puncture occured due to me filtering too much and leaving the rear tyre over inflated. The reason the rear tyre was over inflated is that I couldn't work out how the hell I was going to get an air jack into the valve due to the tiny rims, chunky rear disc and sprocket. It does require some thought, but is possible. Being so tall, the bike is a bugger to get on and initally feels very heavy. To coin the cliche, all that weight disappears once it's moving. No, really, it does, this bike handles like a 125 once in first gear and the high riding position is easy to get used to. It does feel a little twitchy off road, but this stabilises at speed or with a generous amount of rear brake. I tried it following 4x4 tracks, but it should handle smoother surfaces better and isn't too heavy to pick up again, unlike a R1150GS for example. Unfortunately, all that lack of weight is deceptive, and I had a couple of hairy moments when I forgot that I was riding a 190kg motorcycle and not a 10 kg bicycle and needed a fair amount of upper body strength not to drop it. To conclude, if you want a bike that really will do everything, then this is the one. Although it doesn't excel in any one area, it really does have all bases covered and has a good reputation for reliability. If any indication were needed, try finding a secondhand model. PS: It needs a much bigger tank. Current range for mine is around 100 miles before I hit the enourmous reserve. A little more thought was needed there. http://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hub...1&d=1151006907 |
I'm pleased to see that others have positive thoughts on the KLE500.
I'm looking at setting up a bike rental business here in Otago, NZ and am seriously looking at the KLE 500, as well as the Honda transalp and the BMW F650. My target market would be international travellors (and locals) and I'd see the bikes being used for 1-6 days for easy adventure/touring on sealed and gravel roads - not off-road or motorways (don't do them here :-) Therefore they wouldn't need to do the hard-out, loaded down thing many tourers do, nor would they need to do high-speed distances.They'd be kitted-out with panniers and I'll offer helmets, clothing, etc. My prioity is reliability, fuel efficiency, ease of riding and appeal to a (possibly fussy) hirer. I would appreciate your thoughts on if I've covered the bases and if the idea would appeal to you when you visit "Gods Own Country" - surely the best motorcycle destination in the world !!! |
Good choice
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Oh and it's pretty (everyone says so), has reasonable fuel economy (about 50mpg whatever that is in metric), bullet proof reliability and is well deisgned to survive knocks (just look where the gear change lever connects with the gearbox) and is very easy to ride. Most of the grunt starts around 5,000rpm, so tell your riders to keep it under that until they get used to it. Good luck. I may call on your services one day. |
Thanks for that reply and you raise a valid point on seat height - are there any 500 - 650 size "dualies" that have a genuine low seat height ?
I'm also 6" tall and noticed the stretch when getting onto the KLE I recently test rode. Must check if the seat can be lowered. Fuel tank range wouldn't be too much of an issue here with lots of small town suppliers. Start saving ...:thumbup1: |
Is there anyone out there who has had a KLE500 for some time and has a maintenance history with one - I'm interested to know how they take a bit of hard work. I've read somewhere that regular oil and filter changes promise a long life - has anyone got any horror stories ?
Also, has anyone opened out the air filter and put a better (open) exhaust on one - would love to know ? Cheers :thumbup1: |
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Puting open exhaust is usual what we do due to increasing of performances. KLE 500 is a reliable engine, if regular maintened no problems to reach 100.000 km without opening an engine. Just use semisinth or sinth oil, avoid mineral oil. Regulary changing filters every 6000 km and do valve adjustments every 12-15.000 km. KLE will not give you up you on the road. Weak points are poor brakes and too soft suspensions, especialy front. Altogether, very reasonable choice due to cheap price of bike. AnteK, XTZ 660 |
Kle
I own a KLE 400, and have about 22000 kms on the clock. So far no hassles. Attended an off road course with all the BMW guys, and found that the lighter bike is much easier to handle than the 650 and 1200 BM's
The only problem I had was the rubber hose between the carbs and the block moving and allowing air to seep in. Resulted in a flat spot at about 6000RPM, and quite a shocking backfire with smoke coming out the front of the bike with the loss of one cylinder. Gave me quite a fright, but was easy to fix once I found the loose clamp. |
Kle 500
I see some Kle 500s around touring long distances.
But don't know the details of gas tank,etc. It's 2 cylinders and am sure must be very comfortable to ride by lacking of vibration. Though my preference is something else. Regards, |
well the engine is used in the ex500 gpz500 gpz500s el500 and the kle500
but more people use the engine...http://www.rallytwin.com/ :clap::clap::clap: |
F650
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so just letting you know lads.... lookin forward to gettin my kle it'll look nice parked beside my TDM900 in the garage:thumbup1: TDMalcolm |
Yes please give some feedback
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Best regards Petre |
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