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Olde Weird Tip posted:Pretty much any stock supermoto seat is like a 2x4 My WR has a pretty comfy stock seat, but I'm so fat that I compress it into a 2x4 anyhow
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# ? Jan 19, 2012 20:20 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:18 |
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Olde Weird Tip posted:Pretty much any stock supermoto seat is like a 2x4 I bought the "ergo" seat for my KTM, it's not that much more comfortable than the standard. I was thinking for longer trips to wear cycling knicks under my clothes to pad things out a little more.
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# ? Jan 19, 2012 22:32 |
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People on thumpertalk or whatever recommend some corbin seat but I'm always too lazy to actually figure out which one I need. If someone is nice enough to recommend something I can just search for on ebay that is not terrible and fits a drz400sm I'll probably buy it.
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# ? Jan 19, 2012 23:50 |
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soy posted:People on thumpertalk or whatever recommend some corbin seat but I'm always too lazy to actually figure out which one I need. If someone is nice enough to recommend something I can just search for on ebay that is not terrible and fits a drz400sm I'll probably buy it. Corbin S-DRZ-400-S is the part number. As far as I know it's the only aftermarket seat that offers a significantly wider seat. I can't comment on it otherwise, though, since I've never used one.
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 00:51 |
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Z3n posted:You ok buddy? I'm not telling what happened until you get back online, dirtbag. All in all I'm fine though, thanks for asking. Ok so for the DRZ to be V2.0 battle ready I need a new right radiator, a WHITE right shroud (ideally with the 2008 graphics, or a place I can buy that stupid sticker) , a slider that looks like this: but for the front (gotta match maaaan...) - I'm not sure what brand it is so its hard to find this particular one, it was on the bike when i bought it. Lastly my handlebars are all out of whack. The forks are good, and the bars are not bent, it looks like the risers are all out of alighment. (renthal bars) Is it as easy as loosening the bolts, wiggling the bars till they're straight and retightening, or do I need to buy some new rubber bits? The insurance guy said new rubber bits but he also said a new radiator was $400 I'll check out bikebandit, but also thumpertalk and ebay. Thanks all!
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 05:06 |
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Just loosen the long bolts under the top triple and the four clamp screws on the bar clamps, shake everything around and it should all line up. It happens pretty much every time the bars hit something solid, but it's never actually bent something in my experience. Also those sliders are stock as far as I know, maybe try bikebandit or w/e for em? Or up your street cred and make a set from skate wheels.
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 05:22 |
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Endless Mike posted:This is what they're recommending: http://corbin.com/suzuki/drz400.shtml Goddamn, not cheap. Looks better though.
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 20:12 |
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If you're just after looks SDG makes some nice looking seats. Mainly a MX brand though
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 23:20 |
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I had the Corbin on my drz and it wasnt too impressed with it. It was hard, and the wide part would rub on the upper parts of my thighs and get annoying after a while. Realistically I wasn't able to superslab much longer than my friend who had a drz with the stock seat
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# ? Jan 21, 2012 03:20 |
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I got my radiator replacement in the mail and plan on picking up some coolant tonight. is there a special kind I should be looking out for? Does pep boys carry whatever I need hopefully? Theres one a mile from my place. After that the bike is ready to rock again.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 01:55 |
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Just run straight distilled water.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 01:56 |
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Trolling or truth....? I'll do it if you say so, but currently my coolant is green vv CA weather I guess?
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 02:11 |
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What does the owner's manual say to use?
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 04:19 |
Crosspost from the questions thread: Anyone ever have problems with an LED taillight staying on with the key off? It's not either of the brake light switches - those work fine. It's also definitely not in parking mode. Bike is an '05 DRZ400SM with some form of LED taillight assembly and a small license plate LED light wired in to one of the license plate holes. We just had a huge rainstorm and the bike was caught out all night during it - anyone familiar with a specific area where water could cause this?
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 05:54 |
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BotchedLobotomy posted:I got my radiator replacement in the mail and plan on picking up some coolant tonight. is there a special kind I should be looking out for? Does pep boys carry whatever I need hopefully? Theres one a mile from my place. I've always run regular 50/50 from Walmart and the like with no issues. Some people claim that "normal" coolant contains silicates that are harmful to aluminum radiators, and that you should stick to bike-specific formulas. Whatever floats your boat. Do not run distilled water as coolant unless temperatures never drop below freezing where you live. If that's the case, distilled water works great and as an added bonus, you'll be track-legal for racing.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 06:14 |
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Fun camera angle http://vimeo.com/31334552
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 07:14 |
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FuzzyWuzzyBear posted:Do not run distilled water as coolant unless temperatures never drop below freezing where you live. If that's the case, distilled water works great and as an added bonus, you'll be track-legal for racing. There's probably still a bunch of antifreeze in the system, even with one radiator busted, so he's probably fine as is. Plus LA basically never freezes, and if it does, its not hard enough / long enough to cause problems.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 08:14 |
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Z3n posted:There's probably still a bunch of antifreeze in the system, even with one radiator busted, so he's probably fine as is. Plus LA basically never freezes, and if it does, its not hard enough / long enough to cause problems. In that case, he should just go with LA city tapwater, the minerals are plenty to keep the bike from freezing or overheating. Should he put antifreeze in more towards the summer when the temps get higher?
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 08:29 |
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Do not use tap water. Coolant usually has a bunch of other chemicals in it for anticorrosion and the like, it's not just to prevent freezing. Running the right mix is a good idea regardless of weather.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 10:11 |
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Distilled water is also great if you're sweating your rear end off at the track and need a drink. Coolant not so much. Nobody adds water wetter?
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 11:54 |
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Has anyone here ever used Evans waterless coolant? Saw Jay Leno talking about it on his site a few weeks ago and it looks pretty cool. http://www.jaylenosgarage.com/video/waterless-engine-coolant/1376127 Lots of offroader/enduro guys use it apparently. I just found a retailer in the uk that'll ship to Ireland and debating buying it. I'd be interested to hear anyones personal experience of it.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 11:56 |
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Water + wetter is the way to go in my opinion, especially if you don't have to worry about freezing weather. Wetter provides some lubrication you get with coolant (I think?), and in the event you dump coolant all over the place, well it was just some water and not weird chemically coolant. If you want to go to the track, you're set. And it will be that much easier to change coolant more regularly, since all you have to do is let water spill out (wetter is non toxic too I believe). And yeah, tap water has stuff in it that your cooling system does not want.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 15:59 |
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DRZ's
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 18:25 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:Do not use tap water. Pure water actually dissipates heat better. The only advantage of antifreeze is resistance to freezing, it's inferior as a coolant otherwise. If you're paranoid about "lubrication for the cooling system", you can throw in some water wetter. In my experience, though, there is no place for the coolant to "lubricate" anything. Never seen corrosion, either, no matter what bike I was on (multiple years running straight water in the trackbike, 50k on a streetbike in all weather over a year and a half). Z3n fucked around with this message at 21:02 on Jan 26, 2012 |
# ? Jan 26, 2012 20:37 |
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Olde Weird Tip posted:
When I first saw this I was like what the gently caress, how is that huge front wheel attached to that bike
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 20:39 |
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Z3n posted:50k on a streetbike in all weather over a year and a half). "all weather" for you is like summer for a lot of us
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 23:47 |
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echomadman posted:"all weather" for you is like summer for a lot of us That's why it's worth it to give up home ownership to live in CA.
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# ? Jan 27, 2012 03:39 |
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echomadman posted:Has anyone here ever used Evans waterless coolant? Saw Jay Leno talking about it on his site a few weeks ago and it looks pretty cool. http://www.jaylenosgarage.com/video/waterless-engine-coolant/1376127 Surprising lack of reviews online for it despite the product being 15+ years old now.
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# ? Jan 27, 2012 07:52 |
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Can anyone who's ridden dirt on both expound on the difference between your average street tire and the Distanzias? I'm trying to get a clearer picture of what I'd be giving up on the street (if anything), and what I'd be gaining off-road. I've done some trail riding on my Pilot Powers, in addition to your average light off-road hooliganism, and they were definitely more capable than I expected. Of course, the complete absence of tread (especially on the sidewalls) means off-camber or deeper-than-hardpack stuff is a non-starter, but I never expected it to handle like my mountain bike. So, how much better is a tire like the Distanzia? Will the front track better in the dirt? Will the rear grab better going up stairs and over curbs? Obviously they aren't knobbies, but what kind of improvement could I expect over my Michelins?
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# ? Feb 1, 2012 23:50 |
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I'd say they are a bit better, but still as long as you are talking mostly hard pack. The difference is you have a chance of starting out in looser stuff and not insta-crashing in small amounts of slick muck. Most of the time, there wasn't a huge noticeable difference between distanzias and the normal street tires I was running on my DRZ when I made my trips to the ORV park. Anything sketchy, was sketchy on both. On fire roads I felt the distanzias did provide some advantages and weren't so washy in a layer of gravel. They wont perform miracles. On the street, I could hardly tell that there was less grip. At anything short of hard track use, they are great street tires.
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# ? Feb 1, 2012 23:55 |
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If you've never had street tires offroad, you might be surprised how well they do. They arent dirt tires obviously, but they arent insta-crash territory either.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 05:40 |
Olde Weird Tip posted:If you've never had street tires offroad, you might be surprised how well they do. They arent dirt tires obviously, but they arent insta-crash territory either. My pilot powers even held up pretty good at this dinky little faux-mx track near by for some goofing around. Lots of wheelspin and you can't really square off corners but they did ok.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 05:41 |
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Olde Weird Tip posted:If you've never had street tires offroad, you might be surprised how well they do. They arent dirt tires obviously, but they arent insta-crash territory either. Over Christmas i rode about 1-200km on hard packed dirt on my pilot powers and they were fine. At first i was pretty poo poo scared to go above 40km/h but after a bit i had no worries at 80-90km/h. The water crossing that was a bit deeper than i expected and covered in more algae than expected on the other hand...
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 06:01 |
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Yeah, algae is a whole other world, and can take out dirt tires just as easily.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 06:05 |
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toolshed posted:I've done some trail riding on my Pilot Powers, in addition to your average light off-road hooliganism, and they were definitely more capable than I expected. But you're right, and that's exactly why I was asking - if street tires are a 5/10 on dirt, I'm trying to get a better idea if Distanzias are more like a 6, or an 8.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 06:58 |
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They're much closer to street tires than dirt tires.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 07:07 |
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It seems like distanzas only helped when I tried to tackle wet ground and mud. Otherwise regular street tires were fine. I guess it depends on where you push yourself the hardest and thus where you're going to need the most grip. My answer is on the tarmac. I still don't understand how the racers haul so much rear end in the dirt on slicks though. I'm guessing they just pin it and spin the whole way while pointing in the general direction they mean to go.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 12:22 |
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My experience of the Distanzia has been much the same as Gnaghi, it's definitely better than a more traditional street tyre, especially when there's a little mud or gravel. Wet grass and similar has put me on my arse though. I think with racers they are generally using the banking and ruts to stop them getting out of line (and a healthy dose of throttle). I have a quite heavily rutted 'goat-track' short-cut that I sometimes take which sometimes gets quite slippy. I found that keeping your weight/throttle bias firmly to the rear and using the ruts is about the only way.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 13:32 |
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Incoming wall of text.... My wife has finally decided that me getting a DRZ may not bring about the apocalypse. It looks like I'll be able to hoon it up soon. I'm really looking forward to getting back into the dirt. I have a ton of trails very close to me that are perfect for camping/long rides. I haven't been on dirt in almost 9 years now. I did race MX a bit when I lived in GA though and I spent my childhood on dirtbikes. Things are a bit different now though, I live in CA, I pay for my own bikes and I don't heal as quickly as I used to. Let's start off with the bike/budget first. I'm getting about $4700 back on my taxes this year. I should have this within the next 2 weeks. My budget for a DRZ is around $3k, but I can go higher ($3500) if the bike is worth it. Upgrades/mods are a plus, but I really enjoy doing the work on the bikes myself so stock works too. I know there are variations for the DRZ, there's the E, the S and the SM to my knowledge. Did I miss one? I plan to be doing a lot of fire-roads/trail riding and eventually I would love to do either a Baja (Not so into decapitation by a cartel though) or Alaska trip. That's a long ways off though, so would all of the DRZ's work for me or one version work better than the rest? I can and plan to add the SM wheel-set etc. later on unless I find a bike that comes with the extra's. What should I be looking at on the bikes I go see that's symptomatic of problems? Most bikes have their own special "quirks", does the DRZ have any I need to watch for? Gear! I haven't looked into dual-sport/dirtbike riding gear in a long time. I will be commuting on this bike about 12 miles each way to work. I already have a street helmet, jacket, gloves, boots and pants. Do I need to go buy a whole new gear set for riding in dirt? I know I'm going to get MX boots because I value walking, but what about knee-pads, chest protectors, spine protectors, offroad helmets and all that fun stuff? Camping, it rocks and we loves it precious... I love to go backpacking and when I lived in GA it wasn't uncommon for me to disappear on my little 250 for a few days. I use a hammock rather than a tent and I already have lightweight cookware, thermal clothing, camelbaks etc. Is there anything out there that just makes motorcycle camping "better"? I've never used hard bags before, I always just take my trusty back pack but it might be cool to have the extra storage. I tend to ride like a bit of a hooligan sometimes, are hard cases going to interfere with this? I like gadgets and I want to make sure I'm geared for war when I go out. I want to get a small pump for re-inflating my tires for street use after riding dirt. I would also like to install a 12v kit if anyone has any recommendations. I've seen some amazing stuff on ADVrider and Thumpertalk about toolkits for the DRZ. I really liked the "molded" foam mod that put all the tools just under the seat. Is there a list of exactly what tools I should carry for emergency repairs? I doubt I'll be doing a valve job on the trail, but I want to make sure I have the tools I need. My plan is to pick up a SPOT locator once I get the bike. I prefer to ride with people, but I usually end up riding alone. PS: I know a lot of this information is already in this thread. Unfortunately it's pretty spread out. I'm browsing here, ADVrider, Thumerptalk and BARF forums for bikes and advice. I'm on the central coast right between SF and LA, I hope I finally get to ride with some of you. drat I'm excited!
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 19:29 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:18 |
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As for the DRZ's. If you think you want an SM, get an SM. They come with nicer suspension and a better swingarm. You can get dirt wheels for it (the E and S wheels are direct fit), cheaper than you can get SM wheels for the dirt model. Other than that, they're all the same bike, but the E isnt street legal.
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# ? Feb 2, 2012 19:55 |