Results 1 to 15 of 15

Thread: OK you Adv gurus, can you please explain this:

  1. #1
    Join Date
    18th January 2005 - 11:04
    Bike
    Yamaha DT230
    Location
    Ashburton, Mid Canterbury
    Posts
    1,050

    OK you Adv gurus, can you please explain this:

    I had the pleasure of riding the gravel route from Tuakau to Raglan yesterday, sharing rogson's Freewind & DRZ480SM (thanks again Roger). This was the DRZ's maiden gravel ride and we saw some great country but man was it dry, considering it's the NI West Coast. In fact it reminded me of how North Otago was looking just last week.
    Anyway what really surprised me was how bloody well the DRZ coped with the gravel, especially as it was shod with the std "motard" wheels & fat slicks. WTF!! This thing just blew away my two best excuses for being a shit gravel rider i.e. small front wheel & not enough grip. OK I admit that things might have got a bit hairy in an emergency braking situation. But we were still both surprised at how well it hung on in gravel (faster test by the owner, slower test by me).
    So how does it do it? All we could think of was perhaps trail bike geometry and sticky rubber.
    Any other ideas?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    26th January 2008 - 07:37
    Bike
    91 R80GS
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    5,225
    Good question. May I add to it and ask what characteristics do smaller wheels have on gravel compared to the 21 inch? Apart from going over objects easier.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    14th July 2008 - 13:07
    Bike
    Honda FT500, Yamaha WR250R
    Location
    Richmond
    Posts
    591
    Quote Originally Posted by Padmei View Post
    Good question. May I add to it and ask what characteristics do smaller wheels have on gravel compared to the 21 inch? Apart from going over objects easier.
    From my limited gravel riding experience, the 21" fronts are usually narrower and 'cut through' the loose top layer.

    My motard with 17" wheels (50 cc Suzuki SMX...) kind of skimmed over the top which didn't exactly inspire confidence. The compounding factor in this was probably the bikes light weight (sub 90kg).

    I never took my DRZSM on gravel ops: so can't comment that way, it was too shiney!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    2nd March 2004 - 13:00
    Bike
    FransAlp 700
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    14,484
    A motard on gravel is more "riding on ball bearings" than a knoblish shod machine. Mainly due to the width of the tyres.

    The 17" front makes it a bit twitchy compared to a 21" but I took the Nordie through the Rainbow no issues and that was before I learned to ride gravel and didn't know what I was doing.

    I think with the right bike (geometry/weight/tyre pressure) gravel can be good fun.

    On the wrong bike however...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    20th November 2005 - 22:24
    Bike
    WR250R DR650 Transalp650
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    4,229
    Comparing the Freewind to a DRZ480SM is probably more about the rest of the bike than just the wheels.
    www.remotemoto.com - a serious site for serious ADV riders, the ultimate resource in the making.
    Check out my videos on Youtube including... the 2011 Dusty Butt 1K - Awakino Challenge and others.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    18th January 2005 - 11:04
    Bike
    Yamaha DT230
    Location
    Ashburton, Mid Canterbury
    Posts
    1,050
    Quote Originally Posted by Transalper View Post
    Comparing the Freewind to a DRZ480SM is probably more about the rest of the bike than just the wheels.
    Fair comment although we weren't really making a comparison, even though the XF is well sorted with mods to suspension, jetting, 21" front etc.
    Performance aside (that 480 kit is awesome), the main surprise for us was how much control the motard wheels & tyres had on (dry) gravel. It wasn't "twitchy" & even crossed the mounds OK.
    I suppose the good power to weight ratio makes it easier to "point & squirt", but there must be other reasons why it went so well on gravel. It was a revelation for me anyway.

  7. #7
    After thinking a 21in front wheel was the only way to ride gravel for more than 30 years,I have changed my mind - with the right tyres my R65 streettracker is better on gravel than an ADV bike.Weight distribution (more on the front,lower CG) and some hefty trail make the front end very stable,and the square section K70's get down to the surface.I've experimented with riding corners right in the thick stuff between wheel tracks - tracks straight and true,and can power out in a slide without the front moving an inch.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    20th November 2005 - 22:24
    Bike
    WR250R DR650 Transalp650
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    4,229
    eeeek Motu that's terrible news for an avid fan of the 21" such as myself. Next you'll be telling us the world isn't flat too.
    It is however something to consider when time comes time to change bikes, that possibly some bikes may simply work just as well or even better with the horrible small fat wheel.
    Only thing left to do is discover which ones... and whether they still work on other surfaces.
    Last edited by Transalper; 30th March 2010 at 16:22. Reason: isn't
    www.remotemoto.com - a serious site for serious ADV riders, the ultimate resource in the making.
    Check out my videos on Youtube including... the 2011 Dusty Butt 1K - Awakino Challenge and others.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    14th June 2007 - 16:14
    Bike
    2007 HondaXL1000V Varadero and 14 others
    Location
    Russell, BoI
    Posts
    271
    Probably the best gravel road machine for control I've ever ridden was a 1974 Honda 350/4, with a ribbed 18" front tyre. The low centre of gravity did more for it than a 21" front wheel on any machine, IMHO. My mate Dice was 2nd in a Shell 800 on that thing.

    Its short-travel suspension did nothing for comfort on gravel - but the offset to that was a really smooth gutless motor that was a comfort advantage as well as being great for controlled wheelspinning.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    14th October 2003 - 11:53
    Bike
    BMW R100GS
    Location
    Hamilton
    Posts
    4,576
    Brother in laws CB750 used to seem nice and stable on gravel too. I think the 21"inch comes into it's own when you are going through rougher surfaces like rocky terrain, up and down banks, larger rocks, soft sand and gravel etc. On a gravel road it's not so important.
    www.AdventureRidingNZ.co.nz NZ's dedicated Adventure Riding Community
    Forums, free GPS track downloads and much more. Now over 5700 members, are you one of them?

  11. #11
    Join Date
    18th January 2005 - 11:04
    Bike
    Yamaha DT230
    Location
    Ashburton, Mid Canterbury
    Posts
    1,050
    I don't think low COG applies to a DRZ SM !! And remember we are only talking gravel, not off road.
    Any other ideas?

  12. #12
    Join Date
    14th June 2007 - 22:39
    Bike
    Obsolete ones.
    Location
    Pigs back.
    Posts
    5,390
    Quote Originally Posted by XF650 View Post
    I don't think low COG applies to a DRZ SM !! And remember we are only talking gravel, not off road.
    Any other ideas?
    Weight? I would wager the DRM doe's not load the front to much making it feel stable, particularly under power. My bike has an 18' front & feels great on the gravel until I have to brake excessively or load the front through downhil corners. All of a sudden I'm riding a 200kg bike on sports touring tyres again. A bit of throttle fix's it.l

  13. #13
    The CB750 is the worst bike I've ever ridden on gravel,so over weight and top heavy it was really unstable.Trying to work out why the R65 is so good on gravel,I think one of the most important is the amount of trail - 120mm,nearly 4 3/4 in for us old fellas.This gives stability,and in thick gravel stops the contact patch getting ahead of the steering axis.Also for getting some speed on gravel,the short stroke light flywheel engine really hooks up and drives.For instance the XT600 would wheelspin soon as the throttle was opened,and just keep on spinning...even on the hardpack,regardless of tyres.The R65 with only 27 more cc and 4 more HP is a much faster bike on seal and gravel - it will still wheelspin in the loose,but takes a lot more throttle to do so,but when it hits some hardpack it just hooks up and is gone.I can really ride this bike hard and fast....the XT600 and DT230 were just surfing on wheelspin.Getting hooked up is the way to go forward.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    16th April 2007 - 20:06
    Bike
    that black thing above the puddle of oil
    Location
    Hawkes Bay
    Posts
    2,450
    I used to run 18 inch road wheels on the DRZ400, with road tyres. It used to handle the gravel alright. Back would spin up real easy, but the front was fairly planted in most situations (without going silly). Get the tyre pressure right, and it's no drama. Certainly preferred the bight of the 21 inch with a semi knobbly though.

    But hey.....I also rode a lot of gravel on a ZX9R. That was shithouse. You certainly learn throttle control with 140hp on tap.
    Showing off for the camera since ages ago

    Barts Photos
    Barts adventure photo thread

  15. #15
    Join Date
    14th June 2007 - 16:14
    Bike
    2007 HondaXL1000V Varadero and 14 others
    Location
    Russell, BoI
    Posts
    271
    To return to the orginal question, why a motarded DR-Z400 should go so well on the Waikorea Coast road (know it well; I have a bro-in-law farming there).

    1. It's a dry gravel road. You don't need a helluva lot of grip through the surface.

    2. A bit of gravel rolling under the wider tyres will help you ride smoother, anyway.

    3. You sure don't need a huge rolling diameter on the front wheel for gravel riding.

    4. The good supension travel makes you feel comfortable, which helps a lot, as does the seating position.

    All opinion, of course (just informed by 45 years of gravel road riding; we used to live at the far end of a 40-mile gravel road when I got my first bike).

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •