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Thread: Help me spend $9000 (KLR650, DR650 or F650 Dakar...)

  1. #16
    Join Date
    20th November 2005 - 22:24
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    WR250R DR650 Transalp650
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    I had a 2000 F650GS for 3.5years and hated the way BMW had made maintaining the thing so complicated and costly compared to my previous bikes (mostly Hondas). The GS has a 19" front wheel which I found not so good in shingle when compared to 21" wheels. (The F650-Dakar has a 21", wish i had tryed a Dakar).
    Now days i ride a 1996 Honda Transalp and I reckon it does better as an all rounder than the F650. I have more fun in the shingle now and my occasional pillion says she now fells more comfortable too. The Transalps much smoother and feels like it has more room. I have put Givi luggage and crash-bars on it and reinforced the bash plate as the stock one is only plastic.
    The DL650 V Strom caught my eye too as I believe it has better power but I was put off by the Mag wheels (not rock friendly) and another 19" front wheel and has no stock bash plate to protect that low hanging oil cooler.
    Before i bought the F650 i almost bought a DR650 but decided i would miss the on road comfort too much as i still do more sealed road milage than dirt when touring.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    19th August 2003 - 15:32
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    Quote Originally Posted by Transalper
    I had a 2000 F650GS for 3.5years and hated the way BMW had made maintaining the thing so complicated and costly compared to my previous bikes (mostly Hondas). The GS has a 19" front wheel which I found not so good in shingle when compared to 21" wheels. (The F650-Dakar has a 21", wish i had tryed a Dakar).
    Now days i ride a 1996 Honda Transalp and I reckon it does better as an all rounder than the F650. I have more fun in the shingle now and my occasional pillion says she now fells more comfortable too. The Transalps much smoother and feels like it has more room. I have put Givi luggage and crash-bars on it and reinforced the bash plate as the stock one is only plastic.
    The DL650 V Strom caught my eye too as I believe it has better power but I was put off by the Mag wheels (not rock friendly) and another 19" front wheel and has no stock bash plate to protect that low hanging oil cooler.
    Before i bought the F650 i almost bought a DR650 but decided i would miss the on road comfort too much as i still do more sealed road milage than dirt when touring.
    I've owned a F650Dakar and agree wholeheartedly.
    I also rode a Transalp recently and I think that it is the best all round adventure middle weight. The Wee Strom is not really a full on adventure bike like the Honda...

  3. #18
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    23rd January 2005 - 11:00
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    Quote Originally Posted by Adamski
    Yea XR650 R or L or 600 :spudguita


    You could chuck a new tank on the bike of your preference, I put a 21l Ascerbis on my 96 XR600 and was able to do 300-500kms desert/ road riding on a filling.

    All depends what kinda riding you'll mainly do
    Got a pic of your 2007 XR400?

  4. #19
    Join Date
    8th July 2004 - 14:56
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    The Kwaka KLE500 might be another option, they're selling them new even cheaper than a KLR.

    Cheers
    Clint

  5. #20
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    17th February 2004 - 13:09
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    Welcome aboard the site.
    I guess the best answer is to try them out and see what you feel happiest on. I have the early F650 and found it a very comfortable road bike that was quite usefull offroad, but not as good a dirt bike as my XT. The Daker is a good bike, probably the better all - rounder. the GS version is more road oriantated - better 2 up etc but depends on your useage. The V Strom I test rode once was surprisingly more fun than it looked - more so than the TransAlp which was competent if a little bland. The SuzDR and the kwacka are better trailbikes, but harder on your butt on the road.
    Have fun trying them out (they are all basically good bikes) and choose the one that fits you best.
    Experience......something you get just after you needed it

  6. #21
    Join Date
    22nd April 2005 - 21:18
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    A KTM LC4 would be the ducks nuts.

  7. #22
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    15th August 2004 - 17:52
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    Lightbulb Other ideas

    For mainly road use, sealed and gravel, I would suggest the so-called softer road-focused options like the Tranny, Wee-Strom or F650 rather than the more trail oriented models like the XRL/DR/KLR/XT. My KTM 640 Adventure is an absolute weapon in the rough, but comparatively uncomfortable on the motorway...but its the compromise I wanted. The Honda NX650 Dominator was probably a better all-round bike for formed roads, particularly with an Ohlins shock.

    Ride 'em all, buy the one that tickles your fancy. If it turns out to be not what you want, it's easy enough to buy a different one. You'll be wiser next time and have a clearer idea of what you desire - and that may change over time.

    Big tanks are over-rated. The 640 Adventure has 25+ litres which can do over 580km at steady legal highway cruise. The issue is that due to typically varying throttle loads you don't know if it has 10L or 20L left, and the reserve warning is only 2.5L (1L less than the book suggests). When full, it is unnecessarily heavy at the front, so I try to keep the fuel load to a minimum, rarely full fills but rather top-ups to cover each trip. After several trips, you have no idea how much fuel is in there! I've heard big tanks on air-head boxers can be prone to petrol tsunamis which don't help the handling; I've not noticed this on the KTM, just that it's HEAVY when full, and the suspension settings could do with being changed between full and nearly empty.

    I've never found reason in NZ to need more than about 250-ish km range. (I'm sure it is there somewhere, just that I haven't experienced it... yet.) There's no point in being a supertanker when your riding mates have to stop every 180km!! Although it is useful when the ride leader cocks up the fuel stops and you have to keep two or three bikes running to the next servo...

    An alternative is an auxiliary tail-mounted tank for those occasional longer trips. Plenty of Aussie manufacturers. Can be ported from bike to bike, unlike a large primary tank which is bike model (and worse, model year) specific and exhibits the drawbacks listed above. They also splay your knees somewhat more noticably - not very lady-like!

    Re: carbs vs the electrickery on the F650; the latter returns (reportedly) amazing fuel economy which you should factor in to your costings, particularly if you do big miles.

    Hope this helps.
    Cheers,
    Colin

    Quote Originally Posted by Steve McQueen
    All racers I know aren't in it for the money. They race because it's something inside of them... They're not courting death. They're courting being alive.

  8. #23
    Join Date
    11th January 2006 - 10:50
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    2000 Honda XR650R
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    Manawatu
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    Husqvarna TE610?

    There is a review in the latest Kiwi Rider of the 2006 Husqvarna TE610. It has a 12L tank, however the review reckons the suspension is now too biased towards offroad usage. I used to own a Honda NX650 Dominator and nothing since has surpassed it - although my current XR650R is suprisingly good on road. (If it had a bigger tank, electric start and pillion pegs it would be almost perfect). The Kawasaki KLE500 is rather heavy at 180kg. There is a continium from the XR650R , TTR600, DR650, KLR650, Transalp, BMW 650, KLE650, to the V Strom. My ideal dual purpose bike would weight no more than 150kg, have a 15L tank, be a 600-650 single or twin, have a 21 inch front wheel, electric start, skid plate, a minimal fairing, pillion pegs and be a reasonably modern design.

  9. #24
    Join Date
    19th August 2003 - 15:32
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    Quote Originally Posted by csanson
    My ideal dual purpose bike would weight no more than 150kg, have a 15L tank, be a 600-650 single or twin, have a 21 inch front wheel, electric start, skid plate, a minimal fairing, pillion pegs and be a reasonably modern design.
    KTM LC4E (sans fairing).

  10. #25
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    8th July 2004 - 14:56
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    Quote Originally Posted by Oscar
    KTM LC4E (sans fairing).
    Amen Brother! ...add a lil windscreen & the lack of fairing ceases to be a problem.

    csanson's dirt to road continuum is a good guide. The LC4E sits in between the TTR600 & the DR650, & the XT600 level pegs with the DR I reckon.

    I dunno why Honda dont make an E-start Adv version of the 650R, It's a great motor. If KTM can sell about 7 different LC4 variants y'd think that Honda could do an XR650SMR & XR650ADVR at the very least.

    Cheers
    Clint

  11. #26
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    31st August 2005 - 12:00
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    Arrow klr 650

    i have just brought the KLR, for the reasons:
    comfortable seat (beats the DR by miles)
    23l tank!
    water cooled engine
    more power than its simialrly priced rivals
    cheap enough and tough enough to drop a few times
    the US Army's choice of bike
    virtually unchanged in 15-20 years (cheap spares, proven tech)

    to make a better dirt bike just change your gearing and put some decent knob's on it, here in the waikato i prefer soft terrain knobs, cause of the topsoil and clay here, but they wear fast.

    hope its of some help

    carver

  12. #27
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    8th July 2004 - 14:56
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    Cool. If you haven't found it already advrider.com has heaps of info on the KLR's in the Thumpers section.

    I'm organising a ride in July that will suit a KLR pretty well:

    http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...614#post592614

    Cheers
    Clint

  13. #28
    Join Date
    29th December 2003 - 12:00
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    Quote Originally Posted by csanson
    ...although my current XR650R is suprisingly good on road. (If it had a bigger tank, electric start and pillion pegs it would be almost perfect)...My ideal dual purpose bike would weight no more than 150kg, have a 15L tank, be a 600-650 single or twin, have a 21 inch front wheel, electric start, skid plate, a minimal fairing, pillion pegs and be a reasonably modern design.
    I'd second the XR650R - if you value performance over convenience. Unlike the BMW, you could do some proper off-roading with it. European bikes of equivalent performance to the XR would cost much more.

    On the other hand, the KLR650 would be a good compromise - it sits smack bang in the middle of the road-offroad spectrum.
    Slob by name, not by nature..

  14. #29
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    20th October 2005 - 23:11
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    XR650R setup w/road legal? I know the L does so I guess not hard to convert the R.

    The performance in the dirt (I remember my XR600s) combined with an ability to do 600kms in a day and take it does it for me

    Still if road was your main go you could do a lot more with comfort on the BMW. The XR type bike seats and vibration get a bit tiring after 2-300km. Sore butt and arms may develop

    I'm still hoping on that XR400 ...

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