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I will never purchase another dirty ride that is not a KTM.
I just removed the front forks and the rear shock anc cleaned up in 25 minutes.
Try that on a japanese bike.
Ktm designs the shit to be worked on with as few tools as possible everything 8 10 or 13 mm. Easily accessable.
Imy KTM. I think next season I need a NEW KTM
KB
I want one
250 2-stroke. Yes please!
"Life is a tour, not a race... just stay out of my way when I'm touring!"
I had my yz forks and shock off in 25 minutes![]()
LRRS #399
MX #505
Jap bikes may be a bit harder to work on, but the difference i have found is, you have to work on them less than the KTM![]()
Yamaha
All my Jap bikes have been oil and filters..other than crash damage. I've never once had to change a fork seal on any of my offroad jap bikes.
My current KTM is to new to worry about, but the 2 before that it seemed like i was changing fork seals once per season? Water pump seal on my 525, lost track of how many times I replaced the countershaft seals on the last 2.
I do like KTM, but I don't feel they are a superior bike to a jap bike.
Yamaha
I loved my old 91' 300 exc. Of all the different bikes I've ridden that one stands out as being just about perfect... for woods riding anyway.
LRRS am #121
"So this is what your race program has become... the back of a pickup truck huh?" -PK
nice...I def. want to try out pumpkin fever sometime in the future
I'm pretty sure my next bike is going to be orange. And for what it's worth, my KTM 560 was quite a bit more reliable than most of the Jap 450s that I motored past at the track.
-Brian
15 S-Works Venge
I'd have to agree with R7, especially once the bikes begin to get older... I have found that KTM's often have strange anomolies that the Japanese bikes do not have, such as rear brake pads that last only 1 ride, or the previousely mentioned weeping fork seals, or the lower shock bearings that last a month, or fuel tanks that hug the frame so tightly that they wear through..., not big stuff, but defintely different.
None of these things would stop me from buying one, I just do not see any advantage.
Wirelessly posted (HTC EVO "DROID" : Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 2.2; en-us; Sprint APA9292KT Build/FRF91) AppleWebKit/533.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0 Mobile Safari/533.1)
I want my next streetbike to be Orange.
When I start my KTM in the morning, rules are broken. Its inevitable...
01 SV650S (RC51 eater)/07 690SM /03 300EXC/14 XTZ1200
TRACKS:Firebird/NHMS/VIR/Calabogie/California Speedway/NJMP/MMC/NYST/Palmer/Thompson/Club Motorsports
I have two pumkins right now. I have to agree that they tend to have strange little niggles that the japanese bikes don't have. I liken it to owning a ducati. If you love the feel of the ktm, the niggles are worth it. They are built much more like purpose built race machines, which make working on them a satisfying experience.