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Continuing the move to smaller, lighter bikes!
We should have a ride for bikes that make less than 80 HP at the rear wheel. All you need and more.
Good move.
Adam
Me: "Normal people wouldn't do this."
Peter: "First you have to operationalize with normal is."
I had been talking with Jerry at Valley about getting a new bike, and he mentioned the SMC right away. I was skeptical. He got 2 in (an smc and E) and they were spoken for. I looked at em and thought they looked a little longer than they should be. Then he got 2 more, and set one up for me to test ride. I pretty much told him I wanted it right after I stepped off it. That was friday, I rode the E on monday just to be sure I wanted the 17s, and bought the SMC on the spot.
He has an E left. I imagine they will trickle in as demand has been high. The KTM rep was there when I bought my bike and he said there are not many unspoken for.
He also said they will be releasing a solution for the melting blinkers soon. My shop put heat tape on the back of the blinker and it survived my first ride. He said they started drilling new mont holes on the tailpiece a little further back which angles the blinkers up out of the hot exhaust. Overall a very Ducati like situation there!
Ive wanted a motard for so long, and once I heard the maintenace I was basically sold. Then I talked to one of the salesmen, happens to be a nesr folk, and asked how long itd be to get one in, and he mentioned one was in stock. The second I sat on it I knew I was buying it.
Schleppy like, schleppy want.
It's much more of a streetbike, without being overly tame. It seems to have a lot more trail, making it stable. No need for a damper. The suspension is pretty close to roadcourse ready (read firm!) and the gearing is super tall for streetwork. It has a 6 speed gearbox and a slipper clutch from the factory.
The motor is strong, but not right off the bottom. It's kinda like having a DRZ under 5k and a 560 over 5K. But I haven't started exploring the limits yet. There may be even more waiting up high...
The brakes are the best I've sampled on a motard. hands down.
The seat is awesome for track antics because it goes all the way to the headstock. No fuel tank in the way. I find myself throwing the leg out on the street without even thinking about it.
It's just a very cool bike to ride.
Is this going to be the next ULSB weapon?
What kind of HP and torque is she putting out?
6 speed and a slipper![]()
Gino
HAWK GT Racer Expert #929
2012 CCS LRRS ULSB Champion
2012 CCS LRRS P89 Champion
2008 CCS ULSB National Champion
ECKRACING Bridgestone Street & Competition Woodcraft MOTUL On Track Media Pine Motorparts Vanson Leathers
That is a very nice bike! Congratulations!
I wish that these new light, fun singles would start arriving with more "General Street Duty" seats, though (read - wider, softer), and let the racer crowd spend the money for the more slender, harder, "upgrades", instead of the other way around.
I would also like to see more 350-500cc twins, in V or parallel configurations, slipped into these frames. IMO- This would make them more attractive as commuter bikes.
I still absolutely *love* the bike, though. The 620 RXC sitting in my garage is a beast that vibrates (and carburates) horribly, but I am sure that motor is much more refined and nothing like the old LC4.
Keep your license and registration handy! LOL!
holy crap i'm jealous. that thing is gorgeous. congrats, Paul!!
(i'm stewing with envy over here. must... have... MoTard... sooooon)
Beta 200RR
If I keep you away from mud... care to join our Dual Sport ride on Sunday?
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Beta 200RR
I'm headed for 3 crushing days of mtbiking at the Kingdom Trails, so I can't make the ride. I will definitely be dirtroading this bike. Maybe after I shag the Supercorsas though...
p.s. Backed her in for the first time on my lunch break. This could get crazy...
-Pete
NEMRR #81 - ECK Racing
Cyclesmith Track Days
Woodcraft | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
'03 Tuono | '06 SV650 | '04 CRF250X | '24 Aprilia Tuareg
What are the maintenance intervals like on that bike? When are valve adjusts, how hard/easy are oil changes? I know some of the KTMs have some interesting service procedures.
This thing has a built in hooligan setting. There are ten ignition maps that can be selected without tools. Just take the seat off and twist a little knob. Setting 2 should be labeled trouble... setting 3 for daily riding, setting 1 for newbs who want to ride your new bike.