Rich Rohrich said:little bikes with great riders are tough to deal with.
tnrider said:vic, how tall and how much do you weigh - what can one of these bikes handle
motometal said:I have ridden in the woods for over 20 years now (wow I feel old), and I have never had a bike with metal handguards.
90% of the serious woods riders I see have hand guards. I fail to see the logic. Wouldn't it be better to risk breaking a finger or two as opposed to breaking your wrist or arm? The hand guards are coming off, I will put them on only for the paved courses. :|
As a side note, the hand guards also made the steering feel heavy and less precise.
Rich Rohrich said:Anyone who has had the pleasure (or in my case misfortune) of being on the same track as AJ while he hammers the guts out of a bone stock 9hp TTR125 can attest to the fact that little bikes with great riders are tough to deal with. :)
firecracker22 said:Cons:
Get bent into end of throttle tube in a crash causing instant rev
Get bent into levers making things get stuck
Get bent up or down after crash
Get bent into weird shapes and angles
Adds that extra little bit at the outer edges that makes squeezing through trees a hassle
Harder to hang helmet from bars at rest breaks
Mounts and brackets get stripped
Makes bike look like lame-o trail geek machine
firecracker22 said:Cons:
Get bent into end of throttle tube in a crash causing instant rev
Get bent into levers making things get stuck
Get bent up or down after crash
Get bent into weird shapes and angles
Adds that extra little bit at the outer edges that makes squeezing through trees a hassle
Harder to hang helmet from bars at rest breaks
Mounts and brackets get stripped
Makes bike look like lame-o trail geek machine
MrLuckey said:So 4 of your cons are that they may bend? :coocoo: Think about what is getting bent or broken without them.
Cut another 1/4" off your bars for the next one, my helmet has no problem hanging from the bars, if you're stripping stuff thats a personal thing not a failure or con for barkbusters and the last one....well
firecracker22 said:I have run without them as often as with them. Cost me some skin on knuckles a time or two, and ONE ever clutch lever. Seeing as how I broke my most recent lever with handguards, it seems pretty even. My point was that so far, for me, it's kind of a wash.
I am running Pro-Taper Hawkins Hi bend. They measure about 29" or so, I think; significantly narrower already than standard fullsize bars. Cutting them any farther would result in not enough space to mount levers and stuff.
C'mon, can't you laugh a little? Of course I was kidding about the trail geek comment. I mean, I'm no motocrosser, that's for sure. Nikki and Jenny remind me of that every time I see them. Out in the woods I do a little better . . .
I'm not against guards. Just haven't found ones I like yet. Will pick up a set of the KTM (Looks just like the EE kind?) ones next time I'm in the shop, they're the right price and my dealer likes them.
As for how they got bent into the throttle, it doesn't take that much; both myself and one of my friends have had it happen. Dump it over on the right side, and it kinks the outside curve in just enough to catch the edge of the throttle tube. That was with the Acerbis Rally Pros.
:think: So take 1/8" off the throttle tube! Ya' gota' cut the end of it off any way.firecracker22 said:Trouble with that is that the aforementioned narrow bars don't leave enough room to move levers around. The brake lever perch is already right up against the curve of the bar, could not move the throttle housing in any farther.
Ummm, you kind of have to . . . :think:tnrider said:do you also cut the outside end off your grips when mounting hand guards?
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