Starting to Hate this bike.
#52
I got the airbox out, but not before drilling a hole in it to get to that last screw.
The airbox came out pretty easily, actually. I removed the rear black plastic splash guard (the one that holds all the relays), the little "flap" that protects the swingarm, the muffler, and unbolted the shock from both ends. Then it popped right out. Sigh.
So now I need to get some JB Weld or something to patch the hole, since a new one is $76.
Okay, so I'll cut the screen out.
At first I thought the rust might have been from when it was stalling in water crossings, but that was almost two years ago (the annual Kennedy Meadows ADV trip in SoCal) in July, and it was before I ever installed the TwinAir filter or even jetted it. I remember checking the airbox for water, but there was none in there... we assumed it was the carb breather lines since they too were still routed downward.
What about it sitting outside in the rain for two months? It had a cover on it, but it still got rained on. Oregon winters are rainy as hell in December and January, but it got rained on pretty much from mid-Oct til I brought it inside just before Christmas. I only had about 1000 miles on the filter, and glancing at it through the hole, it still looked clean, so I hadn't thought about pulling it until today.
Rob
The airbox came out pretty easily, actually. I removed the rear black plastic splash guard (the one that holds all the relays), the little "flap" that protects the swingarm, the muffler, and unbolted the shock from both ends. Then it popped right out. Sigh.
So now I need to get some JB Weld or something to patch the hole, since a new one is $76.
Okay, so I'll cut the screen out.
At first I thought the rust might have been from when it was stalling in water crossings, but that was almost two years ago (the annual Kennedy Meadows ADV trip in SoCal) in July, and it was before I ever installed the TwinAir filter or even jetted it. I remember checking the airbox for water, but there was none in there... we assumed it was the carb breather lines since they too were still routed downward.
What about it sitting outside in the rain for two months? It had a cover on it, but it still got rained on. Oregon winters are rainy as hell in December and January, but it got rained on pretty much from mid-Oct til I brought it inside just before Christmas. I only had about 1000 miles on the filter, and glancing at it through the hole, it still looked clean, so I hadn't thought about pulling it until today.
Rob
Last edited by RobG; 03-19-2013 at 03:46 AM.
#59
Haha! Not having a laugh a Rob's expense but your post hits real close to home for a riding friend of mine who's on a KTM. He's not mechanically inclined either so every time something goes wrong he's off to the dealer where it inevitably takes at least $1000 and two weeks to get it back! By comparison the KLX is an absolute dream to own!
#60
Haha! Not having a laugh a Rob's expense but your post hits real close to home for a riding friend of mine who's on a KTM. He's not mechanically inclined either so every time something goes wrong he's off to the dealer where it inevitably takes at least $1000 and two weeks to get it back! By comparison the KLX is an absolute dream to own!