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dirt dame

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Everything posted by dirt dame

  1. dirt dame

    Inexpensive auxillary fuel cans

    I had a less than stellar experience awhile back, but once you learn your way around the site, it's easy to pick out the best vendors. I buy a lot of different and colorful riding jerseys, and some fishing tackle mostly.
  2. dirt dame

    Favorite Piston?

    I haven't bought any for a couple of years, but the last one I had, broke in a very unusual way....between the bottom ring land and the intake cutaway. Also had one that had a small blob or lump in the wristpin hole. I couldn't use it and it had to be returned. How does a lump or blob even end up in that hole? I would have thought that those need to be reamed or bored to the correct precise diameter. In the heyday of when I ran a repair shop, Wiseco was known for needing to be run a half thou. looser than what the they speified, compared to other other brands of pistons especially in modified engines, because they didn't actually expand more slowly and evenly than other brands of pistons, like they claimed. It wasn't just my finding, but a general consensus among technicians that rebuilt offroad motorcycle engines. Perhaps they have improved. Wiseco piston out of my KDX 200.
  3. dirt dame

    Favorite Piston?

    I like ProX, Wossner and Vertex. I would choose any of those over a Wiseco if possible. I have found that Wiseco pistons don't perform the way the company claims they do, and they have had some quality control issues with their products in the not so distant past.
  4. dirt dame

    New member from Menifee.

    Welcome to the forum!🤠
  5. dirt dame

    The guy with a TW200

    Welcome to the forum!😃
  6. dirt dame

    SDAR Facebook Group Cover Photo Update

    I might as well toss in a few.....
  7. dirt dame

    Howdy from East County

    Howdy there, Cookieman.
  8. dirt dame

    Adventure Bike Truth: Marketing vs Reality

    Yes, I have thought about those ads that show pros riding MX and dirtbikes. But it doesn't stop me from buying a dirt bike and going out and having fun. I know I can ride a lot of trails successfully on those bikes. I will be doing the same sort of riding, but a lot slower and not big technical things. When I see riders doing some of the same stuff in an adventure bike ad, I know the bike isn't designed to be used by somebody like me for that kind of riding. Although impressive, It doesn't even look like fun to me.
  9. dirt dame

    Adventure Bike Truth: Marketing vs Reality

    I could have probably made a video or two over the years with this title...but for different reasons.😂
  10. dirt dame

    Adventure Bike Truth: Marketing vs Reality

    Not to diminish or doubt your riding skills in any way , but in fact I would be honored to see them in action. I have seen a person or two (Uncle Cameron comes to mind) that could ride the wheels off their giant adventure bikes, all the while making it look like child's play. If i were still there local, I'd love to see you demonstrate your trail skills on a typical (for me) trail loop of 40 miles out at McCain. I was just pointing out that a large percentage of riders will never achieve the skill that the ad is selling their product with. Not may people will achieve the skill level of the people pictured in any motorcycle ad showing off the machine's potential, and that is why, to quote you "it's the carpenter, not the tool" really applies and demonstrates my comment. Everybody wishes to be be the master carpenter (although I think that there a good many more really good carpenters by comparison to really good motorcycle riders)....okay, maybe that isn't such a useful analogy. No, I don't actually have a life. And i miss my home trails.😥
  11. dirt dame

    Adventure Bike Truth: Marketing vs Reality

    The ads always show some professional offroad competitor blithely motoring his way around a bit of sandy single track, roosting berms and hopping over a rock, making average guys believe that there is a tiny chance, no matter how miniscule, that it will be them someday if they purchase the machine in the ad. They will be wrong however.
  12. I didn't see too many tracks, but those that I saw were typically lower speed tracks with more turns.I know that they raced TT at Dehesa, and I think South Bay, back in the day...or night. South Bay had racing at night under the klieg lights. The bikes that were popular at the time were Bultaco Sherpa S and Astro models, Ossa ST/DMR short track bikes, Hodakas and all the new DT,RT,AT,HT etc.enduro line up from Yamaha and the Green Streak 238 and Centurion 100 models from Kawasaki. It was a time when two strokes were coming into their own for dirt riding. Typically anything that could slide well.
  13. Back in 60s, TT was all the rage, before motocross took off in the USA. A lot of my friends in the early 70s were still riding TT events, along with quickly expanding MX events. Everybody who rode TT seemed to have a handlebar mounted compression release. It was popular belief that this helped slow the bike down...so everybody would go hurtling towards the first turn and pull their compression releases open at the end of the straight, resulting in all the bikes farting simultaneously as they set up for the corner. When motocross became prevalent, people learned that compression releases were mostly just a fad (and that they often sucked in dirt, rendering them nonoperational), and learned how to use their brakes and clutches more efficiently. TT lost it's popularity, especially at the local amature level after MX racing became established in America.
  14. Have neither of my aircooled 200s. My 220 was not plated. I had a plated KLX 300 for a while. Have a plated Beta Xtrainer 300 right now. Fairly easy to plate the two strokes up here in Wy.
  15. TT has jumps. And righthand turns. Flat track is a lefthand oval.
  16. dirt dame

    New member from Glendora

    Welcome to the forum!
  17. I would imagine that the back portion of Sky Valley road was closed during the heavy rains too. That route was a mess (and closed)in past rainy winters.
  18. dirt dame

    In-koh-pah / Stagecoach

    Phantom Canyon article way back in the early 2000s. I know the exact trail and spot. http://www.dirtfocus.com/photos2003/09-28_MacCain/mccain_index.htm
  19. dirt dame

    In-koh-pah / Stagecoach

    Just a word to the wise. Cottonwood campground has a lot of equestrians camping there. Some motorcyclists camp back there from time to time, but probably not a good mix of bikes and horses. If somebody complains, you know who will probably lose the argument. Should probably not discuss trails specific to this area on a public forum. Just sayin'....
  20. I bought my 1886 KDX 200 C1 brand new in September of 1985. Except for a brief time around 2008-2009, I owned and rode the bike until circumstances made it so that I could no longer keep it in 2023. That's a long relationship with a trail bike. Until that time, in early days, it went on many trail adventures and enduros, including a qualifier in the state of Washington in 1990, in which I managed to bronze the vet class. Later years saw the bike plated, and it never failed me on many dualsport rides such as those up in the San Bernardino mountains. Long live Bentley The KDX.
  21. As many of you might remember, we had the Valley Fire in 2020. Skye Valley Road has been closed since then due to the fire burning through the area and particularly across the road. Fortunately the area has started to re-vegetate and fencing has been replaced/repaired. Feel free to pass this information along to your members and partners. Sincerely, Gabriel Padilla OHV Area Manager Forest Service Cleveland National Forest, Descanso Ranger District p: 619-445-6235 x3433 f: 619-445-1753 gabriel.padilla@usda.gov 3348 Alpine Blvd. Alpine, CA 91901 www.fs.fed.us
  22. I never thought about how long it takes. There are always rest stops, picture breaks and side routes. the loop is an estimated 25 miles. Never paid attention.
  23. Most of the loop is fairly easy, even for larger bikes, but stretch of Corte Madera rd (formerly Espinoza truck trail)can change from year to year due to weather. Some of it would be considered intermediate in the steeper sections, and after a winter of heavy rain, there could be a lot of erosion and deep washouts.
  24. dirt dame

    Kawee's Corner

    San Jacinto River crossing, San Jacinto truck trail.
  25. I watched it several years ago. It was entertaining and informative.
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