It almost has a bellypan! My new bike!
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Yea, nice bike!!!
I've got a heavy GS Adventure bike I'll trade...................
GS's make great one ski bikes............
Oh, of course you remember, why did'nt you ride an 800 that day?
Seems to be a theme with this thread, wonder what kind of mc your average Twoski might pretend to ride?
off road rider;1363233 man Im spending way to much time on here said:Skip expresions like this, imagine the spare ten minutes you will have just before the seasonal frenzy starts again.
Or simalar to your 2Moto/KTM525/double tanker, ask your buddy Tim, remember he rode Ozzydogs.
Oh, of course you remember, why did'nt you ride an 800 that day?
Seems to be a theme with this thread, wonder what kind of mc your average Twoski might pretend to ride?
I'd say the average 2 ski rider don't ride motorcycles, they ride CVT equipped quad like a Can-Am Explorer... That probably allows them to still drink beer & ride unlike 2 wheels/one ski machines.
If some of them ride motorcycle in the summer and don't ride quad for the "training wheel" reason, then there's a potential Hawk rider there.
I stopped at the KTM dealer here in Vernon and the guy said they may fit a 2-moto kit on the new 690 dual purpose bike. (I must say that it's a really nice bike by the way) He said :"stock, this bike is 64HP !!! Add an exhaust system and work it a bit (10 more Horses) relocate the rear tank at the front (some guys did it apparently) and we're in business ! "
Then I added this : "My hawk cranks out about 150-155 horse, weights around 410# dry and has a nicely tuned CVT that holds RPM awesome in any type of snow". He said "Ooooooh, (3 sec silence), I see." (as if I was talking about something totally in another class).
Sure 64-74 horses sounds good for powering 2 wheels on pavement/hardpack dirt, but reality is that you'll need about twice as much on snow to have the same performance you get on pavement !!! And we're not talking about the transmission, if you have a wide ratio between your gears, you're f'hawked.
For me, fitting a track and a ski on a bike will always remain "Option #2". Or option #1 if you can't buy a Hawk. Snow-Hawks are the way to go in the winter time. And besides : if you have enough power to lift that ski, you won't feel that much of the weight.
Weight on the hawk is only an issue for me when the 12 GAL tank is 3/4 to full & when I roll it over and need to put it back up on its track/ski !!!
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To say we have a conversion because we cant afford a hawk is B.S.
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