Well, the weekend trip definitely did NOT go as planned.
I still don't have my Renzaco seat, he's running behind and won't be working the month of September. Oh well, hopefully I'll get it in November. The stock seat might as well be a plank of wood though, holy crap is it uncomfortable! About an hour and I need a break from it....
First off met my friend, filled up both tanks at a station in Morrison that I've used before. A slab ride to Montrose in the heat. Lemme tell ya, it was HOT. My friend notices that my headlight isn't on. Hmm? I tested it all when I put the new tail light in and it worked. At a gas station I take off the fairing and look at all the wiring, everything up front is hooked up. Well, I've got my auxiliary light, so I'll just run that. Then I see that my rear wheel isn't up against both the axle stops, it's sitting off on the right some. Ugh. At just 225 miles my low fuel light pops on. Wait, what?! I'd just gone 325 miles on the last tanks of fuel before the light popped on! We were probably 40 miles from the next gas in Gunnison, hope I make it!
We get to Gunnison, I fuel up and stop for a cold drink, that's when he notices that my running light/tail light also isn't working. Brake lights work tho. Great, so that entire circuit isn't working. Oh well, let's get to the hotel in Montrose and I'll start diagnosing the lights and square up the rear axle. We get there no problem, unload the bikes, soak up some AC, then go back to my bike. Fixing the rear axle is easy, loosen the nut, give the wheel a boot and retighten it.
Under the seat there are all the connections for the rear tail light, I check them to see if one is loose. Nope. Pull the fuses and visually they look fine, we don't have a multimeter to check them. Well, I'll just deal with it. We go out for dinner/beers and meet up with a friend of Nikos. Nice guy, super good rider! I make a note to never ride with him, as his skill level far surpasses mine and he's so good that he doesn't realize how hard stuff is for us mortals.
That night one of the mounts for my CPAP face mask breaks, so I have to squish the mask against my face and the pillow to hold it into place. Sleep like total shizz. Up and at em! Big day today! Riding 550, "The Million Dollar Highway", then thru Silverton, out to Animas Forks, then onto the Alpine Loop! The entire reason for this trip was this one day of riding. Queue the ominous music to foreshadow....
So 550 is an amazing, twisty road with tight switchbacks, tons of exposure with no guard rails and amazing views. It's hard to take in the views and at the same time pay attention to the road so you don't ride off and plummet to your death.
There aren't really good spots to stop for pics, sadly this is all we got.
Roll into Silverton, which is a cool old mining town, which is being totally over run by tourists, especially this weekend. BTW, I'd never seen so many cruisers (mostly Harleys)out on the road here before, we must've seen hundreds of them. Hilariously the day before we stopped for a coffee and a snack at a place in Fairplay and a harley guy walks up in all his gear, with a 9mm strapped to his hip. Ok, Colorado is an open carry state, I have my CCW and have been in the military for 23 years but I still don't open carry, I hardly even concealed carry, just don't need to. I find it humorous that this guy, just out on a ride, felt it necessary to carry. Like it was part of his riding gear or something. But I digress.
So we get to the start of the dirt, stop to check the air in the tires (I add some to the front and take some out of the back) put on googles and turn the ABS off. On our way to Animas Forks, which is an abandoned mining town. Road there is fine, some wash board, some embedded rock but still an easy ride. I'm up on the pegs and feeling pretty good. I'm wearing my usual boots, so I can actually feel the shifter and rear brake pedal, score!
We get to Animas Forks and it's just awesome. Spend some time there wandering around and checking it out.
From here we start the climb up to the top of Cinnamon Pass and really get on the Alpine Loop. The trail is actually just across the way from the bikes in the above pic. It climbs up to the left fairly steeply with a section of fairly tall embedded rock, with some steps here and there in it. Nikos is ahead of me and thru the intercom tells me to pass him if I think he's going too slow for me. His bike is a twin cylinder and makes more low end grunt then my thumper. I consider it but decide I should stay behind him. He's going a bit too slow for me, so I try to give him some space, so I can then get back on the throttle for this section.
Well, that doesn't work too well for me and I get back on the throttle, try to go over a step maybe 6" high and lose the bike. It's a quick drop and I step off without any issues, bike is laying down on it's right side. Nikos comes back and we get the bike up no problem. A quick check and I notice it's leaking something. Initially I think it's gas, but it turns out it's coolant. Great! Looks like when the bike dropped the Safari Tank hit a bracket on the radiator, which bent and pushed a speed clip into the plastic end tank, puncturing it.
See it? Here's a close up...
So, we make the decision to head back to Silverton so I can remove the Safari tank and assess the damage better.
It's a slow leak, but definitely leaking. We think about it and decide that heading off up the passes would be a really bad idea. If the leak gets worse I'm hosed. If we pull the clip out and try to JB Weld it and that doesn't work I'm hosed. Ok, I start to call the KTM dealers in the nearby towns and nobody has a radiator in stock. In fact they're saying that it has to come from KTM and earliest I'd see it is November! WTF, this bike was made from 2008-2018 with my motor and they're still making it! Argh! Ok, let's head to Gunnison, via slab as that's where I booked out next hotel.
I was gutted, absolutely gutted. The section wasn't too hard for me, it was a simple drop and this is what happened. The irony is that bracket isn't even used by the Safari tank and the previous owner just left it there, with the speed clips installed. At the very least the speed clips should've been removed and maybe the bracket cut off entirely. Dammit!
I fill up in Ouray and I'm getting my typical 60+ mpg again. So either I got a bad tank of gas or my bike didn't like that axle misalignment. We make it to Gunnison and I stop at the KTM dealer there to see if they can search the US and try and find me a radiator. They find two places that show one in inventory. I call the first one in S. Dakota and he quotes me $1000 for it! Um, the dealer here shows it for under $400? He goes to check to see if he actually has it and turns out he doesn't. Or he doesn't wanna sell it to me for the $400 that it lists for. Dunno. Call the second dealer, which is in California and I guess they decided to close for the holiday weekend. Drat! I'll call them tomorrow to see if they actually have the radiator and will sell it to me for list price. If not I suppose I'll order one from Rocky Mtn ATV, who said they could get it in 7-10 business days, then stressed that may change, which I'm sure it will.
We go to the hotel and I try and see if I can get some QuikSteel around the clip and stop the leak
I borrow some tape from the hotel front desk and fix my CPAP mask, so at least that's done and I'll get a good nights rest.
We walk to dinner, then come back a few hours later, more than enough time for that stuff to set. I start the bike up and it starts leaking immediately. Argh!
There goes the fun way home, which would've been over Cumberland Pass, then Cottonwood Pass, then Weston Pass. Slab it is. Nikos wants to leave early since riding slab sorta stinks and we're out of the hotel at 6:30am this morning. Let me comment that Gunnison is frequently the coldest spot in the state. Yeah, it was 43F this morning and both of us just froze our butts off. My hands were popsicles! Then riding over Monarch Pass the sun is coming up and I can't see a damn thing. I really don't wanna ride off the pass here and die, that would suck. So I slow down, freeze more and we stop at the top of pass to put on sun glasses. Bike starts leaking way more. Uh oh.
Down to Salida for a really yummy breakfast at a coffee shop and I check the level in the radiator, not bad, which I'm surprised about. Fill up with gas again, another 60+ mpg, stop at Safeway for a bottle of water, just in case and then start riding again. Stop in Fairplay for a butt break and then off into the valley to head up Kenosha Pass. As I've said before, this valley is a wind tunnel. I've been lucky the last few times I've gone through it but not this morning, so got to fight the wind but made it. Another butt break in Bailey and then I attack the remaining twisties and come home.
I decide to pop off my seat and plug in my stock tail light section to see if it works. Hmm, nope. Grab my test light, open up the service manual, identify the headlight fuse and check it. Yep, it's bad. Put in the spare fuse and it pops immediately. Ok, obviously have short somewhere, likely the wiring for the tail light got squished when I reinstalled the tail/pannier racks. I'll deal with this later. Maybe much later. So I push the bike into the shed and go inside....