kawasakid Posted December 13, 2005 Report Posted December 13, 2005 I just got my shee and found out that the guy before me smoked the clutch and tires after I rode it and before i went to get it BASTARD. What clutch should i use its stock with only k&n and PC pipes thanks Quote
Wallrat Posted December 13, 2005 Report Posted December 13, 2005 I always use barnett dirt digger. Quote
kawasakid Posted December 13, 2005 Author Report Posted December 13, 2005 thanks by the way i love the dancin girl on the side Quote
Wallrat Posted December 13, 2005 Report Posted December 13, 2005 No problem...that'll be $1 US. Quote
sheefreak Posted December 13, 2005 Report Posted December 13, 2005 If you want to go cheap I'm hearing the Tusk clutches are doing fine on low-moderate HP motors. Quote
shanYE west Posted January 26, 2006 Report Posted January 26, 2006 I'll second the Tusk kit. I put a set in my 250r and it worked great, its also dirt cheap. I think it was like $35 or somthing like that. Dont ask me how long it lasted because about a month after I put it in I hit a 660 grizzly head on in the trails and totaled the bike... sold it a week later. Grizzly only got a bent front bumper and rack. Quote
MILO Posted January 26, 2006 Report Posted January 26, 2006 I just got my shee and found out that the guy before me smoked the clutch and tires after I rode it and before i went to get it BASTARD. What clutch should i use its stock with only k&n and PC pipes thanks 448345[/snapback] that's why it's important to take another ride before actually picking it up, and paying up. then you could have told the guy to shove it, or at least gotten a price reduction. lesson learned the hard way, right?? i'd go with the tusk kit. cheaper end of the market, but seems to be pretty dependable in a slightly mod'd shee. if your shee is decked out, you'll want to step it up to something else. Quote
[email protected] Posted January 26, 2006 Report Posted January 26, 2006 I just got my shee and found out that the guy before me smoked the clutch and tires after I rode it and before i went to get it BASTARD. What clutch should i use its stock with only k&n and PC pipes thanks 448345[/snapback] i personally am running the vitoz clutch with the hinsion clutch basket and outer plate . I LIKE THE VITOZ clutch ALOT havent felt no signs of wear and i abuse the clutch alot and it just keeps on gripping ! Quote
fastbanshee4u Posted February 4, 2006 Report Posted February 4, 2006 S tock plates with barnett springs.Stock plates has less surface area than some of the after market,Less surface area with stronger springs means it can not slip as easy.I broken plates from hooking up hard on black top before they slipped and burnt the fibers.Also the steels can warp from getting hot.If you dont put alot of stress on your clutch the cheaper kits do work fine. Quote
sandman Posted February 5, 2006 Report Posted February 5, 2006 stock clutch with the use of good oil like honda gear oil. I got 14 years out of my stock 1990 clutch & I spent most of my time down in the holes at the dunes ( heat feathering etc..) Most of that time it was swimming in honda gear oil. Quote
Polish Posted February 5, 2006 Report Posted February 5, 2006 I used clutch fibers out of a yz490..........they are the same .....but are just much stronger!!!!!!!!!!!........3 stock springs / 3 barnett trust me they work awesome Quote
milo_32000 Posted February 5, 2006 Report Posted February 5, 2006 Can`t find Tusk website, give me a clue ! Thanks, Milo Quote
iceman Posted February 5, 2006 Report Posted February 5, 2006 Can`t find Tusk website, give me a clue ! Thanks, Milo 468882[/snapback] www.rockymountainatv.com Quote
2twin350s Posted February 5, 2006 Report Posted February 5, 2006 barnett dirt digger all the way.dont be cheap(tusk).run the stock springs they give you with the dirt digger kit.i slip the hell out of mine hillclimbing.holds up great.those tusk cluthces will be slippin in a year. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.