rangerboy0308
Member
- Location
- St. George
Just looking for some honest feedback on Rekluse clutches. if they are really worth all the money? thanks in advance to all who respond.
So what's the difference between a rekluse 2.0 exp clutch, z-start pro, and core exp clutch? I'm not sure which mine had but I loved it and will for sure have one by next season.
Can you get another smoking deal? Did you install it yet? Was it an easy install?I was wondering the same thing. I settled on the Z-start pro since I got a screaming good deal
My question is with the rekluse are you still supposed to use the clutch lever to shift? When you let off the throttle and shift it seems to disengage and be happy shifting. I just hope i'm not damaging/prematurely wearing my clutch but still shifting with the lever
With a Rekluse you have the option to ride it manual as if it were not event there(other than coast out at idle) or in the case of my KX450 you could go the whole day without touching the clutch literaly, my bike will start in gear clutch out, which blew me away. you can completly shift without clutch as long as your engine speed is a close match to your transmission speed. the first day I rode with a rekluse I keep using the clutch anyway life long habits are hard to break, but the second day I hardly used the clutch at all, mostly in Cherry creek when I needed to explode out of a third gear whoop in order to double out, on a MX track you would need to manual through rythem sections, but I could see an advantage to the reKluse even on a track. I believe at my age and shape I will probably never go back to not having an auto, its too nice, a guy that was riding with me last weekend asked if its making me a better rider, and my response was that Im riding better because of it, but over time it will probably make me worst rider because its too easy to let the clutch do all the critical thinking.
I'd tend to agree with it making you a better rider, but could make you worse. The way I always explain it is riding with one, you start to ride the terrain instead of riding the bike. You no longer have to think about things with the bike, you just twist the throttle. You can pay more attention to what's going on around you and less on the bike. I also have found that I can ride way longer with one and not be nearly as exhausted, sore, etc afterwards.
Ive only got the last two weeks experience with the rekluse, thus far I would agree with everything in your statement, maybe now that I dont have to focus on clutching I can become a better rider focusing on terrain, throttle control, balance, line selection etc, maybe only my clutching skills will suffer.I'd tend to agree with it making you a better rider, but could make you worse. The way I always explain it is riding with one, you start to ride the terrain instead of riding the bike. You no longer have to think about things with the bike, you just twist the throttle. You can pay more attention to what's going on around you and less on the bike. I also have found that I can ride way longer with one and not be nearly as exhausted, sore, etc afterwards.
also; I agree, less fatigue, its like you can set up for a difficult spot using less energy when you are confident that you dont have to worry about clutch control, not exactly sure why but I was able to ride longer without fatigue.