Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1970's

Cycle News 1972 07 04

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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By john Huetter One of the compensations for those who call themselves motorcycle journalists is the rare opportunity, that presen ts itself every solar eclipse or so, to .combine a fine new bike with open, varIed terrain and some good-rilling buddi.es. It finally happened and I went around grinning for days. It was one of those rare situations with which it's hard to find fault, but I managed. More about that later. Warren Burrell, of American Motocross in Fullerton (you may have seen some of their other German machines in the local MX tracks) made available one of the new, n ever-before-tested, there-aren't-too· -many-in-the.states-yet 175 Pen ton jackpiners. He also made available a fe-r hundred acres of private, near-virgin land high in the Tehachapi mountains of Southern California. It had to be a trail rider's dream come true. I've been motoring on tracks for the last year or so and had forgotten about that aimless kind of wandering with a bike and a buddy, tackling terrain challenges and popping over the hill to see what's on the other side. The terrain and the Penton jackpiner reconverted me. Ron Schneiders may even get me out to an enduro, if it could be on a new Penton. A lot of people have been waiting a good while for the larger KTM-powered Pentons to arti've in this coun try. On balance, the wait was probably worth it. Dedicated Penton freaks will know it was worthwhile. john Penton runs a tau t ship and leans on the KTM people enough so that you can be sure when a Penton is marketed, it's ready. The j ackpiner that was subjected to miles of club·footed, heavy handed thrashing through woods, up hills, and over desert was the motocross model, which means only that it didn't have ligh15. It is identical in almost every other respect to the Enduro modeL Actually, the enduro kit is an add-on to the basic machine. The 175 seems to combine the lightness and responsive handling of the new 125 Penton with the added power of a mildly tuned 250. The bike tested was honestly out of the crate, so there is probably a lot more to be extracted from the big-fmned flat black KTM engine. One interesting feature of the new mill is that it operates in two distinct power bands. There is a low region that is quite comfortable for picking your way through tigh t trees, over boulders and doing stand up trials-type work. Then there is a high region where the engine develops power that is definitely competitive. Wick it up there and you really fly down fire roads or across open . desert. The characteristics of the engine ask for the six-speed KTM gearbox to be used, and it is a real pleasure to do so. (Another advantage of the six evenly-spaced gears is the flexibility as to the type of competition event in .which you can use the machine.) There was never a missed shift in a full day of riding, and that was the flISt time on the bike. The box seems to prefer the assistance of the clutch, but it's not really necessary. Clutchless shifts should be an acceptable rule for most MX and "go-quick" competition. . The engine is a very tractable beastie, and will poke around indefinitely without complaining ar loading up. The massive finning also seems to do the job of dissipating enough heat so that power ________. th_0S8 n_ice_endu_ ro type __ - U The Jackpiner is just the thing for cowtrailing on a warm spring day. loss from heat buildup during long desert charges isn't noticeable. My major complaint was that the dam thing would die or start sput~ering at the top end m mos~ gears. S,?ce the Penton comes .equipped. WIth. an Amal conc~ntnc carb, I. tmmedia~e!y I?omted the fmger at the (m my opmlOn) awful Amal. Mutter, mutter, adjust the air screw, that's better but still not perfect...runs a bit cleaner. "A giant fau.lt f~und with th~. Penton", ~ent the revIew m my .head, th~ Amal IS a dog, and the engm:, doesn t have all the beans It ~hould. . ." Well, It turned out t:!'-at ~ re-Jettmg for t/;'e a1tttude, the ~amJet m the carb hadn t gotten tW.1Sted: m tIght eno~gh. A few hundred vibratlOns later, It had rotated loose, though not completely out. A multitude of sins was thereby explained. The only 'c.0nclu~ion I can dra~ from that expenence IS that an engme (OK, :md .a carb) that .per.fo~s that well ~Ith mcomplete Jettmg IS really outaslght.. Of co,:,rse, the KTM motocross machme, whIch shares the same basics, has been doing all right in the European.GPs. . . The jackpmer abounds With detaIls that reflect· the serious thought and attention that are Penton hallmarks and true of all his motorcycle designs. Self-locking aircraft nuts are at all critical places, including the axles. Audible click three-position petcocks (two of them) make shutting off and going on reserve without looking a snap. 'The tank holds 3.2 gallons very compactly. Ceriatti forks and Girlings with 60-90 sprjngs are a tremendous 1ICIj~._Th_._t ~ffIer doesn't ":"Ike any enemie.. combination for the weight and geometry of the machine. Extra large triple clamps of KTM design hold the forks to the frame. The upward sweeping pipe is tucked out of the way with a large muffler that makes it very, very quiet. There is more engine noise than exhaust noise from the 175 Penton so far as a rider can hear. The still air box is tucked away where no water can get to the filter. American Motocross replaces the dry filter with a K&N before it gets out the door. Stock waterproofing is pretty decent, based on the Penton ISDT experience, no doubt. A couple of items come up a pit short, by comparison. The skid plate has a nice mud deflector on it, but is not wide enough to completely protect the engine cases. They are exposed to the cruel world. Penton does offer an accessory bash plate that protects everything. The seat is all right if you sit in exactly the right place, otherwise there is not enough padding and the frame,and fender are definitely noticeable through the foam. I'm no lightweight but prolonged sit-down riding could get to be a drag. All controls fall in place just great if you're 5'10" or thereabouts. Probably the nicest thing about the 175 jackpiner is that it's versatile. It's a lot of things the other so-called multiple-purpose bikes should be. It will give a good account of itself in motocross (Though you may not have to worry about having the top two gears. 'Sixth is strictly for roads, anyway.j, but it will do all the other dirt things nicely. It's one competition machine you could buy for your wife and she won't feel as though she's been had. Average ladies can actually ride it. It's that tractable. You can buy a 175 Penton and go trophy in the desert on it, finish an enduro without too much trouble, nm with the 250s at your local motocross J track, or just take it out for a ride. john Penton may not }\pve intended it, but the Jackpiner represents a return, at a sophisticated level, to the competitive multi-purpose dirt bike. The jackpiner is not an economy scooter at a retail of $1050, but if you look at it as an investment, it makes a lot of sense. It will do all the stuff your current "stable" of specialty machines will do and do that stuff just as well. Available in july. Oh, yeah. You can also go cowtrailing with your buddies on a warm Spring day. The KTM engine.

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