May 26, 2013, 12:27:22 AM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
News
:
Welcome to the 6th year of The KLRWorld.com Forums!
This topic
This board
Entire forum
Login
Register
Home
Search
Member Map
Gallery
Help
Contact
The KLRWorld.com Forums - Your Kawasaki KLR650 Forum for Tech and Community !
>
Motorcycle Forums
>
Your KL/KLE/KLR250/KL250 Super Sherpa
>
New (to me) KLR 250
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: New (to me) KLR 250 (Read 1068 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
seabee12333
New Member
Offline
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec, 2011
Topic starter
New (to me) KLR 250
«
on:
December 24, 2011, 08:00:48 AM »
My first post and introduction. Live in SoCal, never had a dualsport, but have always liked Kawasaki bikes and have been looking for deals on KLRs for a while Last week I found an '85 250 on Craigslist for $600. It had only 8800 miles and ran, so I arranged a look with the owner. I was surprised to find it was a very clean bike that had been pretty well cared for. I bought it intending to catch it up on maintenance and eventually give it to my son, who just turned 16. It was raining the day I bought it, and I didn't have a helmet, so I only took it for a very short ride. The front brake didn't work at all either, so up and down the alley I went, and then parked it and made the deal. At home, we did an oil change, lubed the chain, replaced the battery, bled the air and crud out of the brake, fixed a small fuel leak, and took her for a ride. I was a little disappointed when the bike wouldn't go over 40 mph! So... I started searching the web to find info on the carb. eventually I stumbled on this
http://faq.ninja250.org/wiki/How_a_carburetor_works:_Carbs_explained
, and realized that it had to be the slide/diaphragm causing this. Took the carb out, popped the top, and sure enough, diaphragm had 4 holes in it, 2 of them were large, like 6mm long. I called a local bike shop in hopes the had one. No, but they said they could order it and have it the next day (yesterday). Well I got it installed, did half the .22 cent mod (couldn't find 2 washers that would fit inside the plastic needle "shoe") I had one in my hardware collection. Removed the snorkle, cleaned and oiled the air filter. Managed not to break my enrichener plastic piece going back together. I and very happy with the results. The little 250 was able to hit 85 mph on one stretch of open, flat road. Now I'm having second thought on giving it to my son...Maybe I'll find him another one. Actually what I have in mind is to look for a deal on a 650 for me, and this for him.
Logged
MacGyver
Moderator
Offline
Gender:
Age: 52
Location: Northeast Georgia
Posts: 2207
Join Date: May, 2008
09 KLR685
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #1 on:
December 24, 2011, 08:13:55 AM »
seabee12333
Logged
SLO-KLR
KLRWorld.com Legacy
Offline
Gender:
Age: 49
Location: Paso Robles, CA.
Bike: 2005 KLR 685 58,000! and counting
Posts: 7287
Join Date: Oct, 2006
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #2 on:
December 24, 2011, 08:22:14 AM »
to KLRWorld seebee!
Logged
Riding into the sunset......
CoastieShep
Dedicated Member
Offline
Gender:
Age: 36
Location: Citrus Springs Fl.
Bike: 2011 KLR650
Posts: 708
Join Date: May, 2011
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #3 on:
December 24, 2011, 09:13:49 AM »
Lucky son you've got there.
Logged
seabee12333
New Member
Offline
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec, 2011
Topic starter
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #4 on:
December 24, 2011, 09:39:25 AM »
Quote from: CoastieShep on December 24, 2011, 09:13:49 AM
Lucky son you've got there.
I figure in some ways a bike is better than a car. He won't have to cart around a car full of guys needing a ride, good on gas, cheap insurance, he can learn how to maintain a machine, and do mods if he wants. I did tell him that an MSF course is mandatory. He still needs his permit and all that goes along with that too. Not like when I turned 16. go to DMV, drive, turned loose on the streets!
Logged
Camas
Moderator
Offline
Gender:
Age: 103
Location: Nibiru
Posts: 5795
Join Date: Oct, 2006
Mobal Goderator
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #5 on:
December 24, 2011, 11:23:25 AM »
seebee. just had to say YOU SCORED!!!
Logged
http://www.sharetrails.org
or give up
ajeli
Certified Sourtoe
Dedicated Member
Offline
Gender:
Age: 33
Location: Mojave Desert
Bike: 2009 KLR 650
Posts: 971
Join Date: Jul, 2010
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #6 on:
December 24, 2011, 12:06:10 PM »
seabee12333. Looks like you got a pretty good deal.
What part of SoCal are you in?
Logged
Not quite right
seabee12333
New Member
Offline
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec, 2011
Topic starter
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #7 on:
December 24, 2011, 01:28:31 PM »
Quote from: ajeli on December 24, 2011, 12:06:10 PM
seabee12333. Looks like you got a pretty good deal.
What part of SoCal are you in?
San Diego
Logged
seabee12333
New Member
Offline
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec, 2011
Topic starter
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #8 on:
December 24, 2011, 03:48:31 PM »
Now I'm going to put out a question about the cam chain and tensioner. Is there a way to check these items without disassembly? should I worry about these with only 8800 miles? The engine runs fine, with very little/no noise (I can hear the chain running inside, but it sounds normal to me). Revs to 7k easily, so I'm just wondering, as I want to make it as dependable and long lasting as I can for my son. Any other recommendations or thoughts on this year would be much appreciated.
Logged
TrailRider
Banned
Offline
Posts: 1260
Join Date: May, 2007
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #9 on:
December 25, 2011, 03:43:55 AM »
Here's The Bike Bandit link you posted above also appears as a Keihin CV carburetor-specific link; stuff's generally applicable to your CVK34 on the KLR250:
http://www.gadgetjq.com/keihin_carb.htm
I doubt two washers necessary for a stock bike's needle shim; one's enough I'd think (and you say it's running right).
The cam chain tensioner's an automatic, self-ratcheting device; if it ain't broke, etc., etc., I'd say.
The KLR600 "base" factory
Service Manual
and its KLR250 supplement could come in handy; might get by with a Clymer Generation 1 KLR650 book in place of the base manual.
I believe your top speed; done 80 + mph with a 14-tooth countershaft sprocket ("closed course, professional rider, do not try this at home").
A most capable dual-sport; gets a lot out of its 250 cc's with its 6-speed gearbox.
-----------------------------
A few items you might consider for fall-down survivability; handguards (e.g., Tusk, from Rocky Mountain ATV-MC) to protect the brake and clutch levers; Ken Sean dual-sport folding rear-view mirrors; Eagle Mike mirror and clutch lever relocation bracket . . . (this last item protects the left handlebar switch-gear from grenading from mirror stem collateral damage) . . .
Logged
seabee12333
New Member
Offline
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec, 2011
Topic starter
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #10 on:
December 26, 2011, 09:47:16 AM »
I have a new question regarding the temp gauge. Mine runs on the right side of center, and sometimes gets up to the triangle, but never into the red. the fan comes on, usually when it hits the triangle. It doesn't seem like it's real hot. just wondering what other 250 riders have experienced with their bikes.
Logged
TrailRider
Banned
Offline
Posts: 1260
Join Date: May, 2007
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #11 on:
December 26, 2011, 12:58:34 PM »
Ain't no thang, IMHO, seabee12333!
My KLR250 behaves the same way.
Just a suggestion; make sure your cooling system is burped (run engine with radiator cap off 'til coolant circulates; then top off radiator and fill reservoir to FULL line). Air pockets can cause high temperature reading because of coolant flow restriction, especially at low rpm.
Logged
seabee12333
New Member
Offline
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec, 2011
Topic starter
Re: New (to me) KLR 250
«
Reply #12 on:
December 26, 2011, 01:37:44 PM »
Quote from: TrailRider on December 26, 2011, 12:58:34 PM
Ain't no thang, IMHO, seabee12333!
My KLR250 behaves the same way.
Just a suggestion; make sure your cooling system is burped (run engine with radiator cap off 'til coolant circulates; then top off radiator and fill reservoir to FULL line). Air pockets can cause high temperature reading because of coolant flow restriction, especially at low rpm.
Thanks for the input!
Logged
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
Print
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
General Forum Information
-----------------------------
=> Guests & New Members- Registration, Activation Help & Forums Available to Guests
-----------------------------
Motorcycle Forums
-----------------------------
=> Your Next Generation KLR650
=> Your Classic KLR650 / Tengai
=> The Versys Forums
=> Your KL/KLE/KLR250/KL250 Super Sherpa
=> Your KLX
=> Stablemates
-----------------------------
KLR Community Forums
-----------------------------
=> Front Page Discussions
-----------------------------
The Riding Forums
-----------------------------
=> Your Photo Ride Reports
=> Riding Gear
=> Camping Gear
-----------------------------
General News and Links Forums
-----------------------------
=> KLX Information & Vendor Links
-----------------------------
KLRWorld International Forums
-----------------------------
=> Canada
===> Eastern Canada
===> Western Canada
===> Northern Canada
=> Australia & New Zealand
=> Great Britain
=> Europe
===> Eastern Europe
===> Western Europe
=> Africa
=> Central & South America
Copyright© 2006 - 2013 KLRWorld.com
All Rights Reserved
Visit:
KLRWorld.com
Loading...