@@twc9000 the neighbors wont have to put up with it for very long ...it will make the sound of the first bike in this video and then it will never run again ..
Warm them up, use good, fresh fuel, change the oil & oil filter often and keep the air filter clean. Other than that, just follow the manual for valve tolerances and change the piston & rings when you should. Remember, an hour meter is your friend!
Yes, in Europe we use RON (research octane number) and in USA they use MON (motor octane number). I run my bikes with 98E5 ethanol 5% and 98 RON. Good video. I would like to add the eight reason for motor failure. Too hard reving with too cold motor. Piston will seize in the cylinder as it expands too fast and cylinder does not have time to expand so fast so the piston to cylinder clearance gets too tight.
@@jannep6772 In some locations in Europe there's actually better fuel available. Germany has Aral 102 competition (ethanol free), Holland has some locations that sell 100+ (ethanol free) fuel. Ethanol is the octane part in fuel but it tends to make the fuel burn relatively slow. Slow is a longer combustion period and that adds up to the actual heat in the engine. Better quality fuel burns quicker and therefore runs cooler. Better fuel isn't just a higher octane value. Stuff like Sunoco, ELF, VP, Panta are completely different from the stuff you get at the gas station. I think fuel quality, besides bad maintenance and bad habits, is the main reason of engine failure, you can compensate by running engines richer to keep them cool but you really want better fuel to keep the thermal drama down. Engines are running quite high rpm's and compression, there's just a really small amount of time for a combustion to happen, you don't want slow burning fuel, it runs hot. Adding 20% extra will cool it down a little but it's a bandage.
I see a lot of people on here commenting on these items mentioned in this video as being too expensive to do as frequently as he mentions. He is pretty much referring to the people who race and are hard on these bikes, people who just neglect any maintenance. For those of you with dual sport bikes, these machines aren't race bikes. They built with different disciplines in mind and last much, much longer. Race bikes are built to produce less internal friction that returns better horse power and bang for your buck in a race setting. A WR isn't a race machine. It was built for the long haul. A true MX bike requires a bit of more attention to detail. You certainly dont want to be sending big jumps on a neglected bike. The idea behind a race model is that the rider will be doing frequent oil changes, air filter changes, top ends, etc. A true MX bike will certainly last a long time if cared for properly, but it definitely needs to be looked after. I ride a 450 and am not a crazy fast rider. C class vet. I do oil after every ride or race day. Regardless of conditions. And also a clean air filter after each ride day. It only takes a few minutes to do both of of these. I like to check my bike over after a wash. I look for missing bolts,loose spokes, debris in the oil filter that shouldn't be there, and sometimes the chain needs to be adjusted. I also check the bottom of the chain slider under the front of the swingarm because it's very thin in that area and can eat into the swing arm if worn out too far. If you are jumping your bike and ignoring the simplest maintenance item's you can pay a hefty price later. Forget about the bike but injuries are brutal. Riding motorcycles is dangerous. Why add more risk by being cheap and lazy? Know your bike, know what it was built to do, and take care of it. None of the maintenance items he mentions is super difficult, and you might learn a thing or two in the process.
@@bustjanzupan1074 he did not tell anyone the main reason 4 stroke dirt bikes fail , simply because he does not know or even have the slightest clue .he did not even mention one reason why of the failures he has seen ! He is only a parts exchanger and not a diagnostic technician
@@bustjanzupan1074 he never mentioned the main reason all four stroke dirt bikes fail. That is the valve springs become too weak in a short time to keep the valves from contacting the piston at the extreme rpms they turn ..all so the tiny hardened steel pins that hold the stacked plates together of there hyvo style cam chains that turn extreme rpm causes the hyvo style cam chain plates to wear tiny notches on the hardened steel pins to cause just one pin out of the hundreds of them to snap into sending the cam chain through the bottom of the engine case at which time the camshaft has stopped turning with intake or exhaust lobes still holding valves wide open to come in contact with a piston that is still going up and down striking the valves 233.333~ times per second causing a domeno effect of major parts of the engine to go kafu¢ken Boooom party over time to buy a complete new engine that usually cost half the price of a new bike ...or spend a little bit more and have A.J. Waggner to shoe horn one of his BUILT CR500R or a CR538R insane strokers all billet cnc milled aluminium complete two stroke engines licensed by Honda with A.J.'s adapter kits made for each brand of 450 four stroke frames . What you end up with is a king of hill , track , and drag strip that can not fail from any problems due to all four strokes because the CR500R engine does not have any parts that fail in all the four strokes which makes the two strokes of today 100% more reliable if you know how to service and maintain a two stroke , it will live longer than you. And all the specs this joker in this video tells you about to stroke engine life is all his own made up B.S. as far as my information goes about two strokes come from a time of honda's very first two stroke that was designed by only one man who was the most world famous professional motorcycle engine designer and racing tuner of all times known world wide no other than Pops Yoshimura who designed built and raced the Honda Elsinore to several Japanese Championships and then in 1974 became the instructor at honda's R&D Training Center in Milwaukee where i became one of Yoshimura's students for around five years learning all the mods Yoshimura made to the honda Elsinore as they were developed over the following years giving me hands on knowledge of everything there is to know about all two stroke engines that i was required to know to keep my job while working at a honda franchised dealership that sponsored AMA pro motocross racing... to evolve into the CR500R that A.J. Waggner by licenses through honda for 25 years has been building two stroke engines from forged blocks of military aircraft grades of billet aluminum and using forged aircraft steel dynamically spin balanced and stuffed crankshafts and transmission gears, shifting forks , counter and main shafts, couplers and special oem machined spacers where they apply..modified billet water pumps and at request engine cases special designed to except common easy to get hydraulic clutch cylinders ..wait a second , why take my word for it who knows more than most about all two strokes , here is A.J. and his website with phone number to call and talk to the guru himself...i try to keep my comments as short as possible but as you can see i know too much and so little time ...now you know too much so if you will please show your pals your new information for in the future we can all be on the same page and ready for the next level up in two stroke tuning ..just remember two strokes by design are internally supercharged at causes their power band to make pounds of boost ...four stroke can only suck, bang, and blow (into dozens of pieces parts and parts pieces in one first and last KAFU¢KEN BOOOM) BUILT500.COM if for any reason you dont like to ride red he now builds engines in flavors of blue yellow and green as well
@@Davido50 the truth . at age 73 today i was at age 25 an apprentice of "pops" yoshimura the inventor of honda's first two stroke called the "Elsinore" ever heard of one ? i doubt it ! that was the game changer as famous as pops yoshimura rip . buzz off ass hole
Much needed information to prevent the continuation of a common money sink hole in MX engine failure. I wish to add when choosing a hi competition piston it will be from std.range of 13:1 average, becomes 14:1, that must run on its specific fuel. and should stamp a note alert to stay with all the ouners when selling. other remedies can help reduce the heat by larger radiator and pumps, lower thermal fan switch, cooler in heat range spark plug, rich jetting or mapping, oil cooler in some exceptions.
Dude my roommate has an older like 02 Klx 300. He fires that thing up and jams out giving it zero time to warm up hahah been doing it for a year or two. I told him you’re going to seize that bitch up doing that. But it hasn’t yet it’s actually quite impressive hahaha.
I have a 86 kx250. It ran with a cracked piston(not the best but pretty dang good) I have only put a new piston in it. The crank is original, I run pump gas (85 to 87, cause I’m broke) I now probably have at least 50 hours on it and it is still running perfectly fine.
My 2007 Yamaha WR250F seized at about 10,000km when a tooth broke off 4th gear and got caught somewhere in the bottom end. It made a real mess. I needed a complete bottom end. (new case, cylinder, crank, rod, piston, etc.)
I always change my piston every 10 to 12 hours on a YZ125. After 10 hours you can really notice the sound and performance are getting slowly worse, that's when its time to change it. Easy job, and you keep your engine fresh. Oil I'll do every 4 - 5 hours. Also clean your airfilter after every track day, that's saves so much trouble down the road. Also a good thing to do, is to completely disassemble your bike once every year, clean and grease the parts, this way your bike stays just like new. Also it is a pretty fun winter or summer project 😉 Another tip for our two stroke lovers, dont mix your gas to lean. 1 liter to 40 liters of gas is a nice mixture. The more oil, the more power you get, piston rings will seal better creating a much better "bang" 😉
In my opinion,it's my opinion that's way to fast my friend believe it or not my friend had 340 hours on ktm sx85 before it blow up and my Kawasaki kx85 has like 160 hours i think and it's running fine yes maybe you don't get the same power out of it but i think 2 stroke if it's build right they can do easily 100-130 hours ,4 strokes i think easily 200 hours my friend has honda crf250 and he has like 170 hours and it still running fine it's my opinion and like honestly even if i want to change the piston every 10 hours i don't have that much money 🤣 like 10 hours thats like a week of riding and piston in my country are like 100 euros and avarge salary here is 1300 euros ,like its to much money for me to spent every week 100 euros that like 400 euros okey if i ride a little less lets say 2 pistons still 200 euros and then comes the gas and the oil and other things that breakes ,and you need to change brake pads🤯🤯,
Well im sunday driver on enduro with 250cr from 97. Went to 40:1 and noticed incredible difference on performance from 32:1. I dont prob have to change piston every 40h🤣
These recommended maintenance hours mentioned are absolutely correct as I am also a MX bike maintenance tech. I have never heard of this guy before but with my experience in working on many engines, I use these exact same numbers when giving advice on maintenance intervals on both 2 and 4 stroke machines. Great job!
Non-ethanol kills detonation resistance. I tune big turbo cars for a living, 91 non ethanol is a lot more prone to knock than 91 E10, despite the same rating. 91 E free is like 88-89 with E10.
I need to chime in here.. I have a different opinion when it comes to four stroke valves.. I suggest not adjusting the valves at all on bikes with titanium valves.. When the valves tighten up and the bike becomes hard to start imo tear it down and replace them because the titanium coating on the valve seats are only microns in thickness so if your valve has moved 3-10mm it's already though the coating and they need to be replaced.. I've seen this time and time again where people keep adjusting the valves and don't replace them and eventually they drop one due the shim thickness being too thin and not enough spring pressure.. The head of the valve sinks further and further into the head loosening the spring.. At high rpm valves float keepers fly off then its game over lol.. Also seen them pull the head of the valve completely off which doesn't end well either..
Every motor I have done with titanium valves I have had to send the head out with the new valves to have the valve seats recut, from my understanding the titanium coating is on the valves. Not the seats
I own a ‘99 WR-400 F Yamaha . I’ve had it now for almost 22 years ( after buying it used ) and have beaten on it numerous times in all kinds of weather & terrain. I use quality oil, clean my air filter , and go over the bike usually before every ride , checking the usual stuff, coolant & oil level , chain , nuts / bolts , the spokes, tire pressures etc , and it has only had ONE valve adjustment, and since my ownership NEVER Had the top end apart for a new piston , rings , bore job , NOTHING. I swear this this is like a cockroach, I haven’t been able to kill it yet . Did I also mention it is street legal & gets ridden at freeway speeds to & from trail rides ?? That old 5 valve thumper has been the most reliable bike I have EVER OWNED , hands down. It’s jetted properly, starts cold usually within one or two good kicks ( ever since I learned it’s ways) and hot usually within a couple more or less using hot start lever on carb. It has a 3-1/2 gallon I.M.S. Tank and it still gets around 30-35 mpg when ridden hard , and around 40 mpg or more , at lighter throttle . I’ll probably never be able to afford a new $10, 000 plus anything dirt bike these days, so I try to take care of what I can currently on my own as much as possible. Oh , I also run a Scott’s brand stainless steel cleanable oil filter & have a spare one as well and a spare Twin-air brand air filter cleaned & oiled & ready for service times . Once swapped in the bike I then clean the ones that just came out & bag them in zip lock baggies for next go -round, usually in 500 miles or so . Take care of your machine & it will provide you with years ( decades ) of service . One more thing , DON’T pressure wash the crap outta your bike after each ride !!! This causes more damage than most people think due to water getting into places it shouldn’t. A little dust on things doesn’t do near the damage as a little water & eventually rust will . C-ya 😎👍
I have 900 hrs on my WR250f and it too is 100% stock and I raced it and ride in the rocky woods on PA. Valve adjustment is key if you run them at high rpms but if you run them in the woods they just keep going...
We have your exact bike. 99 WR400F and we bought it about a year and a half ago and we bought it supposedly "perfectly fine" but after we couldn't start it we took it to a dealer and discovered the head was over-torqued. Squished the aluminum head and the owner was able to revive the head and it has been perfectly fine since. We have done the HotCams auto-decompression cam to remove the fussy decompression lever and the bike is absolutely bulletproof. I agree with you. these early 5-valve Yamaha's are indestructible. I don't even know how many hours our motor has as for it never had a rebuild (on the previous owner and us). All that was done was oil changes and an air filter. We also took off the airbox snorkel to give it extra power. It also has a cheap Chinese carb on it since the OEM carbs are really expensive but after all of that it is a tough tough TOUGH bike.
@@kmx509 Just now saw your reply to my post about my ‘99. I don’t know HOW mine has survived my abuse all these years , but it has !! All you gotta do is give ‘em a little love & attention every now & then it seems. Enjoy your bike man😎👍
Got a 1987 TRX250X, pretty sure it was never torn apart, even the tires and rims were original when I bought it off the original owner, rear end definitely got damaged cause all the missing stuff but still ran til recently
VP Racce gas plus additive. Also don't forget Startron. It Mets out the varnish through entire system as it's an additive. It doesn't take much but you'll notice the bike starts right up and knowing you're not gumming up the jets and cylinder with horsepower sucking varnish! 2 and 4 stroke as well!
very informative ? lf you didnt know that you should change the oil once in a while and clean the air filter and splash some fresh gas in the tank is all that was said and never did the video answer the main reason 4t dirt bikes blow up ,,so if you own one sooner or later its going to self detonate because you still have not been told the real reason why all 4t dirt bikes will all fail that will never happen to a two stroke simply because they do not have any of the parts all 4t dirt bike engines have that causes to fail in the first place ..since you are a millennial who always rudely interrupt their elders and try to correct as you all believe we are to old to know anything ...so i say i know exactly what will fail in all four strokes that even after the parts are changed out their will come a time where those same parts will have to be changed out again ,,and if you allow them to go on beyond and fail they will cause more damage and destruction than the cost of and complete brand new engine ..and go now and figure it all out by yourselves as i am never going to tell any millennial anything at all about everything that you have been purposely lied to about that will cause you to fu
Replace the valve springs and cam chain with stock OEM . No aftermarket stuff...put a small piece rope in the spark plug hole with the piston up against it When intakes and exhausts are closed .this will allow you the change springs without removing the head..you can change the cam chain on the XR without removing the head or splitting the engine cases... The husaberg i know nothing about . It may have bee hive titanium valve springs that dont wear out
U.S. fuel is the same octane. They just use a different way of measuring it. European fuel would also come out to be 87 octane etc if it wass measured the same.
You had 98 RON in Slovakia which is equivalent to 93 octane gas in North America. 2 Strokes do love high octane fuel but any 93 pump gas at least here in Canada is not going to damage your engine.
KTM bottom ends that use a plain bearing last pretty much the life of the bike, or four times longer than needle bearing bottom ends. I had a 2013 250sxf for 9 years, track bike and never needed to change it. Only top ends at 80 hours. Never a failure or any problems. I change oil when it starts getting darker usually 6 hours or more. Use a nice air filter that is dense inside, even if it gets dirty outside no dirt will ever get in. Still have to clean it though, use dawn or filter safe cleaner. Never ever use gasoline to clean a filter.
does the gas degrade the foam? i know they feel weird after being in gas, but to me they always recover just fine when dry. i use gas first, fully dry them, then use the soapy water last. then fully dry. i've also always used grease at the seal. most guys don't but i cant bring myself to trust no grease.
@yukonjon5964 I rinse tge dirt off with a hose, then I buy WD40 by the gallon. I use WD40 to break down the filter oil, then rinse again, then Dawn and water. Rinse and oil it. I don't use hot water as it can break down the glue that holds the filter together. I never use gasoline. It definitely breaks down the foam I also keep several air filters in rotation. Always a clean and oiled fresh ready. I change my air filter and oil every single ride day. It's easy to do and worth the peace if mind. I live in Florida. The sand here is incredible and gets everywhere. I don't take chances with it.
@WealthMafiiayeah i gotta 4 and 2 and the 4 is wayyyy easier to wheelie cuz as soon as u get in the powerband in a wheelie on a 2 it scares the balls outta you
I change my oil on my 450 after every ride. The thing only holds 1 qt. Also, I keep several air filters in rotation. Clean one in after every ride. I enjoy doing maintenance on my bike.
Just checked my 2008 Rmz450 crank, had the bike since new. Still half within tolerance. Full synthetic oil almost every ride only done 1 piston and cam chain
I got a 2016 kx450f with like almost 200 hours and it runs amazing im thinking about doing the piston but i dont think i have too cuz the compression still feels crazy
@@Blocanbentlyyahu dunno lost count around 400hrs. Only other bike I have from new is a 2014 yz250...love it but it cant compete on cost per hour to ride, strange given we all think it should be cheaper. Have a 03 rm250 and a klx250s. KLX just ate a cam,just got it going again ....great for night time slays in the forest with a light bar.
I had a rmz 250, bought it 2nd hand, the hour meter stopped working at 122 hrs, the owner said it had stopped working for some time, so he didn't know the exact hours on the bike. I put a new one on it, changed the oil and filter every 4 hours, cleaned the filter after every ride. I clocked up 480 hours on it. Took it to my local Suzuki deal for an inspection they took the top end off and said it still looked like new inside from the factory! I was very happy with the results. I put another trouble free 200 hrs on it before I sold it. I used motul 5100 without fail. And no toil for the filter.
@@timfagan816 good to hear! 2011 and 2012 RMZ250's are the same thing. my favorites cuz that's after the EFI was fixed but before they went weird with the forks. best deal on a used bike!
@yukonjon5964 I think mine was the 1st generation of the fuel injection! I'm not 100% sure. But it was so convenient to lay the bike down from time to time, and not worry about the fucker flooding like the old carburetor bikes. Yeah the forks went weird on the later models. Glad they ditched the dumb air forks. I used to work at Honda mx, I set up all the bikes that arrived from California into New Zealand, and we had nothing but problems with the air forks. Heaps of customers were buying the usd forks to solve their problems! Was funny working at Honda, and owning a Suzuki! But all the mechanics said the Suzuki were the better machines.
@@timfagan816 man that must have been fun showing the Honda's that Suzuki was holding it's own back then. good times! i was so glad when everyone went back to normal forks. KTM is still trying air though. yeah the first EFI RMZ250 was 2010, so yours is the 2nd year and was slightly better. you had a really good run with that thing. what town was that Honda dealer in? where did you put most them miles on your bikes? the whole top half of the north Island is so great for riding! from the forest up north, to the Coromandel trails, or the black sand beaches of the west coast, and the desert below Taupo... their all my favorite! man i miss that place (moved back overseas years ago). south island was good too, but a lot more rough ground and slow going tussocks. best deal with the south island is to have a street legal dirt bike so you can get in on all the great tracks that they call roads but they're not. if i ever live in the south island again that would be a must.
Is it the ethanol in fuel that is making it bad? I use ethanol free 90 octane in my 450 and avgas in my 2 strokes. Is ethanol free 90 octane goon enough or should I switch over to avgas in everything?
Havent watched the vid yet, but just gotta say, change ur valves. Its just as important as cam chain. Mine blew up because a valve broke of and it ruined alot.
Carbon deposits shorten engine life. Low octane in a 2t will cause more carbon deposit..when you hear an engine pinging that is spark knock ...when detonation happens you can not hear it as its canceled out by the sound of combustion.. and 2 strokes are internally super charged when they begin running in their power band ..so 93 octane gas and a shot of 106 octane booster from autozone works ...but dont spare on your two stroke oil ..mix yamalube R 100% synthetic one pint bottle to five gallons of gas
@@donniebaker5984 I tune big turbo German engines for a living, i pretty much never touch anything under 250hp per liter. I've forgotten more about engines than you'll ever know. You literally just recommended Autozone octane booster and you want anyone to take you seriously? LOL
Been doing some thinking on this. As far as 2 strokes go they are not being used nearly as hard as a weed eater or blower. Both of these run wide open all day 5-6 days a week without issue. A 2 stroke bike is run wide open maybe 20-30% of the time. The bike should go well over 200 hours without a top end so if these engines are getting damaged and I know they are as these mechanics say they are then the parts being used are simply junk. It’s really common sense. They can make these last 10 times the amount of time but they don’t so the aftermarket manufacturers of parts needs to build parts to last and people will spend extra to buy them. As far as 4 strokes go it’s the same issue. It’s about the parts. You can name the very best name in parts yet if they aren’t lasting 200 hours then they are still junk. Trash parts are dominant in the dirt bike world. Diesel trucks run far harder than any race bike yet they last for 500k miles or more and they only change the oil every 10k miles so the issue is NOT the oils.I did the math and it seems a diesel truck is running about 400 hours in between oil changes and they last forever so the parts in the diesel are holding up very well. Once again it’s the parts. A brand new KTM or even a Honda back in the 2 stroke days has junk metal being used. Quality metals would add 5 lbs and not one of us would care or notice it.
Consider the bhp/litre (of engine size) and the working rev range. For competition motorcycle engines it will be way higher than leaf blowers, trucks, etc. That's why they fail when they reach the end of their life or are not cared for.
@@markholland7310 the use of a weed eater and blower is wide open all the time and under a load. They are under far more use than a dirt bike. My point is no one should have to change oil every weekend of riding or even every 10 hours
modify the weed wacker engine to produce four or five times its rated power and it won't last either. It's essentially what's the dirt bike engine is. they push the technology to the absolute limit to be competitive
@@MmMm-f2y7c You said they push technology as far as it will go when building these bikes. There not even close. They could build them to last as long as car motor. I would say study your metals and learn about engine rebuilds. They could make a 1000hp 2 stroke if they wanted to but what’s the purpose. We are already at the edge of what a human can handle anyway
Av gas isn't that good a choice , Av gas has all kinds of additives needed for aviation use that are not good for getting maximum performance. A 50/50 mix of race gas and pump fuel is much better choice.
For my bikes, 4 wheelers, and SxS, I have always put so much oil on my air filter that it is almost dripping off. Doing this I have to clean and re-oil the filter more often than my buddies. They say I am putting too much oil on it, but I argue that This is proof that my extra oil is catching more dirt. Am I wrong? Can you put too much oil on the filter? Thanks, Trav
What you gotta say about oil quality? I have used Yamalube for years and I was told that Motul 300v Is the best ever oil but my engine blowed off after 60 thousand miles using Yamalube
@@stevesmith756Yes Sir! It gets so saturated with dirt, it eventually is pulled through the dirt ridden pores. With a quick check before EVERY ride! Also, all the youngsters, stay off the rev limiter everytime you get in the air. It doesn't do much, and you don't have the luxury of motor rebuilds every ride like Haiden Deegan...lol.
My little CR80 requires 93. But you're saying all 2 stroke bikes should be burning atleast 100 octane? I thought you need the right compression for certain octanes.
Good info as always. When I used to race MX, I ran pure AV gas that had lead in it. I haven't bought any in awhile, a long while. Does the AV gas still have lead in it? Ride safe my 2 wheel friends.
There's avgas with LL at the end indicating "Low Lead" but I think there are unleaded alternatives too. The lead protects the engine parts so they still use it to be extra safe with aviation :)
I always ran a 50/50 mix of AV-gas & whatever 91 octane premium fuel I could get in my Yamaha 2 strokes ( RD -400 & YZ’s ) and Never had any issues once jetted correctly . Made a huge difference out playing in sand dunes on my old Tri-Z 250 3 Wheeler too . 👍
oil change every day, every 5 hours? LOL - On my KTM 500 exc-f I have almost 600 hours, engine never been opened still pulls strong , I do oil change every 40-60 hours and no problems at all.
Yeah some people are freaks about changing oil all the time. The only thing i worry about on motorcycles is bearing failure, or stator failure and getting stranded.
Change your oil every 10 hours? thats like every time you ride lol. Thats like changing the oil in your car every 100 miles.. lol I had a 2007 honda when i was a kid, and NEVER changed the oil in it in like 3 years and it was fine... I would never do that now.. but my point is, i think changing your oil every 50 hours or so is probably not gonna hurt it. Unless you do nothing but redline your bike maybe, then maybe more often lol.
That is just ridiculous to change oil every 10 hours. It’s not even worth riding. They could build the case to hold twice the amount and the oil change would be every 20 hours. The added part would be at the from of the motor
Yeah for real. I think every 50 hours is probably about right. Every 10 rides or so. Maybe a bit longer if you dont ride too hard. Changing every other, or every ride is ridiculous lol
@@domi9243 hes talking about fellas who spend 40hours PINNED, not 40hrs of C-class moto or trails. Its fair play to do that. A 250 piston is pretty cheap too
10 hours for oil seems a little extreme to me also for 2 strokes with transmission oil or 4 strokes with 2 oil compartment when should I change transmission oil? Ktm Manuel says 40 hours
Mostly fail because of the cheep air filters they use Unless there a hepa filter If they squirt oil on them There crap and need replacing with a Hepa filter , Oil rarely fail engines unless they have water in it or contaminate as long as its full and changed occasionally
watching from Slovakia. that natural 91 had additivum plumbum, is very very toxic metal. Also prices are much different you pay between 3,5 to 4,6 dollars per gallon (regular)and we pay 5,67 to 6,58(regular) dollars per gallon. Average monthly salary is around between 800-1100 dollars. But. At least our country has almost free health care system. You dont need to pay for surgeryes etc if your health need it its for free.
Really good and informative video. I was quite supirsed by amount of hours you can go on 4 stroke before rebuild - 100 hours on 250. I've heard that only once and most of the people I know says that 60 hours is maximum safe value for 250 used on MX track.
I'm average weekend warrior riding on passion, not skills and strength. :P Thanks for reply and greetings from Poland close neighbourhood of your origin country- Slovakia. @@dirtniron
About European and American gas... THEY ARE THE SAME! You may see different numbers on the pumps, but our gas is actually the same. It is not because the gas is different or because they contain different amounts of octane. It is because Europe has a different rating system and accepted formula for coming up with their octane number. Although the numbers are different, the gas is the same. Europe uses the RON (research octane number) for their rating. The United States uses the average of the RON (research octane number) and MON (motor octane number) for rating gas. Our formula for rating our gas is different but the actual gas we put in our vehicles is the same.
Rotella is good stuff. IDGAF what anyone says. Been using it fir years. Never had an engine failure. But I also change my oil after every ride. My 450 holds 1 qt if oil. That's not much considering.
He says 10hrs is too much time between oil changes? WTF? 99.5% of us are casual riders. We aren’t pro racers. I’ll stick to my 10hr mark for oil changes.
Changing the oil is alot cheaper than a rebuild is how i see it. On the newer FI bikes especially Honda bikes when they sit the injector can leak off fuel that eventually ends up in the oil and contaminates it.
Electric Bikes are not going to make it on the trails I go on. Maybe the first 15 miles, then turn back to get a possible 30 miles. I go 135 mile rides up in the heavy mountain ranges with larger tanks. EV's are a joke. Also, part of the entire hobby is tinkering with the bike, I love it and that's how you learn things. If you like EV's', good for you I guess and I shouldn't knock it.
North America octane numbers are Research + Motor octane divided by 2. Europe is just Research octane number. Hence the different octane numbers. Motor octane number is always much lower than Research.
Yea fr I ride my 450 pretty hard and it has 180 hours on it just did the valves they were barley out of spec and it has crazy compression still I don’t have to do my piston anytime soon
@@Blocanbentlyyahu I have a 2015 KTM 500 EXC that's California street legal with almost 15K miles on it with 500 hours. Got it used with 13K on it and it just got a fresh piston put on her then. I compression tested it about a month ago and it's 2 PSI low... After 2k miles... I live in Lake Mathews, right next to a lot of trails. She gets 50/50 street/dirt. I also do 105 MPH on the street... LMFFFAAAOOO 🤘
meanwhile me with my drz400e i run 87 gas on it and have done 1200 miles no problems lol havent done anything except oil change O.O i guess ive gotten lucky
Bouncing off the rev limiter without fail will give you engine failure.. learn to ride engines make no power up by the rev limiter.. maintenance is key to longevity of any engine..
Hahaha, when it comes to a part where you mentioned the fuel i was wondering about europe gasoline, where i can take 100oct gas from a pump.... And then host mentioned that he is from slovakia... It all came clear... ;)... Greetings from Czech Rep my mate...
Best way to warm up a 4T racebike is to hold it wide open bouncing off the rev limiter in neutral to keep the motor running clean
;-)😅
Yeah, it's best to do it in your driveway early in the morning. The neighbors will love it.
@@twc9000 😎😎😎
@@twc9000 I find it to be more effective during midnight too
@@twc9000 the neighbors wont have to put up with it for very long ...it will make the sound of the first bike in this video and then it will never run again
..
Warm them up, use good, fresh fuel, change the oil & oil filter often and keep the air filter clean. Other than that, just follow the manual for valve tolerances and change the piston & rings when you should. Remember, an hour meter is your friend!
Just for your information, 87 octane in usa even to 92 octane in Europe. Premium 93 = 98 European
Usa just just use different measurement methods
Yes, in Europe we use RON (research octane number) and in USA they use MON (motor octane number). I run my bikes with 98E5 ethanol 5% and 98 RON.
Good video. I would like to add the eight reason for motor failure. Too hard reving with too cold motor. Piston will seize in the cylinder as it expands too fast and cylinder does not have time to expand so fast so the piston to cylinder clearance gets too tight.
@@jannep6772 In some locations in Europe there's actually better fuel available. Germany has Aral 102 competition (ethanol free), Holland has some locations that sell 100+ (ethanol free) fuel.
Ethanol is the octane part in fuel but it tends to make the fuel burn relatively slow. Slow is a longer combustion period and that adds up to the actual heat in the engine. Better quality fuel burns quicker and therefore runs cooler.
Better fuel isn't just a higher octane value. Stuff like Sunoco, ELF, VP, Panta are completely different from the stuff you get at the gas station.
I think fuel quality, besides bad maintenance and bad habits, is the main reason of engine failure, you can compensate by running engines richer to keep them cool but you really want better fuel to keep the thermal drama down. Engines are running quite high rpm's and compression, there's just a really small amount of time for a combustion to happen, you don't want slow burning fuel, it runs hot. Adding 20% extra will cool it down a little but it's a bandage.
Then we've got California, they give them inferior gas on purpose to destroy your engine. Big lawsuits currently underway.
Higher octane is a slower more controlled burn. Higher octane is best @wernerxldata
It ends up being the same octane numbers, EU vs USA.
It's the method used to measure the octane what differs.
Been explained many times before.
I see a lot of people on here commenting on these items mentioned in this video as being too expensive to do as frequently as he mentions. He is pretty much referring to the people who race and are hard on these bikes, people who just neglect any maintenance. For those of you with dual sport bikes, these machines aren't race bikes. They built with different disciplines in mind and last much, much longer. Race bikes are built to produce less internal friction that returns better horse power and bang for your buck in a race setting. A WR isn't a race machine. It was built for the long haul. A true MX bike requires a bit of more attention to detail. You certainly dont want to be sending big jumps on a neglected bike. The idea behind a race model is that the rider will be doing frequent oil changes, air filter changes, top ends, etc. A true MX bike will certainly last a long time if cared for properly, but it definitely needs to be looked after. I ride a 450 and am not a crazy fast rider. C class vet. I do oil after every ride or race day. Regardless of conditions. And also a clean air filter after each ride day. It only takes a few minutes to do both of of these. I like to check my bike over after a wash. I look for missing bolts,loose spokes, debris in the oil filter that shouldn't be there, and sometimes the chain needs to be adjusted. I also check the bottom of the chain slider under the front of the swingarm because it's very thin in that area and can eat into the swing arm if worn out too far. If you are jumping your bike and ignoring the simplest maintenance item's you can pay a hefty price later. Forget about the bike but injuries are brutal. Riding motorcycles is dangerous. Why add more risk by being cheap and lazy? Know your bike, know what it was built to do, and take care of it. None of the maintenance items he mentions is super difficult, and you might learn a thing or two in the process.
thanks for sharing, appreciate it!
This guy Brad is solid gold! I've also watched his engine rebuilds and wow is he impressive.
Maybe, except, that he putted the Main Reason on only the 6'th place.
@@bustjanzupan1074 he did not tell anyone the main reason 4 stroke dirt bikes fail , simply because he does not know or even have the slightest clue
.he did not even mention one reason why of the failures he has seen ! He is only a parts exchanger and not a diagnostic technician
@@bustjanzupan1074 he never mentioned the main reason all four stroke dirt bikes fail. That is the valve springs become too weak in a short time to keep the valves from contacting the piston at the extreme rpms they turn ..all so the tiny hardened steel pins that hold the stacked plates together of there hyvo style cam chains that turn extreme rpm causes the hyvo style cam chain plates to wear tiny notches on the hardened steel pins to cause just one pin out of the hundreds of them to snap into sending the cam chain through the bottom of the engine case at which time the camshaft has stopped turning with intake or exhaust lobes still holding valves wide open to come in contact with a piston that is still going up and down striking the valves 233.333~ times per second causing a domeno effect of major parts of the engine to go kafu¢ken Boooom party over time to buy a complete new engine that usually cost half the price of a new bike ...or spend a little bit more and have A.J. Waggner to shoe horn one of his BUILT CR500R or a CR538R insane strokers all billet cnc milled aluminium complete two stroke engines licensed by Honda with A.J.'s adapter kits made for each brand of 450 four stroke frames . What you end up with is a king of hill , track , and drag strip that can not fail from any problems due to all four strokes because the CR500R engine does not have any parts that fail in all the four strokes which makes the two strokes of today 100% more reliable if you know how to service and maintain a two stroke , it will live longer than you. And all the specs this joker in this video tells you about to stroke engine life is all his own made up B.S. as far as my information goes about two strokes come from a time of honda's very first two stroke that was designed by only one man who was the most world famous professional motorcycle engine designer and racing tuner of all times known world wide no other than Pops Yoshimura who designed built and raced the Honda Elsinore to several Japanese Championships and then in 1974 became the instructor at honda's R&D Training Center in Milwaukee where i became one of Yoshimura's students for around five years learning all the mods Yoshimura made to the honda Elsinore as they were developed over the following years giving me hands on knowledge of everything there is to know about all two stroke engines that i was required to know to keep my job while working at a honda franchised dealership that sponsored AMA pro motocross racing... to evolve into the CR500R that A.J. Waggner by licenses through honda for 25 years has been building two stroke engines from forged blocks of military aircraft grades of billet aluminum and using forged aircraft steel dynamically spin balanced and stuffed crankshafts and transmission gears, shifting forks , counter and main shafts, couplers and special oem machined spacers where they apply..modified billet water pumps and at request engine cases special designed to except common easy to get hydraulic clutch cylinders ..wait a second , why take my word for it who knows more than most about all two strokes , here is A.J. and his website with phone number to call and talk to the guru himself...i try to keep my comments as short as possible but as you can see i know too much and so little time ...now you know too much so if you will please show your pals your new information for in the future we can all be on the same page and ready for the next level up in two stroke tuning ..just remember two strokes by design are internally supercharged at causes their power band to make pounds of boost ...four stroke can only suck, bang, and blow (into dozens of pieces parts and parts pieces in one first and last KAFU¢KEN BOOOM)
BUILT500.COM
if for any reason you dont like to ride red he now builds engines in flavors of blue yellow and green as well
@@donniebaker5984 What are you on?? 😳 -NY
@@Davido50 the truth . at age 73 today i was at age 25 an apprentice of "pops" yoshimura the inventor of honda's first two stroke called the "Elsinore" ever heard of one ? i doubt it ! that was the game changer as famous as pops yoshimura rip . buzz off ass hole
Much needed information to prevent the continuation of a common money sink hole in MX engine failure.
I wish to add when choosing a hi competition piston it will be from std.range of 13:1 average, becomes 14:1, that must run on its specific fuel. and should stamp a note alert to stay with all the ouners when selling.
other remedies can help reduce the heat by larger radiator and pumps, lower thermal fan switch, cooler in heat range spark plug, rich jetting or mapping, oil cooler in some exceptions.
Change the filter every moto. Change the oil every race. Never had an engine blow. Raced from 79-2001.
I see so many guys start their bike cold and hold it to rev limiter
Dude my roommate has an older like 02 Klx 300. He fires that thing up and jams out giving it zero time to warm up hahah been doing it for a year or two. I told him you’re going to seize that bitch up doing that. But it hasn’t yet it’s actually quite impressive hahaha.
Really bad thing to do🤓🤙
@@Eddiep80he's lucky
Worst thing to do ever,man,y?😫😫😫🤯👁🙈🙈😱😮🤔😡💀💀
You guys have rev limiters?!?
*sad 2 stroke noises*
I have a 86 kx250. It ran with a cracked piston(not the best but pretty dang good) I have only put a new piston in it. The crank is original, I run pump gas (85 to 87, cause I’m broke) I now probably have at least 50 hours on it and it is still running perfectly fine.
My 2007 Yamaha WR250F seized at about 10,000km when a tooth broke off 4th gear and got caught somewhere in the bottom end. It made a real mess. I needed a complete bottom end. (new case, cylinder, crank, rod, piston, etc.)
I always change my piston every 10 to 12 hours on a YZ125. After 10 hours you can really notice the sound and performance are getting slowly worse, that's when its time to change it. Easy job, and you keep your engine fresh. Oil I'll do every 4 - 5 hours. Also clean your airfilter after every track day, that's saves so much trouble down the road.
Also a good thing to do, is to completely disassemble your bike once every year, clean and grease the parts, this way your bike stays just like new. Also it is a pretty fun winter or summer project 😉
Another tip for our two stroke lovers, dont mix your gas to lean. 1 liter to 40 liters of gas is a nice mixture. The more oil, the more power you get, piston rings will seal better creating a much better "bang" 😉
In my opinion,it's my opinion that's way to fast my friend believe it or not my friend had 340 hours on ktm sx85 before it blow up and my Kawasaki kx85 has like 160 hours i think and it's running fine yes maybe you don't get the same power out of it but i think 2 stroke if it's build right they can do easily 100-130 hours ,4 strokes i think easily 200 hours my friend has honda crf250 and he has like 170 hours and it still running fine it's my opinion and like honestly even if i want to change the piston every 10 hours i don't have that much money 🤣 like 10 hours thats like a week of riding and piston in my country are like 100 euros and avarge salary here is 1300 euros ,like its to much money for me to spent every week 100 euros that like 400 euros okey if i ride a little less lets say 2 pistons still 200 euros and then comes the gas and the oil and other things that breakes ,and you need to change brake pads🤯🤯,
@@gal184 Jesus Christ dude, 160 hours?? It's time for a change brother!
Well im sunday driver on enduro with 250cr from 97. Went to 40:1 and noticed incredible difference on performance from 32:1.
I dont prob have to change piston every 40h🤣
On my 2010 gas gas 200 I change the oil every 40 hours and clean the filter when it’s completely coated in dirt. 200 hours so far. runs mint
40😂😂
@@1991enduro hell yea
Why even run an airfilter, total waste! Just spray a shot of oil in the carb every now and again to collect the dirt.
@@markalan4026 more air flow! Might have to try that
Yep the quality builds , no need for cotton wool treatment .
These recommended maintenance hours mentioned are absolutely correct as I am also a MX bike maintenance tech. I have never heard of this guy before but with my experience in working on many engines, I use these exact same numbers when giving advice on maintenance intervals on both 2 and 4 stroke machines. Great job!
Thanks for sharing
The vp additive is called vp madditive it works great. I run it with 91 non ethonal. Cleared the detonation up in my 300 tpi. It's my fav right now.
Non-ethanol kills detonation resistance. I tune big turbo cars for a living, 91 non ethanol is a lot more prone to knock than 91 E10, despite the same rating. 91 E free is like 88-89 with E10.
@@OtisFlint Or the 91 e10 is 91 octane gasoline with 10% ethanol added so it actually totals 92-94octane :)
I need to chime in here.. I have a different opinion when it comes to four stroke valves.. I suggest not adjusting the valves at all on bikes with titanium valves.. When the valves tighten up and the bike becomes hard to start imo tear it down and replace them because the titanium coating on the valve seats are only microns in thickness so if your valve has moved 3-10mm it's already though the coating and they need to be replaced.. I've seen this time and time again where people keep adjusting the valves and don't replace them and eventually they drop one due the shim thickness being too thin and not enough spring pressure.. The head of the valve sinks further and further into the head loosening the spring.. At high rpm valves float keepers fly off then its game over lol.. Also seen them pull the head of the valve completely off which doesn't end well either..
Every motor I have done with titanium valves I have had to send the head out with the new valves to have the valve seats recut, from my understanding the titanium coating is on the valves. Not the seats
Yep you know your stuff. Thanks.
I own a ‘99 WR-400 F Yamaha . I’ve had it now for almost 22 years ( after buying it used ) and have beaten on it numerous times in all kinds of weather & terrain. I use quality oil, clean my air filter , and go over the bike usually before every ride , checking the usual stuff, coolant & oil level , chain , nuts / bolts , the spokes, tire pressures etc , and it has only had ONE valve adjustment, and since my ownership NEVER Had the top end apart for a new piston , rings , bore job , NOTHING. I swear this this is like a cockroach, I haven’t been able to kill it yet . Did I also mention it is street legal & gets ridden at freeway speeds to & from trail rides ?? That old 5 valve thumper has been the most reliable bike I have EVER OWNED , hands down. It’s jetted properly, starts cold usually within one or two good kicks ( ever since I learned it’s ways) and hot usually within a couple more or less using hot start lever on carb. It has a 3-1/2 gallon I.M.S. Tank and it still gets around 30-35 mpg when ridden hard , and around 40 mpg or more , at lighter throttle . I’ll probably never be able to afford a new $10, 000 plus anything dirt bike these days, so I try to take care of what I can currently on my own as much as possible. Oh , I also run a Scott’s brand stainless steel cleanable oil filter & have a spare one as well and a spare Twin-air brand air filter cleaned & oiled & ready for service times . Once swapped in the bike I then clean the ones that just came out & bag them in zip lock baggies for next go -round, usually in 500 miles or so . Take care of your machine & it will provide you with years ( decades ) of service . One more thing , DON’T pressure wash the crap outta your bike after each ride !!! This causes more damage than most people think due to water getting into places it shouldn’t. A little dust on things doesn’t do near the damage as a little water & eventually rust will . C-ya 😎👍
I have 900 hrs on my WR250f and it too is 100% stock and I raced it and ride in the rocky woods on PA. Valve adjustment is key if you run them at high rpms but if you run them in the woods they just keep going...
We have your exact bike. 99 WR400F and we bought it about a year and a half ago and we bought it supposedly "perfectly fine" but after we couldn't start it we took it to a dealer and discovered the head was over-torqued. Squished the aluminum head and the owner was able to revive the head and it has been perfectly fine since. We have done the HotCams auto-decompression cam to remove the fussy decompression lever and the bike is absolutely bulletproof. I agree with you. these early 5-valve Yamaha's are indestructible. I don't even know how many hours our motor has as for it never had a rebuild (on the previous owner and us). All that was done was oil changes and an air filter. We also took off the airbox snorkel to give it extra power. It also has a cheap Chinese carb on it since the OEM carbs are really expensive but after all of that it is a tough tough TOUGH bike.
@@kmx509 Just now saw your reply to my post about my ‘99. I don’t know HOW mine has survived my abuse all these years , but it has !! All you gotta do is give ‘em a little love & attention every now & then it seems. Enjoy your bike man😎👍
@@stephenmiller5023 For sure!
Got a 1987 TRX250X, pretty sure it was never torn apart, even the tires and rims were original when I bought it off the original owner, rear end definitely got damaged cause all the missing stuff but still ran til recently
VP Racce gas plus additive. Also don't forget Startron. It Mets out the varnish through entire system as it's an additive. It doesn't take much but you'll notice the bike starts right up and knowing you're not gumming up the jets and cylinder with horsepower sucking varnish! 2 and 4 stroke as well!
I really enjoyed this video, very informative. You should make Brad a regular!
very informative ? lf you didnt know that you should change the oil once in a while and clean the air filter and splash some fresh gas in the tank is all that was said and never did the video answer the main reason 4t dirt bikes blow up ,,so if you own one sooner or later its going to self detonate because you still have not been told the real reason why all 4t dirt bikes will all fail that will never happen to a two stroke simply because they do not have any of the parts all 4t dirt bike engines have that causes to fail in the first place ..since you are a millennial who always rudely interrupt their elders and try to correct as you all believe we are to old to know anything ...so i say i know exactly what will fail in all four strokes that even after the parts are changed out their will come a time where those same parts will have to be changed out again ,,and if you allow them to go on beyond and fail they will cause more damage and destruction than the cost of and complete brand new engine ..and go now and figure it all out by yourselves as i am never going to tell any millennial anything at all about everything that you have been purposely lied to about that will cause you to fu
Lol, seeing the tmr cylinder brings back memories...had a cr250 with tmr cylinder and porting on race bike... good machine 💪
man, look at the destroyed engine parts falling to the ground from that bike at the start!
I always have 1% 2 stroke full synthetic oil in the gas on my 4 stroke engine, newer had problems on my Husaberg 650Fe and Honda XR 600 🇸🇪💪
Replace the valve springs and cam chain with stock OEM . No aftermarket stuff...put a small piece rope in the spark plug hole with the piston up against it
When intakes and exhausts are closed .this will allow you the change springs without removing the head..you can change the cam chain on the XR without removing the head or splitting the engine cases... The husaberg i know nothing about .
It may have bee hive titanium valve springs that dont wear out
in the uk the fuel is pretty good, we have e10 (95 oct) that we wont even touch and e5(99 oct) that runs well
U.S. fuel is the same octane. They just use a different way of measuring it. European fuel would also come out to be 87 octane etc if it wass measured the same.
You had 98 RON in Slovakia which is equivalent to 93 octane gas in North America. 2 Strokes do love high octane fuel but any 93 pump gas at least here in Canada is not going to damage your engine.
KTM bottom ends that use a plain bearing last pretty much the life of the bike, or four times longer than needle bearing bottom ends. I had a 2013 250sxf for 9 years, track bike and never needed to change it. Only top ends at 80 hours. Never a failure or any problems. I change oil when it starts getting darker usually 6 hours or more. Use a nice air filter that is dense inside, even if it gets dirty outside no dirt will ever get in. Still have to clean it though, use dawn or filter safe cleaner. Never ever use gasoline to clean a filter.
does the gas degrade the foam? i know they feel weird after being in gas, but to me they always recover just fine when dry.
i use gas first, fully dry them, then use the soapy water last. then fully dry. i've also always used grease at the seal. most guys don't but i cant bring myself to trust no grease.
@yukonjon5964 I rinse tge dirt off with a hose, then I buy WD40 by the gallon. I use WD40 to break down the filter oil, then rinse again, then Dawn and water. Rinse and oil it. I don't use hot water as it can break down the glue that holds the filter together. I never use gasoline. It definitely breaks down the foam I also keep several air filters in rotation. Always a clean and oiled fresh ready. I change my air filter and oil every single ride day. It's easy to do and worth the peace if mind. I live in Florida. The sand here is incredible and gets everywhere. I don't take chances with it.
You can get a mechanical cam chain tensioner to replace ktm's stock oil adjusted cam chain tensioner. You'll never skip a tooth again.
Modern dirt bikes blow up because there's too many strokes. Cut the strokes in half & it's amazing how much more durable the motors become...
Conclusions go get a 2 stroke I prefer 4t but it's cheaper and easier less moving parts see
Yes , I love 2 strokes for their simplicity and ease of maintenance. Sound great too
I think 2 strokes are more fun also because they are very light and I can wheelie on it easier cuz of the weight
@WealthMafiiayeah i gotta 4 and 2 and the 4 is wayyyy easier to wheelie cuz as soon as u get in the powerband in a wheelie on a 2 it scares the balls outta you
From my research... Chevron has the better gas.
I believe Shell is supposed to be up there, as well
Sell them before they blow up is the way to go?
I agree with Brad. He has seen it all and of the 4000 motors I would say 100 are mine 😂
The only reason my 4 stroke knocked was because of a factory fault with the connecting rod. I checked the forums and all over, even yamaha said it
Yeah mine has a knock from the play in the clutch basket bearing
1: 4-stroke, 2: fast warmup, 3: lack of maintenance, 4: plating gone, 5: wrong jetting, 6: no oil, 7: Vertex piston
That was super cool! His experience and knowledge was obvious. Cool guy!
I change my oil on my 450 after every ride. The thing only holds 1 qt. Also, I keep several air filters in rotation. Clean one in after every ride. I enjoy doing maintenance on my bike.
I always ran ethanol pump gas in my 2022 gasgas 125 and it has 89hours no top end and still crisp
Number 1 they are 4 strokes more moving parts more complicated, easy fix buy older 2 strokw
Just checked my 2008 Rmz450 crank, had the bike since new. Still half within tolerance. Full synthetic oil almost every ride only done 1 piston and cam chain
How many hours on her
I got a 2016 kx450f with like almost 200 hours and it runs amazing im thinking about doing the piston but i dont think i have too cuz the compression still feels crazy
@@Blocanbentlyyahu dunno lost count around 400hrs. Only other bike I have from new is a 2014 yz250...love it but it cant compete on cost per hour to ride, strange given we all think it should be cheaper. Have a 03 rm250 and a klx250s. KLX just ate a cam,just got it going again ....great for night time slays in the forest with a light bar.
I had a rmz 250, bought it 2nd hand, the hour meter stopped working at 122 hrs, the owner said it had stopped working for some time, so he didn't know the exact hours on the bike. I put a new one on it, changed the oil and filter every 4 hours, cleaned the filter after every ride. I clocked up 480 hours on it. Took it to my local Suzuki deal for an inspection they took the top end off and said it still looked like new inside from the factory! I was very happy with the results. I put another trouble free 200 hrs on it before I sold it. I used motul 5100 without fail. And no toil for the filter.
amazing! what year was it?
i like the RMZ's
@@yukonjon5964 it was a 2011 rmz.
Yes, I will always be a Suzuki man now. I love the rmz's also.
@@timfagan816 good to hear! 2011 and 2012 RMZ250's are the same thing. my favorites cuz that's after the EFI was fixed but before they went weird with the forks. best deal on a used bike!
@yukonjon5964 I think mine was the 1st generation of the fuel injection! I'm not 100% sure. But it was so convenient to lay the bike down from time to time, and not worry about the fucker flooding like the old carburetor bikes. Yeah the forks went weird on the later models. Glad they ditched the dumb air forks. I used to work at Honda mx, I set up all the bikes that arrived from California into New Zealand, and we had nothing but problems with the air forks. Heaps of customers were buying the usd forks to solve their problems! Was funny working at Honda, and owning a Suzuki! But all the mechanics said the Suzuki were the better machines.
@@timfagan816 man that must have been fun showing the Honda's that Suzuki was holding it's own back then. good times! i was so glad when everyone went back to normal forks. KTM is still trying air though. yeah the first EFI RMZ250 was 2010, so yours is the 2nd year and was slightly better. you had a really good run with that thing. what town was that Honda dealer in? where did you put most them miles on your bikes? the whole top half of the north Island is so great for riding! from the forest up north, to the Coromandel trails, or the black sand beaches of the west coast, and the desert below Taupo... their all my favorite! man i miss that place (moved back overseas years ago). south island was good too, but a lot more rough ground and slow going tussocks. best deal with the south island is to have a street legal dirt bike so you can get in on all the great tracks that they call roads but they're not. if i ever live in the south island again that would be a must.
Great video. Good to hear from the expert
98 oct in Europe is exactly the same as 91 in USA. fun fact.
I change my oil and air filter after every ride. Oil filter every other change. Oil is cheap compared to a new KX 450 engine.
Only two strokes 💪😜
Is it the ethanol in fuel that is making it bad? I use ethanol free 90 octane in my 450 and avgas in my 2 strokes. Is ethanol free 90 octane goon enough or should I switch over to avgas in everything?
I do the same, I think its ok
Havent watched the vid yet, but just gotta say, change ur valves. Its just as important as cam chain. Mine blew up because a valve broke of and it ruined alot.
For a 300 2 stroke trail bike, what are the advantages to running avgas or race gas if the engine isn’t detonating?
Zero.
Compression ratio
Carbon deposits shorten engine life. Low octane in a 2t will cause more carbon deposit..when you hear an engine pinging that is spark knock ...when detonation happens you can not hear it as its canceled out by the sound of combustion.. and 2 strokes are internally super charged when they begin running in their power band
..so 93 octane gas and a shot of 106 octane booster from autozone works ...but dont spare on your two stroke oil ..mix yamalube R 100% synthetic one pint bottle to five gallons of gas
@@OtisFlintfor you that goes for all engines just feed them what ever ..you dont have a clue
@@donniebaker5984 I tune big turbo German engines for a living, i pretty much never touch anything under 250hp per liter. I've forgotten more about engines than you'll ever know. You literally just recommended Autozone octane booster and you want anyone to take you seriously? LOL
He’s right about Ca gas with Ethanol. It’s crap for engines. My bike and lawn equipment all see VP race gas. Cut my lawn time down two seconds a lawn
Been doing some thinking on this. As far as 2 strokes go they are not being used nearly as hard as a weed eater or blower. Both of these run wide open all day 5-6 days a week without issue. A 2 stroke bike is run wide open maybe 20-30% of the time. The bike should go well over 200 hours without a top end so if these engines are getting damaged and I know they are as these mechanics say they are then the parts being used are simply junk. It’s really common sense. They can make these last 10 times the amount of time but they don’t so the aftermarket manufacturers of parts needs to build parts to last and people will spend extra to buy them. As far as 4 strokes go it’s the same issue. It’s about the parts. You can name the very best name in parts yet if they aren’t lasting 200 hours then they are still junk. Trash parts are dominant in the dirt bike world. Diesel trucks run far harder than any race bike yet they last for 500k miles or more and they only change the oil every 10k miles so the issue is NOT the oils.I did the math and it seems a diesel truck is running about 400 hours in between oil changes and they last forever so the parts in the diesel are holding up very well. Once again it’s the parts. A brand new KTM or even a Honda back in the 2 stroke days has junk metal being used. Quality metals would add 5 lbs and not one of us would care or notice it.
Consider the bhp/litre (of engine size) and the working rev range. For competition motorcycle engines it will be way higher than leaf blowers, trucks, etc. That's why they fail when they reach the end of their life or are not cared for.
@@markholland7310 the use of a weed eater and blower is wide open all the time and under a load. They are under far more use than a dirt bike. My point is no one should have to change oil every weekend of riding or even every 10 hours
modify the weed wacker engine to produce four or five times its rated power and it won't last either. It's essentially what's the dirt bike engine is. they push the technology to the absolute limit to be competitive
@@MmMm-f2y7c You said they push technology as far as it will go when building these bikes. There not even close. They could build them to last as long as car motor. I would say study your metals and learn about engine rebuilds. They could make a 1000hp 2 stroke if they wanted to but what’s the purpose. We are already at the edge of what a human can handle anyway
Thanks guys a lot of racecars also run av gas have been imtrested in better fuel for my rmz 450 in Ca and the pump gas is trash
Av gas isn't that good a choice , Av gas has all kinds of additives needed for aviation use that are not good for getting maximum performance. A 50/50 mix of race gas and pump fuel is much better choice.
Just wondering what kind of parts you use in all your motorcycles are they stock parts or different parts for your builds....
Ktm 500exc trail riding - I only charge my oil every 20 hours (300miles) never had a problem 3000 miles later.
For my bikes, 4 wheelers, and SxS, I have always put so much oil on my air filter that it is almost dripping off. Doing this I have to clean and re-oil the filter more often than my buddies. They say I am putting too much oil on it, but I argue that This is proof that my extra oil is catching more dirt. Am I wrong? Can you put too much oil on the filter?
Thanks,
Trav
What you gotta say about oil quality?
I have used Yamalube for years and I was told that Motul 300v Is the best ever oil but my engine blowed off after 60 thousand miles using Yamalube
how much should a rebuild cost. i know it changes with location.
Brad is the best in the business!
Awesome video! Great info!
fuel transports in your area pull out of the same area in the region..plus or minus some injected additives
every 5 hours, i couldn't be on a 4T, i spend the whole day on my bike from 7 in the morning to 12 at night
That's what i thought too, That would be crazy replacing oil every 5 hours 😂😂
@@gabrielalvarez9570 yeah it's ridiculous
I can understand an improperly fitted air filter letting dirt in, but why would a dirty air filter let dirt into the engine?
I can only assume the dirt is migrating through the filter
@@stevesmith756Yes Sir! It gets so saturated with dirt, it eventually is pulled through the dirt ridden pores. With a quick check before EVERY ride! Also, all the youngsters, stay off the rev limiter everytime you get in the air. It doesn't do much, and you don't have the luxury of motor rebuilds every ride like Haiden Deegan...lol.
Yup all that rpm on an unloaded engine is really bad. Bad habits
My little CR80 requires 93. But you're saying all 2 stroke bikes should be burning atleast 100 octane? I thought you need the right compression for certain octanes.
Thank you for the tips it helps me out a lot!
Good info as always. When I used to race MX, I ran pure AV gas that had lead in it. I haven't bought any in awhile, a long while. Does the AV gas still have lead in it? Ride safe my 2 wheel friends.
I've told sooo many of my friends about the old avgas. And yes its still leaded
@@MrSuperflydude I also used to run it in my 69 Roadrunner on Friday nights when we cruised the strip.
There's avgas with LL at the end indicating "Low Lead" but I think there are unleaded alternatives too. The lead protects the engine parts so they still use it to be extra safe with aviation :)
I always ran a 50/50 mix of AV-gas & whatever 91 octane premium fuel I could get in my Yamaha 2 strokes ( RD -400 & YZ’s ) and Never had any issues once jetted correctly . Made a huge difference out playing in sand dunes on my old Tri-Z 250 3 Wheeler too . 👍
Don't use 100LL. We don't need any more lead in the air. We need to wait for the dinosaur that is the FAA to approve unleaded recip fuels to be used.
Buy a two stroke rebuild your self 300 two stroke plenty fast and fun to ride then four stroke.
First clip is Derek Anderson
No its me
Avgas 100LL is cheaper than petrol in my country due to the heavy taxes on petrol.
And I live about 8min from the airport.
Someone needs to send this to evan from the cboys
oil change every day, every 5 hours? LOL - On my KTM 500 exc-f I have almost 600 hours, engine never been opened still pulls strong , I do oil change every 40-60 hours and no problems at all.
Yeah some people are freaks about changing oil all the time. The only thing i worry about on motorcycles is bearing failure, or stator failure and getting stranded.
Great advice!!
Change your oil every 10 hours? thats like every time you ride lol. Thats like changing the oil in your car every 100 miles.. lol I had a 2007 honda when i was a kid, and NEVER changed the oil in it in like 3 years and it was fine... I would never do that now.. but my point is, i think changing your oil every 50 hours or so is probably not gonna hurt it. Unless you do nothing but redline your bike maybe, then maybe more often lol.
That is just ridiculous to change oil every 10 hours. It’s not even worth riding. They could build the case to hold twice the amount and the oil change would be every 20 hours. The added part would be at the from of the motor
Also who has the money to change a piston every 40 hours
Yeah for real. I think every 50 hours is probably about right. Every 10 rides or so. Maybe a bit longer if you dont ride too hard. Changing every other, or every ride is ridiculous lol
@@domi9243 hes talking about fellas who spend 40hours PINNED, not 40hrs of C-class moto or trails. Its fair play to do that. A 250 piston is pretty cheap too
10 hours for oil seems a little extreme to me also for 2 strokes with transmission oil or 4 strokes with 2 oil compartment when should I change transmission oil? Ktm Manuel says 40 hours
Mostly fail because of the cheep air filters they use Unless there a hepa filter If they squirt oil on them There crap and need replacing with a Hepa filter , Oil rarely fail engines unless they have water in it or contaminate as long as its full and changed occasionally
We have 99octane over here at the pumps 🏴
I only run VP and pump gas mix and I use all up that day...
In a four stroke ?
I’ve stopped pump gas altogether. Ethanol is so bad for engines and seals
Am liking every bit of this content from kenya. My Serow has engine vibration at past mid rpm and am scared. Advice from you?
I’d check my valves and adjust them more often if it didn’t cost $750 for a mechanic to look at them
Just the video I was looking for
Thank you
watching from Slovakia. that natural 91 had additivum plumbum, is very very toxic metal. Also prices are much different you pay between 3,5 to 4,6 dollars per gallon (regular)and we pay 5,67 to 6,58(regular) dollars per gallon. Average monthly salary is around between 800-1100 dollars. But. At least our country has almost free health care system. You dont need to pay for surgeryes etc if your health need it its for free.
Really good and informative video. I was quite supirsed by amount of hours you can go on 4 stroke before rebuild - 100 hours on 250. I've heard that only once and most of the people I know says that 60 hours is maximum safe value for 250 used on MX track.
It depends how you ride but 100 on 250f sounds ok for weekend warriors
I'm average weekend warrior riding on passion, not skills and strength. :P
Thanks for reply and greetings from Poland close neighbourhood of your origin country- Slovakia. @@dirtniron
My trx450er is at 500 hours still on original top end and everything
I've learned all this the hard way
About European and American gas... THEY ARE THE SAME! You may see different numbers on the pumps, but our gas is actually the same. It is not because the gas is different or because they contain different amounts of octane. It is because Europe has a different rating system and accepted formula for coming up with their octane number. Although the numbers are different, the gas is the same. Europe uses the RON (research octane number) for their rating. The United States uses the average of the RON (research octane number) and MON (motor octane number) for rating gas. Our formula for rating our gas is different but the actual gas we put in our vehicles is the same.
Use an hour meter- record what you do to your bike in a spreadsheet - that way, you always know whre things are . . . .
How did we not touch on oils ? Rotella debate anyone !?!?
Rotella is good stuff. IDGAF what anyone says. Been using it fir years. Never had an engine failure. But I also change my oil after every ride. My 450 holds 1 qt if oil. That's not much considering.
The beginning, gearing up for take off 😮
Use non ethanol gas!!!
He says 10hrs is too much time between oil changes? WTF? 99.5% of us are casual riders. We aren’t pro racers. I’ll stick to my 10hr mark for oil changes.
Changing the oil is alot cheaper than a rebuild is how i see it. On the newer FI bikes especially Honda bikes when they sit the injector can leak off fuel that eventually ends up in the oil and contaminates it.
@@davidpalmer287 i agree but ill stick to what I've been doing. Changed the oil today. 21.0 hrs.
Ya I’ve done 10 -12 hours on my Wr450f
Im doing 5hrs
I bought a engine top end cylinder head on eBay and it didn’t come with the shims, how can I now which ones are the correct ones?
I’d hate to say it but I don’t have time or money to have someone work on my bike every 20+ hours . Makes more sense to have an electric bike for me .
Do it ya self like I do I'm skint but I got everything to do the bikes because I buy and sell them and buy tools and it gets cheaper as I go along
Electric Bikes are not going to make it on the trails I go on. Maybe the first 15 miles, then turn back to get a possible 30 miles. I go 135 mile rides up in the heavy mountain ranges with larger tanks. EV's are a joke. Also, part of the entire hobby is tinkering with the bike, I love it and that's how you learn things. If you like EV's', good for you I guess and I shouldn't knock it.
North America octane numbers are Research + Motor octane divided by 2.
Europe is just Research octane number.
Hence the different octane numbers. Motor octane number is always much lower than Research.
Dudes! Good info Bro. Kiaora. Stay upright.
thanks dude!
40 hours new piston??? More like new rings.
Yea fr I ride my 450 pretty hard and it has 180 hours on it just did the valves they were barley out of spec and it has crazy compression still I don’t have to do my piston anytime soon
@@Blocanbentlyyahu I have a 2015 KTM 500 EXC that's California street legal with almost 15K miles on it with 500 hours. Got it used with 13K on it and it just got a fresh piston put on her then. I compression tested it about a month ago and it's 2 PSI low... After 2k miles... I live in Lake Mathews, right next to a lot of trails. She gets 50/50 street/dirt. I also do 105 MPH on the street... LMFFFAAAOOO 🤘
@@tankeater you cant compression test a 4stroke because of automatic decompression on the cams. You would want to do a leak down test.
what about microcracks developing over time more in cranks when engine is loaded too hard when cold?
Great tips.
Get your arm good quick.
Cheers
Replace your cam chain if your riding a four stroke
meanwhile me with my drz400e i run 87 gas on it and have done 1200 miles no problems lol havent done anything except oil change O.O i guess ive gotten lucky
Bouncing off the rev limiter without fail will give you engine failure.. learn to ride engines make no power up by the rev limiter.. maintenance is key to longevity of any engine..
Hahaha, when it comes to a part where you mentioned the fuel i was wondering about europe gasoline, where i can take 100oct gas from a pump.... And then host mentioned that he is from slovakia... It all came clear... ;)... Greetings from Czech Rep my mate...
Phenomenal video!!! Loved it
“Ktm you can go a bit longer” LOL!
What about non-Ethinal?