>can a 2 stroke dirtbike engine handle daily use on road?
I am about 90% convinced to buy a new 2-stroke dirtbike for my daily driver to work (14 miles total). There will be no highway riding or city driving. I am not worried about the pain it will be inflicting on my body, but I am more concerned about the pistons melting, or premature wear on the engine.
As long as you aren't abusing it it should hold up, I'd think.
I'd recommend seeing if there is a dual sport version that has all the necessary road worthy equipment to be street legal.
Henry Kelly
There isn't. Although it won't take much money to get the lights necessary. I am debating between a KTM 300xcw and one of the new Beta 300rr. The beta has oil injection which I really like.
Lincoln Gutierrez
Don't those bikes need a top end rebuild every 200 hours.
Jace Wilson
Lol pretty much OP you willing to do that?
Jason Perry
For the price of a new dirt bike you could get a used street bike. The maintenance would be the same or even less
Isaiah Clark
i love the 2 stroke smell i would be jealous
Jose Kelly
See200 hours per top end isnt too bad. As long as it isnt needing bearings or cranks every 200 hours I will be happy. Not to mention it only takes a few hours to rebuild a top end on a 2 stroke.
Ryder Richardson
>buying new pistons for your DD every 6-months
Cameron Morales
>new piston once a year on a 2 stroke for ~$300 >Valve adjustment every year for ~$500 and new piston needed every 2 years for ~$1500 on a 4 stroke
Thats basically the service interval options he has if hes looking at a tuned 4 stroke bike (aka not a KLR650 or something similar)
Robert Taylor
Yes, as long as you keep it maintained. Aka keep the proper 2-3% blend of oil, don't run it too hot and so on.
Be prepared that you will probably have to swap out piston rings/pistons quite frequently due to how these engines wear
Charles Lee
No 4 stroke has service intervals that intense.
Bentley Long
>DDing a race bike
Xavier Cook
Dude my manuals say >replace piston and ring every 2 races or 8 hours
Joshua Phillips
That's in all manuals for Honda cr125, cr250, Kawasaki kdx80, kx250
William Diaz
Hondas do. Kek
Justin Davis
Look for one of these. I have the 70cc version for the kiddos. Bulletproof bikes
Aiden Richardson
enduros not motocross The manual for the 300rr says 60 hours for pistons.
James Richardson
Id say so, yea. Use decent 2-stroke oil and it should all be fine. I have a 2-stroke rs 125. Granted it's not a dirtbike but it has a pretty high strung engine. It's gotten to 23000km without a top end rebuild yet; although it needs one about now.
Easton Williams
That sounds stupid as fuck
Adrian Harris
>Paying for insurance C U C K
Asher Edwards
Run the most oil you can run in the gas
Gabriel Sullivan
Wouldent that cause it to run rich? Or do you mean as much oil as you can without being rich?
Alexander Campbell
Do it, I often ride about 45km to the trails, rip around for a few hours, and then ride back.
Sebastian Edwards
What bike costs $500 to do a valve adjustment? I'd love to know, so I can sell valve adjustment services for a mere $250 for the owners of such bikes.
Tyler Taylor
itll do fine, youll need to do top ends once in a while, but theyre cheap and easy to do.
run it heavy on oil and dont engine brake since no throttle = no oil
Ryan Gonzalez
dr650 user? bear in mind rockers are super duper easy to adjust. shim and bucket take forever since the cams have to come off to get at them
Angel Taylor
Either way you are looking at equal cost to a top end rebuild. And on a 4 stroke you will eventually need to replace the piston as well which is guaranteed to be $1000.
Luis Morris
As much as you can without losing power
Brayden Gray
Use redline or motul 2 stroke oil
Levi Nguyen
That's going to be the problem. You will have to remember to constantly blip the throttle to get oil to the engine
Jacob Watson
The throttle is always partially open otherwise the bike would stall.
Isaac Turner
Who are you quoting?
Asher Collins
>new fags not remembering green text before "it was used for quotes"
Man I miss old school /r9k/
James Campbell
There use to be 2 stroke street bikes, so I dont see how this is any different.
Andrew Nelson
I ride a 2 stroke 2-3 times a week (pic related). You should have it tuned to the way you ride e.g. lower temp sparkplugs for less "aggressive" use, and maybe run it a little leaner. For me, the biggest issue is having to wait for the damn thing to get up to operating temperature. These bikes don't like being cold...
Kevin Hill
>run it leaner
Why on earth would he want there to be less oil? Also what year is that RS250? I really wish we could still get those in the states.
Jeremiah Green
RS125 2011 plate. Stopped production in 2012 due to being replaced by the RS4 125 (4 stroke). As for my bike, it runs rich in the lower rpms, making it a pain in the ass for city riding. Rich, while in low rpms makes it almost unusable (for a 125 atleast).
John Hughes
Sure it will work, just remember the faster you run the engine the more lubricated it is. This is why 2 strokes love being full throttle.
Isaac Howard
The bikes OP is looking at aren't street bikes
Josiah Cook
Hiw would the engine on a street or dirt bike differ if they are both 2 strokes?
Hudson Davis
OP why not a proper bike?
>old school /r9k/ Don't be a fag
Owen Scott
Typically a long lasting street bike will have loose tolerances.
Ayden Robinson
The dirtbikes are usually made in such a way that they are bringing out as much power as possible from the engine, meaning that stuff wears out quicker, it runs hotter and so on, while a 2-stroke streetbike will most likely be made in such a way that it runs a lot calmer, lasts longer but has perhaps a much smaller hp/l rate
Tyler Mitchell
It was a good board back around ~2009ish
Caleb Mitchell
No it was shit then too
t. former robot
Parker White
How can you get a tag for one of these?
Isaiah Wilson
most street bikes have oil injection
James Allen
No. Its a waste of a dirt bike and you will blow the engine up by holding it at constant RPM unless you are going to be dabbing the clutch and revving its rings out every now and again.
Have fun cleaning your fouled spark plugs on the side of the road and rebuild after 2000km though. You forgot reed valves, gaskets, seals, the crank, the flywheel and the bottom end bearings. Id expect to be replacing all that after 200 hours of road use on a 2 smoke.
Lucas Diaz
dirt bike engines are on the limit of being broken engines that will not work in the name of weight saving because they only need to work for 15 minutes. Road bike engines are designed to be reliable.
Liam Gray
you have no idea what the fuck you are talking about
Juan Collins
Ok, You can replace a piston and rings and not do any of the gaskets or seals, don't worry about replacing the reed valves when they crack, bearings fucked? let em explode thatell be good for the engine, hopefully the conrod stays inside it and doesnt end up outside the case when the big end decides to let go.
Blake Cox
Who the fuck does a top end and doesnt replace the gaskets or seals? I mean thats just part of the process. Reed Valves very rarely have to be replaced. As for bearings and cranks they normally need to be replaced every other top end rebuild so every 3-500 hours. Even then it is seen as preventative maintenance.
Gavin Morales
300-500 hours is when the big end explodes, you replace it at 200 hours. If the piston is lasting that long fuck its doing well. Maybe if you ran the fuel at 28:1 and i mean all the time you could manage 200 hours out of your pistons. >Reed Valves very rarely have to be replaced. Every 2 smoke i have owned has needed new reed valves after 100-200 hours. it doesnt take much for reed valves to crack and thats carbon fibre being sucked straight into the bore. >Who the fuck does a top end and doesnt replace the gaskets or seals? And i assume someone who thinks a top end rebuild will only be $300 does not replace the gaskets or seals.
Thats $210 for all you need to do a top end rebuild. You obviously have no fucking clue what you are talking about.
Josiah Perez
>vertex piston >athena gaskets/seals yeah nah you know nothing lol. those parts are complete shit, if i was penny pinching id buy wiseco parts.
Sebastian Williams
thats the same price as what posted.
OEM Complete rebuild kit is only 230
Ayden Nelson
Seen as you guys are talking about 300 engines can i join in? something like a 300 would be fine for on road use, the engines make mad amounts of bottom end and mid range power, hardly have a top end to speak of so its not like you are going to be revving the rings out of the thing.
I did around 15,000km on my 300 before it needed a complete engine rebuild and it probably wouldnt have even needed that if it never sat for 3 years without being started before it was ridden again.
as far as rebuild costs go its about $150-$300 for top end, $800-$2600 depending on what needs replacing for a full rebuild and what parts you end up using (OEM is always best but shit like Wiseco isnt exactly bad... its shit like forged vs cast pistons.)
Austin Green
How much was your complete rebuild?
Zachary Jackson
around $1900 in dollarydoos, i replaced the piston, rings, crank, all the bearings in the engine, all of the pressed seals, the reed valves and thats also including the cost for new head stem bearings, wheel bearings and a hammerhead gear stick.
Did not have to touch the bore so was lucky there when the big end bearing let go, really i was lucky the conrod didn't come through the case when it did let go, part of the bearing managed to jam the crank before it could spin around again and break the conrod off the crank.
Eli Baker
oh and i bought a new battery
Sebastian White
That sucks, I had the same type thing happen on my KX250 years ago.
>fresh rebuild >had around 5 hours on it >main bearing in the bottom seized >piston skirt chipped off and fucked up my cylinder walls as well
Jose Campbell
I was so damned lucky the bore didnt get fucked, idk how because part of the main bearing ended up on top of the piston, pic related was when i first took the head off to see the damage