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DT125R FORUM

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  4. So Close!...

So Close!...

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved DTR
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  • HOTSHOT IIIH HOTSHOT III

    @SpookDog All sounds good!

    If the bike still runs I doubt you've done any damage to the CDI by crossing those wires, usually CDI units either work or they don't. Interesting it did still work though; the black/yellow wire tells the little on-board computer inside the 3-wire servo the engine speed (like the crank sensor on a car) and the black/white wire stops the plug sparking by earthing the CDI when you flick the kill switch or turn off the ignition, so I guess if you hooked either of those wires from the CDI up to some test equipment like an oscilloscope, you'd probably get some quite similar results.

    Keep us posted for any improvements!

    S Offline
    S Offline
    SpookDog
    wrote on last edited by SpookDog
    #990

    @HOTSHOT-III

    I’ve found the 2 wires that the starter solenoid joins to the loom by, also a wire that appears to be the clutch switch.
    What stator did these 3mb RE’s use bud, any idea?…
    —————————-

    Edit: I managed to get the 3nc CDI working thanks to HotShots 3mb wiring diagram. Turns out that the wire that goes to the side stand, from the CDI, needed earthing…
    Will test it out later when I can…

    ——————————

    PS if this doesn’t cure it I’ll have to try swapping out the carb for the tzr one or my old one. I’m wondering if the choke plunger rubber is worn and not sealing properly.
    Also the ignition coil on the stator and the wiring between it and the CDI unit…
    I can’t think of anything else at the moment…
    Still getting light missing at low revs and an orange/red spark…

    I replaced the connector & wiring from pickup to CDI. Repaired a connection & wiring in the orange coil wire as well.

    S 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • S SpookDog

      @HOTSHOT-III

      I’ve found the 2 wires that the starter solenoid joins to the loom by, also a wire that appears to be the clutch switch.
      What stator did these 3mb RE’s use bud, any idea?…
      —————————-

      Edit: I managed to get the 3nc CDI working thanks to HotShots 3mb wiring diagram. Turns out that the wire that goes to the side stand, from the CDI, needed earthing…
      Will test it out later when I can…

      ——————————

      PS if this doesn’t cure it I’ll have to try swapping out the carb for the tzr one or my old one. I’m wondering if the choke plunger rubber is worn and not sealing properly.
      Also the ignition coil on the stator and the wiring between it and the CDI unit…
      I can’t think of anything else at the moment…
      Still getting light missing at low revs and an orange/red spark…

      I replaced the connector & wiring from pickup to CDI. Repaired a connection & wiring in the orange coil wire as well.

      S Offline
      S Offline
      SpookDog
      wrote on last edited by SpookDog
      #991

      @Me!…

      It would appear that a hot wired £25 CDI unit bought from fleabay has cured the low rpm problems! 25 miles with no noticeable pops or hesitation! I’ll check again tomorrow after I’ve adjusted the new slack in my chain…

      But for the time being I am optimistic!…
      🙂🐾🐾☠️🃏

      S 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • S SpookDog

        @Me!…

        It would appear that a hot wired £25 CDI unit bought from fleabay has cured the low rpm problems! 25 miles with no noticeable pops or hesitation! I’ll check again tomorrow after I’ve adjusted the new slack in my chain…

        But for the time being I am optimistic!…
        🙂🐾🐾☠️🃏

        S Offline
        S Offline
        SpookDog
        wrote on last edited by SpookDog
        #992

        Last post of the day!…

        Sparks?! I believe that they should be fat blue~white, yes? If mine are orange ~red then I’m wondering if the capacitors in the CDI unit are getting enough electrickery to generate constant good blue ~white sparks? Even if this could contribute to the demise of a CDI unit? (Serious Deja Vu here somehow)
        I’m thinking of changing out the ignition ~source coil and the wiring from the stator to the CDI unit anyways...
        I would seriously love some feedback about spark colour and strength…

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • MadGyverM Offline
          MadGyverM Offline
          MadGyver
          wrote on last edited by
          #993

          Healthy spark is blue-white color.
          You are dangerously close to my path...

          I need my tools and a pile of junk.....

          S 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • MadGyverM MadGyver

            Healthy spark is blue-white color.
            You are dangerously close to my path...

            S Offline
            S Offline
            SpookDog
            wrote on last edited by SpookDog
            #994

            @MadGyver

            Bikes still running good and sweet. The source coil was well in spec with the Ohms (not the purple ones)

            One good thing is I’ve learned how to isolate the ignition system from the rest of the loom. Just pulling the black/white wire (kill switch & key barrel) on the CDI isolates most of it. Depending on the CDI year there’s more you can do to isolate the side stand curcuit. It doesn’t use a ‘to earth’ curcuit to kill the engine. It uses a curcuit that kills the ignition if not earthed (IE a partial break inside the insulation will kill it) You can bypass the loom by earthing the single blue CDI wire to the HT earth point.
            Both these give you a chance to identify a possible partial/intermittent break in the loom…
            I’ll read through your thread again. You have a 3nc CDI if I remember?

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • MadGyverM Offline
              MadGyverM Offline
              MadGyver
              wrote on last edited by
              #995

              @SpookDog Yes you remember correct,1x3NC and 2x4DL.
              I did some work on the DT,will update the thread within the week.

              I need my tools and a pile of junk.....

              S 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • MadGyverM MadGyver

                @SpookDog Yes you remember correct,1x3NC and 2x4DL.
                I did some work on the DT,will update the thread within the week.

                S Offline
                S Offline
                SpookDog
                wrote on last edited by
                #996

                @MadGyver

                Let me know what is happening with the spark! If it’s sparking and not running, or if there is a spark but the engine only fires once. Or there’s no spark at all. We’ll get your bike running bud, I’d stake my ‘reputation’ on it! ROTFFLMAO! 😜 …

                ———————————

                My bikes still running and firing smoothly, I’m almost ready to call it fixed!…

                S 1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • S SpookDog

                  @MadGyver

                  Let me know what is happening with the spark! If it’s sparking and not running, or if there is a spark but the engine only fires once. Or there’s no spark at all. We’ll get your bike running bud, I’d stake my ‘reputation’ on it! ROTFFLMAO! 😜 …

                  ———————————

                  My bikes still running and firing smoothly, I’m almost ready to call it fixed!…

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  SpookDog
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #997

                  One more 25 miles round trip and I’m going to call it fixed…

                  S 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • S SpookDog

                    One more 25 miles round trip and I’m going to call it fixed…

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    SpookDog
                    wrote on last edited by SpookDog
                    #998

                    Engine is running sweet as fux! It’s officially mended by replacing the CDI unit with a 3NC unit, that I had to earth the single light blue wire to bypass the side stand circuit.
                    It’s strange that the old 3BN CDI was still working but missing, they usually work or don’t in my previous experience. I will have to check the wiring for internal breaks…

                    Now I can start on the 101 other things that need attention! Greasing the brake pads! Fitting the rear mud flap (can you get a front one that’s half decent?) Fitting the 2T oil pump. Rear linkage bushings. Wheel bearings. Chain tension. LED driving lights. Resonating exhaust expansion chamber. Recovering spare seat. Barrel base gasket. Front brake light switch wire inside break in wire. Bed forks in properly. Find proper clutch perch. Find new block and bullet connectors and proper gauge wire to build new loom. Original throttle cable. Electrolysis the rust out of tank and POR15 seal it. Machine/dremmel fuel petcock to take original metal ‘lever’.
                    And anything else that I can’t think of off the top of my head! 🃏
                    Till then, signing off 😉 …

                    S 1 Reply Last reply
                    2
                    • S SpookDog

                      Engine is running sweet as fux! It’s officially mended by replacing the CDI unit with a 3NC unit, that I had to earth the single light blue wire to bypass the side stand circuit.
                      It’s strange that the old 3BN CDI was still working but missing, they usually work or don’t in my previous experience. I will have to check the wiring for internal breaks…

                      Now I can start on the 101 other things that need attention! Greasing the brake pads! Fitting the rear mud flap (can you get a front one that’s half decent?) Fitting the 2T oil pump. Rear linkage bushings. Wheel bearings. Chain tension. LED driving lights. Resonating exhaust expansion chamber. Recovering spare seat. Barrel base gasket. Front brake light switch wire inside break in wire. Bed forks in properly. Find proper clutch perch. Find new block and bullet connectors and proper gauge wire to build new loom. Original throttle cable. Electrolysis the rust out of tank and POR15 seal it. Machine/dremmel fuel petcock to take original metal ‘lever’.
                      And anything else that I can’t think of off the top of my head! 🃏
                      Till then, signing off 😉 …

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      SpookDog
                      wrote on last edited by SpookDog
                      #999

                      alt text

                      Link (@ least one) on the chain locked up solid because of road salt. So freeing off the chain and adjusting is going to be my first job. What good is an X~ring chain if it doesn’t survive a couple months of winter?!…

                      S HOTSHOT IIIH 2 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • S SpookDog

                        alt text

                        Link (@ least one) on the chain locked up solid because of road salt. So freeing off the chain and adjusting is going to be my first job. What good is an X~ring chain if it doesn’t survive a couple months of winter?!…

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        SpookDog
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #1000

                        @SpookDog

                        Living in the age of corrosion…

                        🐾☠️🐾🃏

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • CalumC Offline
                          CalumC Offline
                          Calum
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #1001

                          The amount of times I've had a pushbike chain snap on me, and I've gone over the handlebars, because the fricken salt has corroded it 🤣

                          I've had it a few times where I've gotten to work and ended up with a puncture, to repair the tyre only to leave the car park to cycle home and fall flat on my arse 😛

                          Always Originate, Never Pirate!

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • S SpookDog

                            alt text

                            Link (@ least one) on the chain locked up solid because of road salt. So freeing off the chain and adjusting is going to be my first job. What good is an X~ring chain if it doesn’t survive a couple months of winter?!…

                            HOTSHOT IIIH Offline
                            HOTSHOT IIIH Offline
                            HOTSHOT III
                            wrote on last edited by HOTSHOT III
                            #1002

                            @SpookDog

                            Link (@ least one) on the chain locked up solid because of road salt. So freeing off the chain and adjusting is going to be my first job. What good is an X~ring chain if it doesn’t survive a couple months of winter?!…

                            If I'd just done a complete engine rebuild I wouldn't be messing around with a used chain with tight links. How will you feel if you end up with smashed crankcases?

                            And I'm not sure I'd want an O- or X-Ring chain on a 125 either; when they first appeared in the 80s, advice in the MX world was if you ride an 80 or a 125, stick with standard chains as O-Ring chains take an extra half a horsepower to turn. Now translate this to road bikes; in the cold light of day a well-sorted DT125R mates the power output of a YZ80 with the weight of an XR600, so you really don't want anything getting in the way of what power you have got reaching the rear wheel.

                            There's also another side to this which is, a lot of people seem to think a sealed chain is the equivalent of armour plating, i.e it requires no maintenance whatsoever and will never wear out. I've seen people in motorcycle shops adjust the pressure washer to a pinhead-sized jet and point it directly at the chain to avoid cleaning it properly. You can't expect any O-Ring to withstand that. Whereas spending 5 minutes with some Jizer and a paintbrush, you'd only need gentle mains water pressure to rinse it off.

                            Possibly more than anything else, chains are sensitive to how they're treated. A timing chain inside an engine can last hundreds of thousands of miles because it's in a completely clean environment with filtered oil being constantly sprayed at it all the time it's in motion. I used to work for a guy who owned a Yamaha 660 Raptor quad, he fitted a chain oiler and immediately experienced less chain wear in an entire year of Devon greenlaning than he previously got in a single outing. And quads have a lot of grip with those fat tyres meaning they're hard on chains. That thing was an animal, I rode it once and that was enough.

                            Here's a picture of a chain which regularly did a 40-mile loop of greenlaning and looked like this after every time I cleaned the bike. Nothing special, just 5 minutes scrubbing with Gunk/Jizer and a paint brush, rinse with the hose (a MX bike stand so you can rotate the rear wheel is essential), dry with WD40 (which corrodes nitrile rubber; another thing you can't do with a sealed chain) and bog roll and re-lube. I think it looks more beautiful than a highly polished fairing on a sportsbike, because that is my passport to scalded cat acceleration, reliability when freezing my bollocks off 50 miles from home and a left crankcase without a hole in it. It's a little bit like the passage in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance where the author Robert M. Pirsig talks about trying to remove a stuck engine case screw and says, until you remove that stuck screw, it is worth the market value of the motorcycle so you have to re-value the screw. And if you're riding through a British winter with salt on the roads, you have to re-value the chain.

                            alt text

                            A top-of-the-line non-O-Ring D.I.D 428HD costs £25 and you can get the correct split links for like £1 each so any time it needs to come off you can just throw a new split link on. Other ways to bulletproof the drivetrain include using a new front sprocket nut and tab washer, cleaning the output shaft threads with a Dremel wire wheel and degreasing the shaft and nut threads with Brake Cleaner before using blue Loctite and tightening to 60Nm (one person can do this by sitting on the bike, holding the rear brake on and putting a fork leg on the end of the torque wrench with the old chain temporarily refitted), and using genuine rear sprocket bolts and nuts; the 35Nm Yamaha recommend for these is more than double the default 16Nm you'd expect to use on an M8 x 1.25 fastener.

                            I realise I've gone full Hermione Grainger over this (not the 1st time lol) but you've moved mountains doing a full rebuild in winter without having anywhere to work indoors, I think I would have found it very hard to achieve what you've done, and for the sake of a new chain and sprocket set all that work could be undone (plus the fact a snapped chain at highway speeds is bloody dangerous). Keep cleaning and re-lubing a non-O-ring chain and it'll stick two fingers up at the gritting lorry.

                            S 1 Reply Last reply
                            2
                            • CalumC Offline
                              CalumC Offline
                              Calum
                              wrote on last edited by Calum
                              #1003

                              Interesting read as always @HOTSHOT-III

                              I know you're right in a lot of what you say, I always think if it cost more...it must be better.

                              I do need to replace my chain on my DT, not because it's worn or damaged, but because back when I built the bike, I was going for "Style" and therefore sourced a 520 pitch chain, but to be honest I'd rather reduce the reciprocating parasitic losses from the engine. That said, it's difficult for my build since I run RS125 wheels and the RS never came with a 428 Pitch chain thus sprockets aren't supported. Can use smaller chains, but I had that let go on my RS and I had to walk home 😛

                              Always Originate, Never Pirate!

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • HOTSHOT IIIH HOTSHOT III

                                @SpookDog

                                Link (@ least one) on the chain locked up solid because of road salt. So freeing off the chain and adjusting is going to be my first job. What good is an X~ring chain if it doesn’t survive a couple months of winter?!…

                                If I'd just done a complete engine rebuild I wouldn't be messing around with a used chain with tight links. How will you feel if you end up with smashed crankcases?

                                And I'm not sure I'd want an O- or X-Ring chain on a 125 either; when they first appeared in the 80s, advice in the MX world was if you ride an 80 or a 125, stick with standard chains as O-Ring chains take an extra half a horsepower to turn. Now translate this to road bikes; in the cold light of day a well-sorted DT125R mates the power output of a YZ80 with the weight of an XR600, so you really don't want anything getting in the way of what power you have got reaching the rear wheel.

                                There's also another side to this which is, a lot of people seem to think a sealed chain is the equivalent of armour plating, i.e it requires no maintenance whatsoever and will never wear out. I've seen people in motorcycle shops adjust the pressure washer to a pinhead-sized jet and point it directly at the chain to avoid cleaning it properly. You can't expect any O-Ring to withstand that. Whereas spending 5 minutes with some Jizer and a paintbrush, you'd only need gentle mains water pressure to rinse it off.

                                Possibly more than anything else, chains are sensitive to how they're treated. A timing chain inside an engine can last hundreds of thousands of miles because it's in a completely clean environment with filtered oil being constantly sprayed at it all the time it's in motion. I used to work for a guy who owned a Yamaha 660 Raptor quad, he fitted a chain oiler and immediately experienced less chain wear in an entire year of Devon greenlaning than he previously got in a single outing. And quads have a lot of grip with those fat tyres meaning they're hard on chains. That thing was an animal, I rode it once and that was enough.

                                Here's a picture of a chain which regularly did a 40-mile loop of greenlaning and looked like this after every time I cleaned the bike. Nothing special, just 5 minutes scrubbing with Gunk/Jizer and a paint brush, rinse with the hose (a MX bike stand so you can rotate the rear wheel is essential), dry with WD40 (which corrodes nitrile rubber; another thing you can't do with a sealed chain) and bog roll and re-lube. I think it looks more beautiful than a highly polished fairing on a sportsbike, because that is my passport to scalded cat acceleration, reliability when freezing my bollocks off 50 miles from home and a left crankcase without a hole in it. It's a little bit like the passage in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance where the author Robert M. Pirsig talks about trying to remove a stuck engine case screw and says, until you remove that stuck screw, it is worth the market value of the motorcycle so you have to re-value the screw. And if you're riding through a British winter with salt on the roads, you have to re-value the chain.

                                alt text

                                A top-of-the-line non-O-Ring D.I.D 428HD costs £25 and you can get the correct split links for like £1 each so any time it needs to come off you can just throw a new split link on. Other ways to bulletproof the drivetrain include using a new front sprocket nut and tab washer, cleaning the output shaft threads with a Dremel wire wheel and degreasing the shaft and nut threads with Brake Cleaner before using blue Loctite and tightening to 60Nm (one person can do this by sitting on the bike, holding the rear brake on and putting a fork leg on the end of the torque wrench with the old chain temporarily refitted), and using genuine rear sprocket bolts and nuts; the 35Nm Yamaha recommend for these is more than double the default 16Nm you'd expect to use on an M8 x 1.25 fastener.

                                I realise I've gone full Hermione Grainger over this (not the 1st time lol) but you've moved mountains doing a full rebuild in winter without having anywhere to work indoors, I think I would have found it very hard to achieve what you've done, and for the sake of a new chain and sprocket set all that work could be undone (plus the fact a snapped chain at highway speeds is bloody dangerous). Keep cleaning and re-lubing a non-O-ring chain and it'll stick two fingers up at the gritting lorry.

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                SpookDog
                                wrote on last edited by SpookDog
                                #1004

                                @HOTSHOT-III

                                Hey bud! I’ve just spent the afternoon fitting a new JT chain (o~ring!) I ordered for £20.50 yesterday. I can’t believe it turned up so quick! I wish I had a hose pipe! Fuxin salt kills me every (snowless!) winter. Luckily I had sprockets around from before when I had monies!…

                                alt text

                                SHINY!!…

                                the chain!

                                HOTSHOT IIIH 1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • S SpookDog

                                  @HOTSHOT-III

                                  Hey bud! I’ve just spent the afternoon fitting a new JT chain (o~ring!) I ordered for £20.50 yesterday. I can’t believe it turned up so quick! I wish I had a hose pipe! Fuxin salt kills me every (snowless!) winter. Luckily I had sprockets around from before when I had monies!…

                                  alt text

                                  SHINY!!…

                                  the chain!

                                  HOTSHOT IIIH Offline
                                  HOTSHOT IIIH Offline
                                  HOTSHOT III
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #1005

                                  @SpookDog Cool, my views on O-ring chains on smaller bikes are just an opinion but you have a new chain and that's the main thing 👍

                                  @Calum I ran a 520 conversion drivetrain on a 3DB DTR at one time and never had an issue, including a trip from Southampton to Donington Park for the 1998 British GP. Including campsite mayhem (now sadly banned by the nanny state) I must have done about 600 miles that weekend and the old round slide carb '88 never missed a beat!

                                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbSCsNda4e0&t=67s

                                  alt text

                                  alt text

                                  S 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • HOTSHOT IIIH HOTSHOT III

                                    @SpookDog Cool, my views on O-ring chains on smaller bikes are just an opinion but you have a new chain and that's the main thing 👍

                                    @Calum I ran a 520 conversion drivetrain on a 3DB DTR at one time and never had an issue, including a trip from Southampton to Donington Park for the 1998 British GP. Including campsite mayhem (now sadly banned by the nanny state) I must have done about 600 miles that weekend and the old round slide carb '88 never missed a beat!

                                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbSCsNda4e0&t=67s

                                    alt text

                                    alt text

                                    S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    SpookDog
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #1006

                                    @HOTSHOT-III

                                    Ahh! Real deal endo blue, not like my shabby pretender was! Interesting tail end setup. Was there a number plate light up under?…

                                    HOTSHOT IIIH 1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • S SpookDog

                                      @HOTSHOT-III

                                      Ahh! Real deal endo blue, not like my shabby pretender was! Interesting tail end setup. Was there a number plate light up under?…

                                      HOTSHOT IIIH Offline
                                      HOTSHOT IIIH Offline
                                      HOTSHOT III
                                      wrote on last edited by HOTSHOT III
                                      #1007

                                      @SpookDog Thanks bud, yes what I did was to make a U-shaped piece of 1mm thick steel with the centre section the same width as the distance across the indicator mounts on the grabrail. The parts each side were about 30mm at the top tapering to 20mm at the bottom and I then mounted it fitted over the indicator mounts, sloping downwards at the same angle. Although not visible in the pic there was enough space under the blue rear mudguard to fit one of those little oval standalone number plate lights, nicked off a Kawasaki Eliminator down the breakers IIRC. Taillight is one of those scaled down TS125R pattern lights and always worked very well, the only drawback being it took a 21/5W stop/tail bulb with a smaller glass about the same size as a 10W bulb which were difficult to get hold of:

                                      https://www.denniswinter.com/off-road-c1/parts-c91/electrical-parts-c144/tail-lights-c473/raceline-enduro-3-motorcycle-tail-light-universal-fit-p258537

                                      Back in the 90s no-one had thought of making tail tidys, all the grey import 400s and 250s had much nicer rear lights and indicators than UK versions of the same bike, so it was something of a pastime to try and emulate that if like me you were stuck in a low-paid job (in a grey import shop ironically) and couldn't afford a V-Twin TZR250 fresh off the container from BAT Motorcycles etc.

                                      Here's a TDR250 with a home-made rear light I made out of 2mm aluminium and a rear reflector lens from a Honda FireBlade. It had a twin bulb holder from a Yamaha Virago which has the rear light bulbs very close together (I cut out the part I needed with a junior hacksaw and screwed it to the alloy backplate before sealing up the holes around the edge with JB Weld). It was extremely bright and passed several MOT tests, and I had to line the inside of the tailpiece with heatproof tape to stop it melting. It also featured tool-free mounting as the TDR250 tailpiece has a shallow ridge on the inside so I shaped it to clip into that and then you just refitted the tailpiece/grab rails and it was pushed against the rear subframe and couldn't go anywhere. Once myself and a mate who had a TZR250 Parallel Twin swapped bikes, I was behind him and I couldn't believe I looked like that, it just looked illegal and against the laws of physics cranked over with 6" of space above the rear wheel. Eventually I sold it to buy a Kawasaki KR1-S, the buyer complained it wasn't original, then about a year later I bought another TDR250 cheap so I contacted him and said do you want to swap the custom rear light assembly for a stock one? He said OK so I rode over to his house and we changed them over. I thought more fool him, the stock TDR250 looks bloody awful with the numberplate stuck below the tailpipes, almost as bad as later KMX125s with the rear mudflap 2 feet long!

                                      alt text

                                      alt text

                                      S 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • HOTSHOT IIIH HOTSHOT III

                                        @SpookDog Thanks bud, yes what I did was to make a U-shaped piece of 1mm thick steel with the centre section the same width as the distance across the indicator mounts on the grabrail. The parts each side were about 30mm at the top tapering to 20mm at the bottom and I then mounted it fitted over the indicator mounts, sloping downwards at the same angle. Although not visible in the pic there was enough space under the blue rear mudguard to fit one of those little oval standalone number plate lights, nicked off a Kawasaki Eliminator down the breakers IIRC. Taillight is one of those scaled down TS125R pattern lights and always worked very well, the only drawback being it took a 21/5W stop/tail bulb with a smaller glass about the same size as a 10W bulb which were difficult to get hold of:

                                        https://www.denniswinter.com/off-road-c1/parts-c91/electrical-parts-c144/tail-lights-c473/raceline-enduro-3-motorcycle-tail-light-universal-fit-p258537

                                        Back in the 90s no-one had thought of making tail tidys, all the grey import 400s and 250s had much nicer rear lights and indicators than UK versions of the same bike, so it was something of a pastime to try and emulate that if like me you were stuck in a low-paid job (in a grey import shop ironically) and couldn't afford a V-Twin TZR250 fresh off the container from BAT Motorcycles etc.

                                        Here's a TDR250 with a home-made rear light I made out of 2mm aluminium and a rear reflector lens from a Honda FireBlade. It had a twin bulb holder from a Yamaha Virago which has the rear light bulbs very close together (I cut out the part I needed with a junior hacksaw and screwed it to the alloy backplate before sealing up the holes around the edge with JB Weld). It was extremely bright and passed several MOT tests, and I had to line the inside of the tailpiece with heatproof tape to stop it melting. It also featured tool-free mounting as the TDR250 tailpiece has a shallow ridge on the inside so I shaped it to clip into that and then you just refitted the tailpiece/grab rails and it was pushed against the rear subframe and couldn't go anywhere. Once myself and a mate who had a TZR250 Parallel Twin swapped bikes, I was behind him and I couldn't believe I looked like that, it just looked illegal and against the laws of physics cranked over with 6" of space above the rear wheel. Eventually I sold it to buy a Kawasaki KR1-S, the buyer complained it wasn't original, then about a year later I bought another TDR250 cheap so I contacted him and said do you want to swap the custom rear light assembly for a stock one? He said OK so I rode over to his house and we changed them over. I thought more fool him, the stock TDR250 looks bloody awful with the numberplate stuck below the tailpipes, almost as bad as later KMX125s with the rear mudflap 2 feet long!

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                                        SpookDog
                                        wrote on last edited by SpookDog
                                        #1008

                                        @HOTSHOT-III

                                        Tail end looks good. The personal touches, gotta love them!…
                                        Quite like the colour scheme as well 😜

                                        Strange, quick question! Have you used or know of a decent front mudflap? Or a frame gusset guard to help prevent muck being thrown up into the front of the engine-barrel-ect?…

                                        Anyone use ACF 50?..

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                                        1
                                        • S SpookDog

                                          @HOTSHOT-III

                                          Tail end looks good. The personal touches, gotta love them!…
                                          Quite like the colour scheme as well 😜

                                          Strange, quick question! Have you used or know of a decent front mudflap? Or a frame gusset guard to help prevent muck being thrown up into the front of the engine-barrel-ect?…

                                          Anyone use ACF 50?..

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                                          S Offline
                                          SpookDog
                                          wrote on last edited by SpookDog
                                          #1009

                                          Trying to learn the habit to wash the salt off! I don’t have a hose pipe so I use a 3litre pump up garden spray bottle 😐

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                                          No bluddy way near perfect, but better than crusty salt~mud~spray!…its all I can do…

                                          HOTSHOT IIIH 1 Reply Last reply
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