• Recondition an xr200 or move on?

    From thack203@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Slingblade on Tue Jul 28 20:44:54 2020
    On Saturday, July 19, 2003 at 9:50:39 PM UTC-5, Slingblade wrote:

    A few weeks ago I talked to the guys at xrsonly. It seemed like for
    about a grand I could have the bike gone over top to bottom
    mechanically, including suspension. If it would perform noticeably
    better than when it was new, I bet I would still enjoy it. Being able
    to charge down wide flat dirt roads at 40-50 mph is really all I am
    looking for.

    But I like the suggestion of the xr250. I have rode friends crf450,
    yz250, yz426f and a drz400,... I feel really uncomfortable, like the
    bikes are SO tall and powerfull!!! I just don't want to get into a
    big bike I can't enjoy!

    Heres another suggestion:
    Have it bored .30 over, have the heads ported and polished...and if
    you want to splurge a little get a better exhaust. This will put you
    near a 250 in terms of power.

    I think XRsonly is a little steep on their labor....which is why you
    were quoted over $1000

    If I may make another suggestion: Start nosing around the local bike shops...and talk to a mechanic for that shop...actually try to talk to
    as many mechanics as you can....most of these guys (if not all of
    them) are underpaid..
    I have met some very good friends by talking to mechanics....and if
    you pay them $10-$12 an hour to work on the bike at their home.....you
    will have saved a fortune... plus helped them out, plus probably made
    a great friend.

    (also if you happen upon a Honda mechanic....he can get discount
    prices for the parts there at the shop..and also save you a heap more
    money if you plan on buying engine parts at the dealer)

    I hope this helps..it has worked for me. Best of luck anyway you go,
    you cant go wrong either way you go...

    You have no idea what you are talking about. You would have to bore a 200 about 4mm over (.157") and put in larger valves and a bigger carb to get anywhere near the output of a 4 valve XR250.

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  • From Futility Man@21:1/5 to thack203@gmail.com on Wed Jul 29 20:23:32 2020
    On Tue, 28 Jul 2020 20:44:54 -0700 (PDT), thack203@gmail.com wrote:

    On Saturday, July 19, 2003 at 9:50:39 PM UTC-5, Slingblade wrote:

    A few weeks ago I talked to the guys at xrsonly. It seemed like for
    about a grand I could have the bike gone over top to bottom
    mechanically, including suspension. If it would perform noticeably
    better than when it was new, I bet I would still enjoy it. Being able
    to charge down wide flat dirt roads at 40-50 mph is really all I am
    looking for.

    But I like the suggestion of the xr250. I have rode friends crf450,
    yz250, yz426f and a drz400,... I feel really uncomfortable, like the
    bikes are SO tall and powerfull!!! I just don't want to get into a
    big bike I can't enjoy!

    Heres another suggestion:
    Have it bored .30 over, have the heads ported and polished...and if
    you want to splurge a little get a better exhaust. This will put you
    near a 250 in terms of power.

    I think XRsonly is a little steep on their labor....which is why you
    were quoted over $1000

    If I may make another suggestion: Start nosing around the local bike
    shops...and talk to a mechanic for that shop...actually try to talk to
    as many mechanics as you can....most of these guys (if not all of
    them) are underpaid..
    I have met some very good friends by talking to mechanics....and if
    you pay them $10-$12 an hour to work on the bike at their home.....you
    will have saved a fortune... plus helped them out, plus probably made
    a great friend.

    (also if you happen upon a Honda mechanic....he can get discount
    prices for the parts there at the shop..and also save you a heap more
    money if you plan on buying engine parts at the dealer)

    I hope this helps..it has worked for me. Best of luck anyway you go,
    you cant go wrong either way you go...

    You have no idea what you are talking about. You would have to bore a 200 about 4mm over (.157") and put in larger valves and a bigger carb to get anywhere near the output of a 4 valve XR250.

    The chances of this still being a current problem since the original post in 2003 are quite slim.
    --
    Futility Man

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  • From sturd.virtec@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jul 31 08:47:27 2020
    Futility Man notes:

    The chances of this still being a current problem since the original post in 2003 are quite slim.

    Oh I don't know. Why would anybody throw away an XR200? There's always a youngun around to show how to ride and it's perfect.

    Go fast. Take chances.
    Mike S.

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  • From The Real Bev@21:1/5 to sturd.virtec@gmail.com on Fri Jul 31 11:34:10 2020
    On 07/31/2020 08:47 AM, sturd.virtec@gmail.com wrote:
    Futility Man notes:

    The chances of this still being a current problem since the original post in >> 2003 are quite slim.

    Oh I don't know. Why would anybody throw away an XR200? There's always a youngun around to show how to ride and it's perfect.

    I still have my 1980 KDX175 and my son got it running again several
    months ago. I regret giving away my Ducati even thought I KNEW I was
    never going to replace the clutch.

    --
    Cheers,
    Bev
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    "Friends help you move. *Real* friends help you move bodies."
    --A. Walker

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  • From Futility Man@21:1/5 to The Real Bev on Fri Jul 31 17:10:57 2020
    On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 11:34:10 -0700, The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com> wrote:

    I still have my 1980 KDX175 and my son got it running again several
    months ago. I regret giving away my Ducati even thought I KNEW I was
    never going to replace the clutch.

    Ten years ago someone gave me a 1962 Rokon Trailbreaker. I never got it running. Earlier this year I gave it back.
    Three of my wife's bikes qualify for antique tags, one of mine will qualify next
    year.

    --
    Futility Man

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  • From XR650L_Dave@21:1/5 to sturd...@gmail.com on Mon Aug 3 12:54:00 2020
    On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 11:47:28 AM UTC-4, sturd...@gmail.com wrote:
    Futility Man notes:

    The chances of this still being a current problem since the original post in
    2003 are quite slim.

    Oh I don't know. Why would anybody throw away an XR200? There's always a youngun around to show how to ride and it's perfect.

    Go fast. Take chances.
    Mike S.

    I started on an '82 XR200, piggy-back shocks. Trials-bike light and geared crazy low, perfect backwoods exploring bike.

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  • From Pothos@21:1/5 to Allan Grote on Fri Dec 15 15:54:25 2023
    On 12/15/23 11:37, Allan Grote wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 23, 2003 at 9:32:59 AM UTC-7, James wrote:
    Maybe someone can give me a history lesson. Didn't XR200s used to be
    designed as off-road racing models vs. now when they're intended to be
    basically play bikes?
    James
    00CR250
    unitedt...@yahoo.com (Slingblade) wrote...
    Check out http://www.xrsonly.com

    I just rebuilt my XR200 for about $400.

    Its a 1984 model and this is its first rebuild. I figure $400 every
    20 years aint that hard on the old wallet.

    If you just like to put-put around and tractor up some hills...and are
    a laid back rider....keep the bike.

    I ride this bike often and its still fun.. if you can say the same
    thing keep it.
    Very interesting, My little XR200 (non mono shock) that I rode in high mountains in Colorado, my house was at 8,800’ and was at the start of the trails I rode regularly in groups and sole rides well over 12,000’ on the snowmobile trails above Grand
    Lake, CO for nearly 40 years. Rarely ran out of power, braking wasn’t as good as modern bikes, but sufficient to have fun. I rode with several friends on their race ready 2 strokes, sure they pulled away, but no one complained about waiting… at the
    end of the day, riding a bike that’s 40 or 50 pounds lighter is a heck of a big advantage, plus much more fun!
    One thing I learned, unless you want a room full of plastic mementos, buy a well made light bike that just doesn’t break. My 1983 XR200 dual shock made it nearly 40 years with only spark plugs oil changes and 4 or 5 sets of imported cheap tires.
    The day the fire took my Honda, it also took my 175 Enduro Yamaha, a very close chase for my favorite bike ever! But, I’m replacing the Honda…

    I also had an '83 XR200, and decided to get it street legal. The XR's
    fork, shocks, swingarm, kickstand, and exhaust system are installed on
    my '79 XL185S.

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