zxr250 cooling problems
zxr250 cooling problems
hey there people
i have just recenly purchased a 1992 zxr250
it has a overheating problem/ cooling problem
the bike tends to run fine however once the speed goes over 80km/h the temp gauge keeps going up till about the half way markat which point i over ride the std fan switch and turn the fan on manually
i have replaced the fan switch but this hasnt solved the problem i was wondering if any 1 else has experiance this problem or may have any sugestions that may fix.
im thinking of replacing the radiator, fan, thermostat, and hoses to see if this solves it
thanks in advance
justin
i have just recenly purchased a 1992 zxr250
it has a overheating problem/ cooling problem
the bike tends to run fine however once the speed goes over 80km/h the temp gauge keeps going up till about the half way markat which point i over ride the std fan switch and turn the fan on manually
i have replaced the fan switch but this hasnt solved the problem i was wondering if any 1 else has experiance this problem or may have any sugestions that may fix.
im thinking of replacing the radiator, fan, thermostat, and hoses to see if this solves it
thanks in advance
justin
- mike-s
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Try in this order.
* Flush radiator out with an alkaline radiator flush, i usually put it in, ride the bike for while. I did mine for 30 mins for a first treatment (as i didnt think it was bad, i was wrong) which didnt do the job for mine, so i did it again for about 4-5 hours of riding to totally flush the bastard out. then disconenct all rad hoses and flush every internal area out with a hose at rather high pressure, reassemble.
* Take thermostat out and see if it "opens" at 100'c, replace if farked.
*Replace cap (never hurts to do this anyway).
* Flush radiator out with an alkaline radiator flush, i usually put it in, ride the bike for while. I did mine for 30 mins for a first treatment (as i didnt think it was bad, i was wrong) which didnt do the job for mine, so i did it again for about 4-5 hours of riding to totally flush the bastard out. then disconenct all rad hoses and flush every internal area out with a hose at rather high pressure, reassemble.
* Take thermostat out and see if it "opens" at 100'c, replace if farked.
*Replace cap (never hurts to do this anyway).
pull the thermostat out,
there's no need for one in brisbane.
effectively what happens is, the thermostat blocks the water from flowing to the radiator until the engine warms up to a certain temp, then it opens to let the cooling process happen.
QLD isn't cold enough to need the thermostat to close so the engine can heat up. only poms need it.
i took mine out and it fixed the exact same problem. replace it if u want, but i didn't see the need.
there's no need for one in brisbane.
effectively what happens is, the thermostat blocks the water from flowing to the radiator until the engine warms up to a certain temp, then it opens to let the cooling process happen.
QLD isn't cold enough to need the thermostat to close so the engine can heat up. only poms need it.

There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
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Don't chuck the thermostat- if you do the bike will never be at the correct operating temperature and premature wear will result! If it is stuffed you can ride around temporarily without it, but make sure you replace it! 

2 X ZRX1200R 4 X ER6N, GT550, 1988 ZX-10, 4 X GPZ250R, 4 X GPZ900R and GPZ750R
Yeah I like Kawasakis.

IF you dont know the history of the bike and certain that it has ALWAYS had coolant in it check to see (when the thermo DOES open) that the water is actually "flowing past" the cap.
I have seen alloy water pump vanes "disolve" to nothing when they have had tap water run in the radiator..... its spinning but there are no "fins" to pump the water....
Damn you would have to be unlucky but....
I have seen alloy water pump vanes "disolve" to nothing when they have had tap water run in the radiator..... its spinning but there are no "fins" to pump the water....
Damn you would have to be unlucky but....
Just because you CAN ride, doesn't mean you SHOULD
doesn't a thermostat just open and close at a certain temp?bonester wrote:Don't chuck the thermostat- if you do the bike will never be at the correct operating temperature and premature wear will result! If it is stuffed you can ride around temporarily without it, but make sure you replace it!
There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
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Yup they do, but the closed phase is very important- you want the engine to warm up as quickly as possible- most of your engine wear occurs just after starting, while the bike warms up- the thermostat allows the bike to warm up quickly, as it effectively cuts the radiator out of the equation whilst the bike warms up. When cooling is required, the thermostat opens, allowing the radiator into the cooling circuit. The thermostat has an important job to do in conjunction with the radiator- keep the temperature within a pre determined range, giving the best performance and best wear characteristics- if you remove the thermostat you can shorten the life of your engine considerably.doesn't a thermostat just open and close at a certain temp?
FWIW air cooled engines are generally built with looser tolerances because they have a wider temperature range to deal with- (so they can expand and contract more) they don't have the benefit of a liquid cooling system to keep the temperature more constant.

2 X ZRX1200R 4 X ER6N, GT550, 1988 ZX-10, 4 X GPZ250R, 4 X GPZ900R and GPZ750R
Yeah I like Kawasakis.

fair enough,
just wouldn't have thought it'd be an issue in our climate. i would've thought oil and regular servicing would be more important.
just wouldn't have thought it'd be an issue in our climate. i would've thought oil and regular servicing would be more important.
There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
- wazza1234
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I've taken the thermo out of most of our cars when they fail...CBF'd replacing it and makes SFA difference in a car....although a bike might make more difference...having only a liter or 2 of coolant and all...speaking of which I need to replace the coolant in both car and bike...bugger...anyone know if water restrictions allow the use of a hose for purposes of flushing out engines?diesel wrote:fair enough,
just wouldn't have thought it'd be an issue in our climate. i would've thought oil and regular servicing would be more important.
- ZZRCHIKKY
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why are u putting water in the engin ? isnt that were oil goes ?wazza1234 wrote:I've taken the thermo out of most of our cars when they fail...CBF'd replacing it and makes SFA difference in a car....although a bike might make more difference...having only a liter or 2 of coolant and all...speaking of which I need to replace the coolant in both car and bike...bugger...anyone know if water restrictions allow the use of a hose for purposes of flushing out engines?diesel wrote:fair enough,
just wouldn't have thought it'd be an issue in our climate. i would've thought oil and regular servicing would be more important.
owwww me lubs my dr 650 WOOOOOOOOOOOOOT