Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 16

Thread: Got some questions about my new 225dx

  1. #1
    mrit is offline New to the board Arm chair racerNew to the board
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Snohomish, WA
    --
    20

    Got some questions about my new 225dx

    So as of today I am a proud new owner of an 84ish YTM 225dx. Besides several problems the previous owner "didn't" know about, lets just say now she is a fixer upper. I was mainly curious about the forks, every 225dx I have seen on here has had the top of the forks about level with the handle bars, mine isn't even close. It actually has air fittings on the top, kinda like the valve stems on tires



    The PO said that he didn't put much pressure in them cause it made it better for the trails. I have worked on a ton of machines, but this is my first atv so have no clue if what he was saying is accurate.

    The rear axle bearing are bad, I've read denniskirk sells them, but Im not sure which are the correct ones. Anyone got a part # for the correct ones? The pullstart stopped working right after I bought it too, it figures. It doesn't catch, is this a relatively simple fix? If so, how do I go about it?

    Also is there a place that sells individual engine gaskets? I would rather not pay $50 for all of them when I only need the gasket that seals the cover under the pullstart.

    Thanks alot

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    EastGreenbush, newyork
    --
    3,494
    forks are most definately from a dirt bike or something, most are run at zero psi, you can add up to maybe 10 max, but dont need to. pull starts are a pain to rebuild so i hear, ive never had to do one yet good luck with it.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Northwest Indiana
    --
    550
    Simply loosen the top tree and lower the forks accordingly. Go to your local Yamaha dealer and ask for the gaskets you need.
    1985 KXT250 A.K.A. "Doom"/Multiple Engine Combinations/Jason Hall Inverts/HRE Swing Arm, Cal Fab Swing Arm/Jemco Pipe/Buzz Saw Cylinder, Klemm Research Cyinder/PWK Carb/PVL Ignition/Dura Blue Axle/Mosh Custom Seat

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Northwest Indiana
    --
    550
    Now that I have taken a closer look.....make sure that those are the factory forks.
    1985 KXT250 A.K.A. "Doom"/Multiple Engine Combinations/Jason Hall Inverts/HRE Swing Arm, Cal Fab Swing Arm/Jemco Pipe/Buzz Saw Cylinder, Klemm Research Cyinder/PWK Carb/PVL Ignition/Dura Blue Axle/Mosh Custom Seat

  5. #5
    mrit is offline New to the board Arm chair racerNew to the board
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Snohomish, WA
    --
    20
    Quote Originally Posted by Tecate 50 View Post
    Now that I have taken a closer look.....make sure that those are the factory forks.
    Thats one thing that I wasn't sure about, none of the other 225dx's I have seen had them.

    The forks are really soft, so it sounds like i can adjust however I want as long as its below 10psi?

    Thanks
    Last edited by mrit; 09-20-2009 at 12:04 AM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Monroe MI
    --
    5,787
    Never seen tubes that long on a 225. The forks are on backwards also. Hate to stop hard on that, those would skewer you. Putting air in those would just increase the chance of blowing the seals.

    You can make a gasket out of thin cardboard.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Monroe MI
    --
    5,787
    Those are definately the wrong forks. Even the outer tubes look different by the axle. The rest looks like it's in good shape. Post the VIN, if you are unsure of the year.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails 83_shaft225_yllw_r.jpg  

  8. #8
    mrit is offline New to the board Arm chair racerNew to the board
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Snohomish, WA
    --
    20
    I believe the vin is 29U-078997, That is what is stamped on the tube that supports the forks.

    Fixed the oil leak today, half the gasket was missing and the PO just threw on a ton of silicon thinking it would fix it Had to drill out two of the screws, who the hell thought it would be a good idea to use phillips screws , so im gonna be looking for some allen head bolts. Fixed the pullstart also, it was just gummed up.

    Gotta figure out what is wrong with the carb, it leaks like crazy.

    Found out the "bent hub" was a really bent axle, so got one on order from ebay.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Monroe MI
    --
    5,787

  10. #10
    mrit is offline New to the board Arm chair racerNew to the board
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Snohomish, WA
    --
    20
    Thanks mike.


  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Santa Barbara, California
    --
    1,161
    This was the first trike I ever rode, these are great trikes.
    1985 Honda 200x
    1986 Honda TRX350D - Gone but not forgotten 1982 Honda 185s*sold* 1985 200x*sold* 1983 200x*sold* 1985 ATC70*sold* 2002 Honda 400EX*sold*

  12. #12
    mrit is offline New to the board Arm chair racerNew to the board
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Snohomish, WA
    --
    20
    Just outta curiosity, does anyone know how much travel the stock forks have? I didn't try too hard, but with 0 psi in the forks I couldn't get them to bottom out

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Monroe MI
    --
    5,787

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Tulsa Ok. USA
    --
    1

    Allen heads

    Went to my local hardware store (lowe's) and picked up a bunch of Allen head screws! Couldn't believe I found em, size 1 metric 20 to 30 length. Replaced all the Phillips heads and allen head size is same as valve covers. $.50 each

  15. #15
    mrit is offline New to the board Arm chair racerNew to the board
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Snohomish, WA
    --
    20
    Yep I went to home depot for 90% of the screws. I had to go to a specialty bolt store to get the longer ones. For anyone in WA check out Tacoma bolt and screw, wish I would have gone there first. They only charged $.30 each, compared to $.55 at home depot. Not much money still, but it add's up, could have saved a couple bucks. M6 x1 or however it goes.

    Besides the fill plug on the diff, she seems to be coming togeather fine. I took the torch to heat it up a bit, and still ended up stripping the allen socket in it. It didn't want to budge. Taking the easy out kit to it tomorrow.

//ArrowChat Integreation Code //