How hot is too hot.
- Wheelie-Gene
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How hot is too hot.
I have a cylinder head temp monitor for the 480.
I noticed that the head temp hovers around 320* while trail riding and in town cruising. Sustained higher speeds brings the head temp up to 350*+.
What is considered normal operating temps for an air cooled engine???
I noticed that the head temp hovers around 320* while trail riding and in town cruising. Sustained higher speeds brings the head temp up to 350*+.
What is considered normal operating temps for an air cooled engine???
2nd gen SSS street hooligan
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
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I just think it's odd it runs hotter even at higher speeds. Generally there is no substatute for air when passed through a radiator or accross fins. I guess those air cooled bikes don't really have a way of channeling air to the cylinder. The fins may not see more air at higher speeds than they do lower because the engine sits in a pocket behind the front wheel and forks...I don't know? Just thinking...
'03 CR500 powered by...umm...a new motor?
How did you do the mod?I honestly thought 4 strokes run hotter than 2's,I own a Polaris Hawkeye and ride alot of different 4 stroke quads all the time and the heat is pretty intense sometimesJoshwfl wrote:Wow, that seems hot! I shot my wife's 300ex with an infrared thermometer once and got 225 degrees, then again, it's a 4 stroke with an oil cooler mod. Interesting question.

1994 Heartless CR500R
1986 KX500
This is the same cooler it had:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/TRX-300e ... 0147308350
Now she has a newer 300ex and it does seem to get very hot.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/TRX-300e ... 0147308350
Now she has a newer 300ex and it does seem to get very hot.
- Wheelie-Gene
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I know that timing, fuel mixture and oil content plays a role in EGTs (combustion temps).
Timing is in the stock position.
The clip on the slide needle is in the top groove. I placed it in the center position and it was so blubbery it wouldn't run, I put it in the #2 slot and took it on a high spped run and it didn't change the #s one bit. I can feel that the power fell off, so it is indeed running richer.
I might run a slightly richer oil mix (maybe also some race fuel?) and see what it does.
I heard it detonate one time when it approahed 350. I pulled over and let it idle....it actually cooled down.
I don't know what's in the engine, the head could have been milled at one point.
Seems that could have been an issue....the old 500 has a shroud.
Timing is in the stock position.
The clip on the slide needle is in the top groove. I placed it in the center position and it was so blubbery it wouldn't run, I put it in the #2 slot and took it on a high spped run and it didn't change the #s one bit. I can feel that the power fell off, so it is indeed running richer.
I might run a slightly richer oil mix (maybe also some race fuel?) and see what it does.
I heard it detonate one time when it approahed 350. I pulled over and let it idle....it actually cooled down.
I don't know what's in the engine, the head could have been milled at one point.
Seems that could have been an issue....the old 500 has a shroud.
Last edited by Wheelie-Gene on January 3rd, 2009, 3:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
2nd gen SSS street hooligan
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
- redrocket190
- Posts: 1229
- Joined: September 17th, 2007, 9:07 pm
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- Location: San Clemente, CA
What fuel, jetting and carb are you running? How long are your trail rides? Are you riding in stop/start traffic for protracted periods of time? IMHO, I think you are sweating the small stuff on this one.
On this board or http://www.cr500riders.com you'll find a post about a Klemm Research (?) mod to the 1984 CR500R cylinder head to stip it pinging. The CR480R can ping and I ran 50/50 race gas to avoid this - probably not practical for you though. You might want to see what these folks can do for the 480.
BTW, stock jetting is way off - but on the rich side which will help with the temperature factor. A high-speed run is not going to be significantly impacted by the needle. Run a 70 (72) pilot and a 152 (172) main as a test as see if you like it.
On this board or http://www.cr500riders.com you'll find a post about a Klemm Research (?) mod to the 1984 CR500R cylinder head to stip it pinging. The CR480R can ping and I ran 50/50 race gas to avoid this - probably not practical for you though. You might want to see what these folks can do for the 480.
BTW, stock jetting is way off - but on the rich side which will help with the temperature factor. A high-speed run is not going to be significantly impacted by the needle. Run a 70 (72) pilot and a 152 (172) main as a test as see if you like it.
Michael Stiles
2007 Honda CR500R-AF
2007 Honda CR500R-AF
- Wheelie-Gene
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I figured I'd pull the bowl and see what #s it has.
Whoever owned the bike in the past did a great job of taking care of it. It has an aftermarket pipe/silencer kit on it, so I would guess it might have been tuned also.
I was going to look back in my prior thread and see what the jet sizes you mentioned were, so thanks for resubmitting those #s.
Changing the needle did make a big difference in the low/mid throttle openings. It blubbered terrible and never would clear up, and even changing to 1 groove richer made a big difference...It was way less snappy and killed the off-idle power.
I figured I'd put the needle back where it was and document the pilot jet.
High speed doesn't mean large throttle openings. 65/70MPH is only 1/4 throttle.
I can trail ride/hit side streets/play around all day long w/temps at 300+/-. I can get on the highway and within 2 miles it'll be inching up/past 350. Steady RPMs @1/4 throttle = 350*+. It's not the temps that I mind, it's the detonation that comes with it.
The head could have been milled down at one time, I figured I mix in some race fuel and see what it does.
You can listen to the engine and see that I don't rev it hard (I take care of my shit), even on the highway I keep the RPMs comfortable. Maybe I am a worry-wort.I guess if I didn't have a temp monitor it'd be "outta sight, outta mind".
Thanks for the advice....and I realize what people are thinking. It's a racing machine, not a fucking street bike.
You've probably seen the vid (I'll post it in case you haven't).
Whoever owned the bike in the past did a great job of taking care of it. It has an aftermarket pipe/silencer kit on it, so I would guess it might have been tuned also.
I was going to look back in my prior thread and see what the jet sizes you mentioned were, so thanks for resubmitting those #s.
Changing the needle did make a big difference in the low/mid throttle openings. It blubbered terrible and never would clear up, and even changing to 1 groove richer made a big difference...It was way less snappy and killed the off-idle power.
I figured I'd put the needle back where it was and document the pilot jet.
High speed doesn't mean large throttle openings. 65/70MPH is only 1/4 throttle.
I can trail ride/hit side streets/play around all day long w/temps at 300+/-. I can get on the highway and within 2 miles it'll be inching up/past 350. Steady RPMs @1/4 throttle = 350*+. It's not the temps that I mind, it's the detonation that comes with it.
The head could have been milled down at one time, I figured I mix in some race fuel and see what it does.
You can listen to the engine and see that I don't rev it hard (I take care of my shit), even on the highway I keep the RPMs comfortable. Maybe I am a worry-wort.I guess if I didn't have a temp monitor it'd be "outta sight, outta mind".
Thanks for the advice....and I realize what people are thinking. It's a racing machine, not a fucking street bike.
You've probably seen the vid (I'll post it in case you haven't).
2nd gen SSS street hooligan
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
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- Wheelie-Gene
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I just checked the jets in mine. It has a 72 and a 162, clip in top groove. I might try the 152, just to see how it would run. It's crazy fun now, leaning it down will make it even more so???redrocket190 wrote:Run a 70 (72) pilot and a 152 (172) main as a test as see if you like it.
Great advice....Thanks.
2nd gen SSS street hooligan
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
83 CR480
83 XL600
97 VFR750
Kawasaki H1-F
Suzuki Titan
HondaHarley
83 CB1100F
-
- Last active:
- Wheelie-Gene
- Posts: 311
- Joined: May 26th, 2008, 11:52 am
- Last active:
- Location: stick country-TX
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