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EXHAUST / GEARING

Posted: 07 Apr 2003, 13:10
by Paul P
Will a cr 250 powerpipe fit on a mk3 crm 250 and if so would it be an improvement ? does anyone know what sort of top speed 14 / 48 would give and does anyone else out there own a mk 3 crm 250 with purple mudgaurds and yellew side panels

Posted: 07 Apr 2003, 15:04
by Russell
My Mk3 has a Purple tank but thank God the mudgaurds are yellow.

same colours

Posted: 11 May 2003, 08:01
by Luke Davey
yes, my mudguards are purple, and the side panels are yellow, why do you ask

Posted: 11 May 2003, 16:15
by Russell
My MK 3 is flat out at about 75 with 13 50 gearing

Posted: 11 May 2003, 23:37
by double_clutch
75mph flat out! surely it must be restricted? my old dt125 did 70mph! im sure my crm is quicker than 75, although ive never had it flat out since my nasty accident on it

Posted: 12 May 2003, 06:45
by admin
thats not restricted, just russell has it geared very low. bet it lifts the front in third with no effort and first gear is near useless

Recommended Gearing?

Posted: 12 May 2003, 08:36
by Phil Neal
What would be a good gearing for green laning, I think the standard may be a bit high, whats the biggest you can go on the back without changing the chain? or is it ok just to shove another sprung link in? (I never seem to go over 60-70 on the road due to traffic etc.)

Never sure at what point to go for a rivited chain, I'd heard anything over 125cc and you are risking it abit?

Posted: 12 May 2003, 09:37
by Russell
I run 13 50 gearing with 114 link chain, I replaced all sprockets and chain at same time so did not have to extened chain I simply took it to the shop and they selected the best chain. The biggest rear sprocket I have run was 53 this was great for lifting the front wheel but you had to change gear more often than a restricted moped. My bike is never used on road except to ride to garage to fill up and spends most of its life in an old chalk pit lots of hills and tight turns, I never get out of third if higher gearing so 13 50 is good for my needs but may not suit people who use on road. Mine will lift in third and on a good day you can keep front wheel in the air through first four gears.
The only change to bike for bigger sprockets is to fit a dropper plate to chain guide.

Posted: 12 May 2003, 20:50
by double_clutch
if you have a bigger rear sprocket the big does more wheelies but has a slower top end (more low down speed than top end speed) and if you have smaller sprocket on back it will keep the front end down and make it faster top end (less low doen speed and greater top end)?????????


help im confused

larger rear sprocket = .............................................?
smaller rear sprocket = ..............................................?

Posted: 12 May 2003, 21:51
by jackstribe
DC here's the explanation. :o :o
just like a mountain bike, a bigger cog at the back makes the wheel easier to turn, hence lots of wheelies. cos the wheel spins quickly more easily, then it cannot get any faster as engine gets faster, hence low top end.
the opposite is true of a smaller rear sprocket.
with a rear sprocket, the number of teeth can be quite varied eg 40 to 53 teeth difference on the CRM.

a smaller cog at the front is also same as an mtb, so to put a smaller cog on the front is OPPOSITE to the rear, ie it will make the wheel turn quicker, hence wheelies etc. a larger front sprocket makes the top end longer but accelerate slower. the difference in teeth is not very much eg on a CRM you would have either 12, 13, 14 or maybe 15 teeth at a push.

hope everyone understands this ramble!!!!!!! :lol:

Posted: 13 May 2003, 20:22
by SteveOldGit
Its nearly new C&S time for me as my chain is virtually shagged! :( Is the conclusion that 13/50 (as suggested by Russell) is the best gearing for 80/90 % off road? (fairly hilly stuff) :? + any recommendations for a supplier? is it our friends at L.T.? Also, Russell, sorry to show my ignorance! but what is a 'dropper plate for chain guide'? and were do i get it from? if i go for this gearing?.

Thanks for any replys.

Posted: 13 May 2003, 20:48
by admin
The dropper, is the chain pre tensioner (located in front of the rear sprocket). If you go above 47 on the rear this catches the sprocket and isnt low enough. The modded one LT sell will allow much larger sprockets to be fitted.
Hope this helps

Posted: 15 May 2003, 20:38
by SteveOldGit
DOH! :oops: (apologies for being a mechanical thicko!)

Thanks Admin for your advise.
Looks like there be more 'beer vouchers' heading L.T's way in the near future :lol:

Steve.

purple and yellow

Posted: 29 May 2003, 09:31
by Paul P
refering to the top of the page and Luke Davey I only ask because ive owned my bike for almost 1 year and I have only ever found one picture on the internet and when I go to a bike store they just scratch there heads