Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
By the way, for anyone interested, Suzuki produces two types of coolant that is recommended for the GW250:
1) Long life coolant (green in color). This is what comes in the bike from the factory. You mix this green coolant with distilled water (50:50 ratio). Don't use regular tap water, as the bike has an aluminum radiator core that will clog/corrode from minerals inside tap water. Distilled water is inexpensive and readily available from any Watson store (comes in a clear bottle with a green cap). Watson usually places it alongside regular bottled water. The label clearly states "Distilled Water". Also good for batteries, of course.
2) Super long life coolant (blue in color). This is premixed. You just pour it into your cooling system, right out of the bottle.
I'm not sure if it is ok to mix the two different types of coolant. I have the GW250 shop service manual and it doesn't mention anything about mixing the two different coolants.
Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
Quote:
Originally Posted by
euphonius
Birdshit?
Quick eye, but I don't think so. Tastes much differently! :naughty:
Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
Little update.
I needed to get a servicing done on a GW.
I wanted the dealer (Qili Motors) to check the valve clearances, as I had not had this done and it was well past Suzuki's recommended mileage limit.
Qili refused to do it, saying "they are fine, we don't hear anything - we'll do it when we can hear the valves rattling away." You can't make this shit up.
So, an argument started ... but, of course, in Qili's view it is the "expert" and I am the typical dumb customer ... worse, I am a dumb foreign customer. No amount of reasoned explanation helped - I was confronted with the "just come back when it is broken and we will fix it" mentality.
Fine, I will do it myself ... but I have better things to do.
I didn't even want to get into the Suzuki recommended "check torque settings on all major fasteners" ... Qili's technician walked around with a crescent wrench seeing if things were tight. Sigh.
Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
Same bs here. We can't actually go to the dealer to have any work done, my toolkit is better than theirs, they don't have a torque wrench or even a tire pressure gauge.
I have to take the bikes to independent mechanics or do things myself, it's the only way. I'm going to get my valves done pretty soon, but not by the dealer.
Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ZMC888
... they don't have a ... tire pressure gauge.
Haha - right you are!
I forgot to mention something else the "technician" performed.
Qili Motors spent a lot of money acquiring and renovating a new building for its service department. It is impressive, by Chinese standards. For example, each station has air hoses on a retractable overhead spool.
So, the "technician" pulls down the hose, attaches a pressure gauge with a trigger at the end (so air can be shot out), and he begins to spray the dust off my bike. I have no friggin idea what part of "maintenance" he is doing but ... after spending 5 minutes blowing some dust off the bike, he detaches the gauge and returns the air hose to the ceiling.
I'm sitting in the "Customer Comfort" area, a few feet away, and I just can't take it. I walk over and ask ... "uh, excuse me, would you mind checking my tire pressure?"
Damn, you would've thought I was asking him to bake a cake! He reluctantly did it. I double-checked at home, late last night (tires were cold) ... sure enough, 44 in front, 48 in rear.
Another example of upgrading the hardware, but the software is still version 1.0.
Re: Suzuki GW250 impressions
Yep, they need to by micro-managed down to the last detail. One time I asked a mechanic of 30 years if he could put some oil down the throttle lines as he was installing a throttle cable anyhow. He gave me a look as though I'd just asked if I could bed his daughter, then he squeezed black used engine oil down only the push line (of a push pull throttle) and gave me a smug look.
Often I fix, maintain and adjust my bikes near my apartment complex. They seem to have no word for maintenance only 'fix', 'preserve' or 'adjust'. They keep coming over and asking 'are you fixing your bike?' 'Is it broken?' No just checking the tire pressure, checking the chain tension etc. The concept of maintenance seems utterly lost on all but about 2% of the very best Chinese mechanics.