Someone on chinariders was asking about massimo bikes and posted a link to the dirt bike he was interested in. http://massimomotor.com/productview....%20Bike&pid=49
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Someone on chinariders was asking about massimo bikes and posted a link to the dirt bike he was interested in. http://massimomotor.com/productview....%20Bike&pid=49
The original carb is vintage....over a decade, good luck.
Dear Forum viewers,
I now have more than enough money to buy the YG250-6, however, since China's switch of standards from EURO2 to EURO3 and Yin gang's consequential alteration of the bike's engine from carburetor to fuel injection, I've been thinking more and more about the Yamaha YBR250.
When I was first informed of the big change and my hopes of getting a registrable YG for 15,000 I was really heartbroken:sad: but I had to make a decision. My first thought was to reconsider the YBR after some good advice was given to me by a person I look up to.
Consider the following facts:
1. After the YG becomes fuel injected it's going to cost at least 17,000 and as dewsnap said, it is dangerously close to YBR at 23,000rmb.
2. Yamaha made the YBR250 fuel injected from the moment they designed it (I assume anyway). Yin gang have changed the design of their already reverse engineered carburetor engine to be fuel injected and I couldn't trust that as much as I could trust an original Yamaha design.
3. The YG is expected to be released in May but I wouldn't be surprised if that date was delayed. I want my new bike sooner than that.
4. The YG is beautiful. I think it's much better looking than the YBR but still, it is Chinese made and will most likely have more problems than the YBR and I've recently noticed a new kind of 'good look' from the YBR.
5. The YBR should be quality through and through: Good welds, pieces that fit properly and bolts and nuts that are fastened correctly before it left the factory. I wouldn't expect that from a Chinese make. The YBR should last a long time without many problems, if any, as long as I treat it well.:clap:
.
ChinaV; I hope that you don't see this as a dig on you or your YG250-6. I really appreciate your review and all of your advice about the bike.
Pete
P.s. The YBR is (obviously) Japanese. Would CMC have some kind of problem with me doing a review on a YBR? :rolleyes1:
It's not a Chinese made bike so that was a stupid question. Of course they wouldn't like that. What I meant to ask is: If I were to take a long, interesting ride (like Tokyokid did through Tibet) and post a big review of it on here then would that be ok with CMC?:naughty:
MCM? Of course you can review anything here! its all relevant for comparison if nothing else. BUT ZMC88 wrote this: You can see that the YBR 250 takes prominent position on Jianshe's website. They even make a 劲龙ⅡJYM250, which has a different 220cc engine, they are next to each other on the site, even with Chinese style photoshopped publicity shots and graphics! The YBR250 is certainly made in lots of different factories all over the world, probably China, India, Brazil, Japan and Portugal to name a few.
http://www.mychinamoto.com/forums/sh...e-sense-to-buy so read the whole thread and decide for yourself.
I'm quoting myself here!Quote:
Originally Posted by ZMC888
Mostly my thoughts for Pete........
That was the name of the thread, and at that time (summer 2009) it made sense. However since then I have revised my opinion, I still don't believe I was wrong but times have changed....
At that time the DD250G-2 was easily registered and cost only 10,000 RMB. Now this bike seems less available and more expensive, I doubt it can be registered due to emissions. Also we know that most of the street style Regal Raptors will be a headache to own for the first few months with some cheap components and a junk exhaust system with probable bad assembly.
The Yinggang is certainly a pretty bike but I've been told that the bike isn't available in Shandong, plus the emission worries means that there might be some serious issues registering the bike, and spending 15,000 on a bike that possibly cannot ever be plated, not the best idea.
From what I can gather Pete wants to live in China long term and do some road mileage. I don't know for sure but over a five year period I really think that at the moment a YBR250 is about the most logical choice for a road bike in China. Although a fairly limited choice at the moment.
This is just a "official" bored SR150 :naughty: http://www.zclub.com.tw/discuz/thread-76882-1-1.html
The Jialing JH600 is another strong choice, though you'll pay another 7k rmb for the bigger bike. Especially good for distance touring and pillioning. Most of the production goes to military and police departments, but there are a lot of civilians out there on the JH600 and it's got a decent track record.
It's China3 compliant and about 32k RMB. Just sayin'...
Quote:
Originally Posted by euphonius
Pure road I mean, not road/trail.Quote:
Originally Posted by ZMC888
Although 32K? That's less than I thought, I thought they'd gone up to 35K? Now for the 17 inch wheels, road tires and the shorter travel suspension! :naughty:
I have nothing against that bike, however, there is something about the look of it that just doesn't attract me. I think it's the forward fairing + headlights:riding:. If they could be messed around with and altered then maybe.... :mwink:
Looks are not the most important thing though. I thought my first and current bike looked great when I bought it. The occasional Chinese person (who knows nothing about motorbikes) still comments on it and says it looks 'handsome' but they don't know that it's a total piece of :bs:. Things go bad on that bike quicker than I can fix them.
Even with all that said, I'd like to see some people riding JH600s around my area; it would be a nice change from the constant swarms of e-bikes that can't ride in a straight line and love to swing right across main roads without doing so much as glancing in the direction of the traffic that they are cutting up:gaah:. I also wouldn't mind seeing less of the rusty old farmer motorbikes with exhausts that sound like a pig with diarrhea, or like an engine runs on bubbles... know the kind that I mean?:weary:
Is there a replacement for the farmers riding wrecks of bikes worth a good few weeks of their wages? Is there a replacement for the many relying on Ebikes? They would all rather have a car or a truck I am sure.
But how can they do that? Go to USA or France or UK for a job such as you have in their country? Can they do that easily and then save enough for a car and all the petrol and maintenance for years? Would the infrastructure support it?
They have a culture of billions of people been evolving for thousands of years and are forced by our military and financial aggression to look outwards. We sell them the ideas of expansion and growth and see them as a market from which we, including those of us working there, profit. They become aware and reciprocate and want a small part of what the poorest people in most of our societies have - communications, transport, health systems, entertainment, possesions ... maybe freedom. And they do not have the regulated systems and bureaucracies we have and have grown up with to teach them how to drive, behave in this new world.
Don't blame any of them, that is ignorant and self-centred I believe. Of course they have fools and arrogant people and want to take what they can, and they are not all altruistic or unbiased or even friendly. They don't have to be. It is their ground not yours. Be real.
It is not as if our society is perfect even in the matter of road rules and compliance. The 'rich' west ride arrogantly around in empty SUVs or in unnecessary fuel guzzlers and muscle cars, the 'normal man' drinks or his kid smokes crack and drives and kills innocent folk. And accidents happen too. Kids run out of school yards, tyres blow, brakes fail, tired mothers back into the street, truck drivers work long shifts. There is no difference. Why the fuck do you think you should escape the simple consequences of daily life all over the planet and why shouldn't you play to their rules in their game?
I stand corrected and feel exactly like this right now:asshat:. I'm not entirely closed minded but I can seem it sometimes.
What you said is absolutely true; about 99% of Chinese people are only riding bikes, motorbikes and e-bikes because they are saving up for a car or simply can't afford one. I know all too well that westerners drive around too much in big cars or SUVs (especially from what I saw in the states) and it would be much better for everyone if they did more car pooling or took public transportation.
There are many things that I don't like about the roads in the west and roads over here in China. It's not my place to say what's right and what's wrong but I still like to express my opinion from time to time.
Whenever I ride my bike around a right hand bend and meet a group of e-bikes oncoming in my lane (it happens about twice or three times a week) I get a bit pissed off with their attempt to save time by cutting across the road to avoid waiting for the light to turn green again and putting me, or others in my situation, in danger by doing so. The terrible thing is that, before long, I found myself doing the EXACT same thing:uhoh:. I must have picked it up from them because I saw it so often and began to accept it as the norm. I sometimes still get the urge to do that kind of thing but I force myself not to. This isn't because I wish to continue getting angry at them and avoid being a hypocrite but simply because I don't like to be the cause of any inconvenience to other people while I'm on the road and I don't want that to change that for any reason. I wish that more Chinese people would eventually grow to become the same way but I don't expect it.
After all is said and done and I complain about the things I don't like over here this is still, just like you said, their ground not mine: I consider that to be the bottom line. I may rant a bit because I still have some expectations left over from my time in the west but I'll never forget the bottom line... I'm getting married here very soon and will live the rest of my life in China so I can't afford to.
Pete
You are no more an asshat than I am Pete. And thank you sincerely for a 'sober' and balanced response. Sometimes I let fly a bit and it is not always at the poster, just a general salvo. I too often see in these pages what I perceive as narrow or misguided western thinking. Of course that is the way we think, we were brought up like that. Once in Bali I lost my temper with a rip-off 'bemo' driver, I shouted and swore colourfully and picked up the back of the 'bemo' so the poor sod sat there, enging revving, going nowhere. Six foot two, 200lb muscular white monkey goes berserk! The point is, the whole area cleared. Plenty of tough dudes around, some with working machetes even, but they do not do it our way. I learnt in that moment, and I worked it out. I started laughing out loud and they all came back, patted me on the back, making jokes at the expense of the bemo driver - and I was their friend. I never forgot since then that I was not back in a down-town western city with a knife in my pocket and alert senses.
Maybe I take things too seriously at times and could just let it sit but I read every post, everyday, (I know 'get a life' but I can't do much else at present) and the 'mood' of the forum at times makes me ashamed. Yeah I know, who made me judge and policeman? But I don't back off, I enjoy debate and arguments here and see it as a meeting place not just a place for queries about an exhaust bolt.
Posts like yours make me proud. I secretly envy you younger guys a lot, I wish I had the opportunities and years you have. i wish you well in your marriage btw, that is great news!
I'm honored to make your acquaintance Jape!
...I'll bear that in mind while viewing your posts in the future:popcorn:. I've only read a small handful of your posts so far but I'm sure you've had a lifetime of good and bad experiences from here and there.
Your experience in Bali sounds unique to me. I would love to have seen that and I also look up to a lot for resolving the situation the way you did.
I look up to all of the posters on CMC a lot too, from those with over 500 or 1000 posts down to the guys with less than 10 but still have very valid/interesting info. I feel pretty small next to you guys (especially you at 200lb! :muscles: I'm always struggling to keep myself around 140lb) and that makes me think over and over about everything that I dare to type on here. I will still continue to post in the likely event that someone will find one of my experiences interesting or just funny.
I too enjoy this site for the debates and arguments as well as the technical information and experience with motorcycles that people share here.
Thanks for your good wishes on my marriage. I've yet to tell the family back home that we're planning to have the marriage within the next month but at least most of them know I'm engaged by now.
Pete
Don't worry, although it was all muscle back then, since I bust my back I am down to mere existence, as a pot-bellied, skinny old bloke of 140lb.
60 in a couple of weeks, where did the time go? Don't sell yourself short, I don't know what you do or your age but even in this connected, travelling world, it is rare a bloke is willing to move and fall in love and join in and work and live and hopefully raise kids (?) in another culture so different as China is. Takes courage and perseverance and other qualities to do it right.
I didn't have any choice, I'm hiding!:seesaw_smilie:
Happy birthday for next week Jape.
60's not old btw. Haha. My old dear is pushing 60 and she's still mad as ever, travelling the UK doing the biker rallies and all that.
Not saying that's a good example, but all we can do is keep on keeping on.
All the best. :icon10:
SoberPete, congratulations are certainly in order. :thumbsup:
I'm also recently married to a Chinese girl...
The Chinese mentality and way of life is a joy and being part of a Chinese family will be the most rewarding thing you'rel likely to experience. :icon10:
I've been fascinated with the Chinese language, culture, history, food and more since I was around 14 years old. One day when I was 22 my Dad finally kicked my arse into setting a date for coming here instead of me always saying "I'm gonna go to China one day". A year from that day I had saved my money, arranged a TEFL job and was on a plane over here just before I'd turned 23. I'm going to be 26 and married before the end of this year. Since I arrived here I've had some great times and some really bad ones too but this is still the place that I want to be in.
I didn't meet my misses straight away but when I found her I knew she was the one. Always told myself I'd never get married but I changed my mind from the first day that I met her. I will settle down here and have a least two kids by the way!:icon10: Even though I miss family back in the UK and USA it still just feels 'right' to be here.
I'll take my wife back to the west for a bit of travel and to meet the family when we can both afford it. I'd also love it if my brother, sister or any other family members could make it out here so that I could show them how different, and sometimes wonderful, it is in The Far East.
A large portion of my good experiences over here have been with the misses and the family. I have learned much about their way of life so far but I know that I still have a long way to go. I know exactly what you mean :chinese:.
Congratulations to you too Dewsnap!
By the way guys, please, call me Pete:icon10:
V, I've got some engine's disassembled pictures. Enjoy.
p.s. I don't own those pictures, contact me if violating copyright.
thats a single cylinder push rod engine correct?
No Gardo it is not….are you asking because its April 01?
It’s a 170MM
http://www.yingangmotor.com/product/...ail.aspx?id=19
It’s a DOHC double over head cam with 4-valves.
No..... I was asking because I didnt know
Very interesting td_ref, thanks for sharing. Hope I don't get to see that much of my engine :lol8:.
Gardo, it's the Honda AX-1 / NX250 engine....the pinnacle of Chinese 250cc engine technology at this time.
Cheers!
ChinaV
Thanks and now i have learned something new today