Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
bowtiewagon
my bike has had a couple carb issues and i am considering...
Mikuni VM26 (& copies) is the answer. BOTH jets is easy to find in local powersport shop
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
humanbeing
Mikuni VM26 (& copies) is the answer. BOTH jets is easy to find in local powersport shop
Very cool thanks.
2 Attachment(s)
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Well I did it finally. Weather is good, got up, and swapped out the bent shocks.
bent ones off....
Attachment 19350
new ones on...
Attachment 19351
have not ridden yet.. may go in a bit.. hot out. Relaxing from working. Was relatively easy to do. Kind of weird how they are in there. basically just clamped in. no bolts hold them in at all. two bolts just clamp around them in a sleeve, and that is it.
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
ok took her for a ride, and man are these shocks stiff. so bad that I cannot even see out my mirrors, they are just vibrating so bad they are noting but fuzz when I look at them while riding. Is there a way to adjust these shocks for a softer ride? I do not want to mess with the nuts on the top of them until I know for sure that is what they are for? I hear these are under tension and the last thing I need is to twist the nut and they pop out on me.
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
bowtiewagon
ok took her for a ride, and man are these shocks stiff. so bad that I cannot even see out my mirrors, they are just vibrating so bad they are noting but fuzz when I look at them while riding. Is there a way to adjust these shocks for a softer ride? I do not want to mess with the nuts on the top of them until I know for sure that is what they are for? I hear these are under tension and the last thing I need is to twist the nut and they pop out on me.
The forks probably came dry and need fluid in them. They take 10w fork oil and some riders use ATF. I'm not sure how much is required per fork. Maybe HumanBeing will have that information. As far as the internals, you'll have a spacer, washer, spring, and the dampening rod. The dampening rod is bolted into the bottom of the slider and keeps the fork from separating when it becomes fully extended.
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ben2go
The forks probably came dry and need fluid in them. They take 10w fork oil and some riders use ATF. I'm not sure how much is required per fork. Maybe HumanBeing will have that information. As far as the internals, you'll have a spacer, washer, spring, and the dampening rod. The dampening rod is bolted into the bottom of the slider and keeps the fork from separating when it becomes fully extended.
wow ,I appreciate the information. Was not aware they came dry. I will remove them and have them looked at. You would think buying parts they would come complete.
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
bowtiewagon
wow ,I appreciate the information. Was not aware they came dry. I will remove them and have them looked at. You would think buying parts they would come complete.
You can loosen the top clamp bolt on the triple clamp, remove the fork cap, and look down inside without removing them.
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ben2go
You can loosen the top clamp bolt on the triple clamp, remove the fork cap, and look down inside without removing them.
would that also be where to fill them up?
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
Quote:
Originally Posted by
bowtiewagon
would that also be where to fill them up?
Yes, but you'll need to know how much to fill them with. To little and you'll burn up the bushing and not get any dampening. To much and the ride will be extremely stiff or lock up the forks. When you remove the caps, keep pressure on them, so the spring doesn't pop off the cap.
Re: Dong Fang DF 250 RTB Bobber Information
interesting. I have searched for how much to put in, but you know how it is with this bike. Trial and error. I think what I might do,it disassemble one old shock, pour out the oil and estimate how much is in that, then go from there. hopefully that will give me a figure that will work.