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SHAD Welcome New Member


Joined: Mar 03, 2010 Posts: 3 Location: CANADA
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Posted: Fri Mar 05, 2010 8:43 am Post subject: 1975 YAMAHA DT125 ENDURO |
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HELLO, I HAVE JUST AQUIRED A NICE OLD GEM. I WAS AMAZED TO SEE THAT AFTER A LONG TRUCK RIDE FROM THE FARM, AND FROM SITTING OUTSIDE UNCOVERED FOR WHO KNOW HOW MANY YEARS, THIS LITTLE PUPPY FIRED RIGHT UP WITH JUST A FRESH BATTERY!!
BUT IT IS IN NO WAY IN "GOOD RIDING ORDER"
IM GONNA START TEARING IT DOWN WHEN THE SNOW MELTS BUT I WAS WONDERING... I GOT ME A CLYMER MAG. AND I WAS LOOKING AT THE CARBS
(THIS BIKE BLEEDS GAS OUT THE BANJO BOLT AND THE BOTTOM OF THE BOWL)
AND IN THE MAG. IT SHOWS THE BANJO BOLT WITH ANOTHER BOLT SCREWING INSIDE IT AND THIS BOLT IS CALLED UP AS THE MAIN JET?!?!?!
BUT THATS NOT THE MAIN JET??? REALLY CONFUSED HERE IN THE EXPLODED DIAGRAM THERE ARE 2 MAIN JETS??!!
ANY FEEDBACK WOULD BE GREAT TO HELP ME UNDERSTAND WHATS GOING ON HERE THANKS!
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zjeppe Weekend Warrior


Joined: Dec 26, 2009 Posts: 226 Location: Heist-op-den-berg
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Posted: Sat Mar 06, 2010 1:25 am Post subject: |
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Welcome Shad, but...why shout(capitals are considered shouting at forums ) sorry can't help you with your prob but I'm shure the guys around here 'll point you in the right directions
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drew0512 Weekend Warrior


Joined: Jan 29, 2010 Posts: 15 Location: Charleston, SC
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drew0512 Weekend Warrior


Joined: Jan 29, 2010 Posts: 15 Location: Charleston, SC
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tcanough Weekend Warrior


Joined: Sep 05, 2009 Posts: 189 Location: Phoenix , Arizona
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Posted: Sat Mar 06, 2010 9:04 am Post subject: 75 dt125 |
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Welcome Shad ; Is the weather starting to break in your part of Canada ? I currently own a 75 dt125 and have had my trials with it and expenses as well . Just got it running again , passed emissions , registered , insured and the same day [ 3.5miles later seized the motor ] had to order everything for the bottom end build as I already had the top end parts from a previous miss diagnosis . This bike looks like it came from the showroom , original condition ,and 4,500 miles . You just can't erase 35 years of sitting . Check the engine out completely before running it too much . And save yourself allot of time and expense " DO NOT PRESSURE WASH THIS BIKE " I can tell you this from $400.00 worth of engine rebuild experience !
Now for your original question , I do believe that the Clymers and others call that particular jet a main jet [ I'm holding the exact carb in my hand and had to disassemble it to see what you were referring to ] . This is not what you or I would think of as the "MAIN JET " Located in the top portion of the carb . It is a jet and it's function is unknown by me . Oh Ya , the reason I'm holding the carb in my hand is that it is part of what I took out with the pressure washer , along with the oil pump , the points the points cam and probably contributed to taking out the oil seals causing the crankcase to loose vacuum and seizing . The last point is a guess as I've not disassembled the engine yet . I'm leaving that to a professional of which I'm not . Good luck to you with the little Yamaha . I love mine when it's running .
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drew0512 Weekend Warrior


Joined: Jan 29, 2010 Posts: 15 Location: Charleston, SC
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Bikegeezer Gear Head


Joined: Dec 26, 2007 Posts: 1216 Location: Scottsdale, Arizona
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Posted: Tue Mar 09, 2010 7:05 am Post subject: Re: 1975 YAMAHA DT125 ENDURO |
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| SHAD wrote: | REALLY CONFUSED HERE IN THE EXPLODED DIAGRAM THERE ARE 2 MAIN JETS??!!
ANY FEEDBACK WOULD BE GREAT TO HELP ME UNDERSTAND WHATS GOING ON HERE THANKS! | I'm looking at that diagram and see only one main jet (#6) and one pilot jet (#1). Which part # are you thinking is the other main jet?
Stu
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Steve Searles Forum Moderator


Joined: Oct 03, 2005 Posts: 1583 Location: Marshall, MI
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Posted: Tue Mar 09, 2010 7:52 am Post subject: |
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In that particular carburetor the "main" jet is indeed in the "banjo" bolt in the carb bowl. The other jet "pilot " is in the main body of the carb. Just make sure both are clear and you can see light thru them and continue on. Don't let terminology get in the way of a good easy carb cleaning. Take out air idle mixture screw after documenting how many turns out it is set at. (Usually 1 1/2 turns out). Blow out all passages, clean bowl and reassemble. Check needle and seat as well. It should be just fine. New plug, file, clean points, etc.
_________________ You only go around once in life, but if you do it right, once is enough! |
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SHAD Welcome New Member


Joined: Mar 03, 2010 Posts: 3 Location: CANADA
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Hoss Weekend Warrior


Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 41 Location: Spring, TX
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Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 9:16 am Post subject: |
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I believe the second spark plug is a spare. I could be wrong.
_________________ 81 DT175 |
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jayel Commuter


Joined: Apr 28, 2008 Posts: 815 Location: Southeast Iowa, 74 Yam TX650A, 78 Yam SR500E, 87 H-D XLH 1100
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Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 9:59 am Post subject: |
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| it's a compession release port originally just a block-off plug in that hole but you could use the compression release (better than brakes on dirt, acts like engine braking on a four stroke) or a extra plug
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pd Weekend Warrior


Joined: Feb 08, 2010 Posts: 145 Location: West Michigan
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Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 10:53 am Post subject: |
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For conversation , my '58 Simplex has a double spark plug and both fire at the same time from the same coil . It's a two stroke .
_________________ ´82 CB750C+ |
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jayel Commuter


Joined: Apr 28, 2008 Posts: 815 Location: Southeast Iowa, 74 Yam TX650A, 78 Yam SR500E, 87 H-D XLH 1100
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Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 11:21 am Post subject: |
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| pd wrote: | | For conversation , my '58 Simplex has a double spark plug and both fire at the same time from the same coil . It's a two stroke . | trying to keep one clean enough to fire thru the oil mix no doubt
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Bikegeezer Gear Head


Joined: Dec 26, 2007 Posts: 1216 Location: Scottsdale, Arizona
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Posted: Fri Mar 19, 2010 5:24 am Post subject: |
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About that second plug in the hole intended for a compression release, a lot of guys think it's a swell idea to put a hotter plug in that hole. The thinking seems to be that if the cooler plug fouls, you can just swap the wire to the hotter plug. That may be true, but one should beware of how hot a plug goes in that hole. The plug doesn't create heat, it removes heat. And it does that whether there's a spark going across it or not. If it's too hot a plug, it'll hole the piston - wire connected or not. Best to keep spare plugs under the seat, and fill that second hole with a factory type blanking plug or a compression release. Sometimes, both holes are spaced equally from the center. But if one hole is centered and the other is off to the side, the hole at the center of the head is the one that should have a spark plug in it.
Stu
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