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| you would still have to use the spacer plate with the 88-89 cylinder if your still using the stroker crank. the only way to ditch the spacer plate would be to get the head rechambered/cut for the extra stroke.
__________________ 86' honda 250R woods bike esr trx 5 pipe and silencer 38mm air stryker carb five0nick porting 68mm racer's choice piston 200psi compression on 110 octane and klotz R50 vforce 3 reed valve 01 cr250 ignition system +4 axle 13/38 gearing durablue lowering strut chassis and swingarm skidplate holeshot tires on douglas rims front & maxxis razars on stock honda rims on rear new maier front and rear fenders |
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| i already have the head macined for the extra stroke... but for the longer rod... i am useing the spacer to take up space for the longer rod... not stroke... so all atc-trx 250r cylinders are the same heith???
__________________ 1986 Honda Trx 250r 1. Hot Rods +4 Stroker Crank 2. V-Force Reeds 3. Wiseco 67.50 Piston 4. Twin Air Filter 5. Fmf Fatty Pipe 6. Fmf Powercore 2 Silencer 7. Shaved Head 8. NGK Sparkplug 9. Tusk Clutch Kit 10. Hinson Clutch Basket 11. Keihin PWK 39 Carb 13. Maier Plastic 14. Moded Head Lights 15. Dougles Rear Rims 16. Maxxis Razr Front Tires 17. Kenda Knarly Rear Tires 18. Renthal Handle Bars 19. Dura Blue Wheel Spacers 20. DG Steel Series Nerfs 21. AC Racing Grab Bar 22. AC Racing Classic Front Bumber 23. Lone Star Racing Brake Block Off Plate 24. Laeger +2 A Arms 1985 Honda CR 125R 1. Dg Type 2 Silencer 2. Uni Air filter 3. Wiseco .60 Piston 4. Scott Mx Grips 5. Fmf Power Reeds 6. Hot Rods Crank |
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| You can cut the head for the stroke increase but not the deck change due to the piston. That must be done with a plate. |
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| So if i had a stock 1989 honda trx 250r.... i put a stroker crank in it.... milled the head out for longer stroke.... would i have to use the spacer??? im kinda confuzed ![]()
__________________ 1986 Honda Trx 250r 1. Hot Rods +4 Stroker Crank 2. V-Force Reeds 3. Wiseco 67.50 Piston 4. Twin Air Filter 5. Fmf Fatty Pipe 6. Fmf Powercore 2 Silencer 7. Shaved Head 8. NGK Sparkplug 9. Tusk Clutch Kit 10. Hinson Clutch Basket 11. Keihin PWK 39 Carb 13. Maier Plastic 14. Moded Head Lights 15. Dougles Rear Rims 16. Maxxis Razr Front Tires 17. Kenda Knarly Rear Tires 18. Renthal Handle Bars 19. Dura Blue Wheel Spacers 20. DG Steel Series Nerfs 21. AC Racing Grab Bar 22. AC Racing Classic Front Bumber 23. Lone Star Racing Brake Block Off Plate 24. Laeger +2 A Arms 1985 Honda CR 125R 1. Dg Type 2 Silencer 2. Uni Air filter 3. Wiseco .60 Piston 4. Scott Mx Grips 5. Fmf Power Reeds 6. Hot Rods Crank |
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| Yes you would. All of the cylinders are the same height. The whole for the piston rod is lower on th 86 piston to accomodate for the shorter rod on the 86. In 87 they went to a longer crank and move the whole for the piston up to keep the same stroke. By running the 87 rod with the 86 piston you gain about 4 mill. so you have to use the spacer. If you switch to an 87 piston with the 87 crank you won't need the spacer then because everything will line up. However just run the spacer with 86 piston on the 88-89 cylinder and you will have the best of all worlds. A longer stroke with the best port layout of the stock 250rs. |
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| Just to add my 2cents, and to clarify a common misconception, a longer rod does not make a longer stroke, at all. A 10 foot rod attached to the regular crank would still only travel 72mm, correct? What makes a longer stroke is the position of the crank pin. You can only "stroke" a motor by adjusting the actual distince the piston travels, no matter where in the bore that travel is occurring. So, the common corrections made with a spacer plate have nothing to do with the stroke of the motor. If you're using an OEM crank, you're running stock stroke. However corrections made with a spacer plate to accommodate an actual stroker crank has to do with stroking the motor, but only so far as the crank is creating a different stroke, not by the height the cylinder is above the crankcase. Typically porting is done to adjust and create the desired port timing. So if you feel you can just swap any 198X cylinder on your bottom end, you probably never finished your original design/build.
__________________ All250R - For the development and preservation of 2stroke racing technology |
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