I am the 3rd owner of a 1997 KDX 200. I have rode the bike for about 7 months now. The bike runs strong and functions great. I have never fouled a plug and the plug has a nice color to it. I do have a complaint about the amount of fuel the bike requires which might suggest rich jetting.
I am to the point where I like to make some of the standard upgrades. The bike came with a FMF fatty pipe and silencer. Last night I added a rad valve (got it for cheap from a friend, I know the power reed work just as good and the delta valve is better).
As stated everywhere leaner jetting is required for the rad valve. I am trying to get a baseline on how the bike is setup before ordering new jets. So here the current setup:
plug = b7es
main jet = 160
pilot jet = 45
the plug is good color but the bike used a ton of gas. None to little spooge is present.
Question time finally:
The 45 pilot cannot be the stock jet right?
Why is the plug the correct color yet the main jet so large? Is the extra heat of the b7es creating enough heat to prevent wet fouling?
Thanks in advance I like to understand what is going on before jetting down and returning to the correct plug heat range.
I am to the point where I like to make some of the standard upgrades. The bike came with a FMF fatty pipe and silencer. Last night I added a rad valve (got it for cheap from a friend, I know the power reed work just as good and the delta valve is better).
As stated everywhere leaner jetting is required for the rad valve. I am trying to get a baseline on how the bike is setup before ordering new jets. So here the current setup:
plug = b7es
main jet = 160
pilot jet = 45
the plug is good color but the bike used a ton of gas. None to little spooge is present.
Question time finally:
The 45 pilot cannot be the stock jet right?
Why is the plug the correct color yet the main jet so large? Is the extra heat of the b7es creating enough heat to prevent wet fouling?
Thanks in advance I like to understand what is going on before jetting down and returning to the correct plug heat range.