car
18th October 2008, 15:32
I'm on the lookout for a project trail bike. Went to see an XT250 today. Early '80s, no plate or papers. Didn't run, but almost did. Kicked over, compression felt good, had spark. Clutch is allegedly burned out, clutch cover has been holed at some point and welded. Oily underneath, but the welded hole looked like it had held. Frame looked sound enough, straight, swing arm moved freely without noticeable play. Head bearings are completely shot, but forks mercifully free of pitting. No lights or dash, no batteries, plastics missing or cracked. Owner bought it a runner, but with said fried clutch, never got round to fixing it. I can well believe it -- the guy must have had half a dozen old beaters on the go.
All in all, I was tempted to make the guy an offer. But the thing that always seems to kill projects is parts availability, which is why I'm looking for some NZ-local advice. What's the XT250 going to be like for parts, from breakers or otherwise? If I need to replace the clutch and half the bottom end, am I going to be able to find parts here?
Given that it has mount points for a dash, the front wheel is geared for a speedo, I'm guessing that the XT250 was sold as a road-registerable bike, even if this one's never been registered. Which, correct me if I'm wrong, means it should be easier to get the thing registered?
Anyone anything to say about the old XT250 in general? Were they a "run forever" kind of a bike, or "run if you're lucky" kind?
Thanks in advance.
All in all, I was tempted to make the guy an offer. But the thing that always seems to kill projects is parts availability, which is why I'm looking for some NZ-local advice. What's the XT250 going to be like for parts, from breakers or otherwise? If I need to replace the clutch and half the bottom end, am I going to be able to find parts here?
Given that it has mount points for a dash, the front wheel is geared for a speedo, I'm guessing that the XT250 was sold as a road-registerable bike, even if this one's never been registered. Which, correct me if I'm wrong, means it should be easier to get the thing registered?
Anyone anything to say about the old XT250 in general? Were they a "run forever" kind of a bike, or "run if you're lucky" kind?
Thanks in advance.