Honda NSR250R and Suzuki RGV250, Are these legal in Ontario? | Page 3 | GTAMotorcycle.com

Honda NSR250R and Suzuki RGV250, Are these legal in Ontario?

Those are little 2 strokes 250cc and down and they are only useful in dirtbikes.

2 strokes above 250cc for motorcycles have a hard time competing with 4 strokes on all fronts -- that's why you don't see them anymore.

I retired my last 2 stroke street bike 3 years ago, she was a TS200R. Great bike, parts became prohibitively expensive.

The reason real dirt riders, not kids on dirt bikes, are buying 2Ts again is because a 2T dirt bike is just better. The 4 strokes don't have the power to weight ratio. A 4 stroke bike is heavier when compared to a 2T bike of the same HP (We'll just ignore the traction advantage that a 2T bike has on a 4 stroke and that tires last longer on a 2T).
A 4 stroke is also more expensive to operate, harder to fix, MUCH more expensive to fix, much more expensive and complicated to "hop up" than a comparable 2T.
Another good reason to run a 2T is, if done right, a 2T is quieter than a 4 stroke. REAL dirt riders care about the environment.
For all the same reasons they use larger 2T engines in snowmobiles. Polaris and Skidoo make a 600 and 800/850 2T sled. The Skidoo ETEC 600cc makes 125HP and passes California EPA.
WickedATV can make you a Banshee based 700cc screamer that will still win at the sand drags against the factory 4 strokes.
I don't know where you're looking, but I see 2Ts all the time.
 
Those are little 2 strokes 250cc and down and they are only useful in dirtbikes.

2 strokes above 250cc for motorcycles have a hard time competing with 4 strokes on all fronts -- that's why you don't see them anymore.

I retired my last 2 stroke street bike 3 years ago, she was a TS200R. Great bike, parts became prohibitively expensive.

300cc 2T is considered now little, eh? ... It might be interesting if anyone actually tried to make street legal 2T road bike with the latest tech ... and I don't mean taking dirt bike and street legalizing it, because that is what your blanket statements come from, as far as I can tell. The problem is that not even KTM will consider this a sensible way to spend money at this point in time. They will rather spend it on electric road bikes of some sorts developments, because that is where the law/regulation and public will be leading them to ...
 
I've owned an RG500. and a couple rg 250's (street & race).
The 250 was my preference at sub 300 pounds. Plenty of power for the street.
Lwt 2 stroke is a blast and keeping it in the powerband is not a problem for an experienced rider. Its actually part of the fun.


Yes you can title those 250 street bikes for the road.

Where's delboy?
 
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Both my RG500 and RG250's were reliable. Took a tour to BC and back on the RG500. Street RG250 got new pistons/rings and crank seals at 20,000kms - was still running excellent, this was just maintenance, and its quite easy to do (on the 250). Both the 250 and 500 were properly jetted, idled perfect, never ran rough, never fouled a plug, never had a seize. Many 2 strokes were messed up by "tuners" who didn't know what they were doing. Yeah they eat fuel; but too much smoke indicates something is wrong. just my 2 cents.
 
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300cc 2T is considered now little, eh? ... It might be interesting if anyone actually tried to make street legal 2T road bike with the latest tech ... and I don't mean taking dirt bike and street legalizing it, because that is what your blanket statements come from, as far as I can tell. The problem is that not even KTM will consider this a sensible way to spend money at this point in time. They will rather spend it on electric road bikes of some sorts developments, because that is where the law/regulation and public will be leading them to ...
I'm sure with enough time and money it could be done... but why? There are a lot of challenges to solve:

Dependability - few owners want open heart engine surgery ever 20,000km (Ducati owners excepted).
Powerband - narrow powerbands at high RPM makes street riding tougher
Fuel Economy - use anywhere from 20-50% more fuel than same HP 4 stroke
Emissions -- hack, cough.

The last gasp (outside of dirt bikes) was Suzuki's GT750 which did well with dependability & mileage. By the late 70's, advances in 4 stroke designs overtook the last hurdle, power to weight, for street bike applications. That was the end.
 
Dependability - few owners want open heart engine surgery ever 20,000km (Ducati owners excepted).
We're supposed to be talking about NSRs and RGVs and TZRs. These bikes are no less reliable than comparable 4 strokes. These are quasi racers. They need maintenance, LOTS of maintenance, just like the comparable 4 strokes, like a RC30 or FZR250 or a more modern "full on" 4 stroke dirt bike.

Powerband - narrow powerbands at high RPM makes street riding tougher
A modern reed block, fuel injected 2 stroke with a power valve will pull from about 3500rpm up, about the same as a FZR250 or RC30

Fuel Economy - use anywhere from 20-50% more fuel than same HP 4 stroke
I'll give you 20%, 50% is a stretch. Fuel mileage is why we will not see 2 stroke road bikes. Read up on CAFE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_average_fuel_economy

Emissions -- Did you miss the part were I told you Skidoo and Polaris sell 2 strokes that pass current California emission standards.

The last gasp, of street bikes in Canada that pushed any boundaries, would be the '89 RZ350 (that carried on in Brazil till at least 1996).
Yamaha stayed the course with GP bikes till the early 2000s, Honda and Suzuki; well into the 1990s. Aprillia and Rotax are still at it, bless their 2 stroke hearts.
... and a GT750 is a under powered tank and doesn't get anything like what we could call gas mileage. 490 lbs dry and about a yard across at the crankshaft. I have one. It's a tank, but a pretty cool tank.
 
Dependability - few owners want open heart engine surgery ever 20,000km (Ducati owners excepted).
We're supposed to be talking about NSRs and RGVs and TZRs. These bikes are no less reliable than comparable 4 strokes. These are quasi racers. They need maintenance, LOTS of maintenance, just like the comparable 4 strokes, like a RC30 or FZR250 or a more modern "full on" 4 stroke dirt bike.

Powerband - narrow powerbands at high RPM makes street riding tougher
A modern reed block, fuel injected 2 stroke with a power valve will pull from about 3500rpm up, about the same as a FZR250 or RC30

Fuel Economy - use anywhere from 20-50% more fuel than same HP 4 stroke
I'll give you 20%, 50% is a stretch. Fuel mileage is why we will not see 2 stroke road bikes. Read up on CAFE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_average_fuel_economy

Emissions -- Did you miss the part were I told you Skidoo and Polaris sell 2 strokes that pass current California emission standards.

The last gasp, of street bikes in Canada that pushed any boundaries, would be the '89 RZ350 (that carried on in Brazil till at least 1996).
Yamaha stayed the course with GP bikes till the early 2000s, Honda and Suzuki; well into the 1990s. Aprillia and Rotax are still at it, bless their 2 stroke hearts.
... and a GT750 is a under powered tank and doesn't get anything like what we could call gas mileage. 490 lbs dry and about a yard across at the crankshaft. I have one. It's a tank, but a pretty cool tank.

Wrong.

You could buy the RS125 and RS250 Aprillia in Canada until 2002.
 
My tzr250 and gamma250 are my daily rides. I test rode modern supersport 600cc and 1000cc to see if I wanted to go back to a four stroke. NOPE.
Too heavy and felt like I would have to get to hta breaking speeds to have any fun or putter around in 3 gears (been there, done that).

The NSR250 has always been the bike I've lusted after.

Two strokes aren't for everyone, that's for sure. But it'll be a cold day in HELL before anyone takes mine away from me.


Thought this video was relevant to the topic.

[video=youtube;ceXjCUhUn_s]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceXjCUhUn_s[/video]
 
Both my RG500 and RG250's were reliable. Took a tour to BC and back on the RG500. Street RG250 got new pistons/rings and crank seals at 20,000kms - was still running excellent, this was just maintenance, and its quite easy to do (on the 250). Both the 250 and 500 were properly jetted, idled perfect, never ran rough, never fouled a plug, never had a seize. Many 2 strokes were messed up by "tuners" who didn't know what they were doing. Yeah they eat fuel; but too much smoke indicates something is wrong. just my 2 cents.
Loved my rg 500 power wheelies in 3 :). New rings over winter $200 and good for another year of racing. If someone built a modern 500 2stroke I would buy that over any 1000 four. But I love 2 stokes.
 
We're supposed to be talking about NSRs and RGVs and TZRs. These bikes are no less reliable than comparable 4 strokes. These are quasi racers. They need maintenance, LOTS of maintenance, just like the comparable 4 strokes, like a RC30 or FZR250 or a more modern "full on" 4 stroke dirt bike.
I was talking about 2 strokes in general, not just the small racebikes. There is just no way you can get 2 strokes to run as long between rebuilds, even with modern 2 stroke lube you're lucky to get 1/2 the miles of a 4stroke.

A modern reed block, fuel injected 2 stroke with a power valve will pull from about 3500rpm up, about the same as a FZR250 or RC30
Agreed, but both come with a dependability and maintenance cost. Ever see a top end that had a reed or powervalve for breakfast?
Fuel Economy - use anywhere from 20-50% more fuel than same HP 4 stroke
I'll give you 20%, 50% is a stretch. Fuel mileage is why we will not see 2 stroke road bikes. Read up on CAFE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_average_fuel_economy
Hmmm, I thought I was being kind on the fuel economy. My TS200r reliably used 7.5l/100 - the KLRs around me were a dependable 5l/100. My math pegs pegs that as 50% more fuel for the 2 stroke. The 250 stroke SS bikes get about the same, 7.5l/100km - compare that to a 400cc Ninja at 4l/100, that's about about 85% more fuel for the 2 stroke.
Emissions -- Did you miss the part were I told you Skidoo and Polaris sell 2 strokes that pass current California emission standards.
2 stroke snowmobiles are classified quite differently - the fleet size is small which is a factor in computing limits. I believe California has limited all 2 off road stroke motorcycles (RED STICKER BIKES) to closed course racing.

g/mile limitsROGCONOXPM
Diesel Bus0.0310.590.03
Motorcycle, Off Road0.6819.80.640.06
Snowmobile *69.875512.51.353.925

*converted off limits based on time and BHP, normalized to 75HP and 60MPH.

ARB-A-05-01-2017.jpg


The last gasp, of street bikes in Canada that pushed any boundaries, would be the '89 RZ350 (that carried on in Brazil till at least 1996).
Yamaha stayed the course with GP bikes till the early 2000s, Honda and Suzuki; well into the 1990s. Aprillia and Rotax are still at it, bless their 2 stroke hearts.
... and a GT750 is a under powered tank and doesn't get anything like what we could call gas mileage. 490 lbs dry and about a yard across at the crankshaft. I have one. It's a tank, but a pretty cool tank.
I agree they are cool, if I didn't have a garage full of silly antique bikes I just might own one of those. The GT750 is a textbook study of why 2 strokes died off. To make it dependable and reasonable on fuel, the GT750 had to be tuned way down and made heavy by water cooling. The power to weight ratio advantage disappeared, powerband issues, emission issues and economy remained a challenge. The GS750 that replaced the GT750 had almost exactly the same specs, performed better, was easier to ride, longer lived, and had much better emissions.
 
Emissions -- hack, cough.

The current bikes sold in Europe must meet Euro 4, basically anything with two wheels and street legal. So the new line of KTM street legal enduro dirt bikes with TPI 2T EFI is compliant. Really no different than your 4T bike .... Just so we are clear what is exactly possible today with a bit of development after long time running the carbs in 2T. Who knows what else they could do, if they really wanted or were allowed .... just saying.

Too late for that now, in my opinion ... as the new tech will roll over anything with ICE anyways. Just a matter of time.
 

That's a silly picture and argument ... 1) considering the dirt bike will do on average about 500 - 1000 kms (most weekend warriors) per bike ... 2) There's very small amount of these dirt bikes on the road vs. the millions of cars of which most are CUV/SUV,Trucks ...... so what will the map look like once we consider miles driven per year???

So easy to fight the wrong battles these days ... obviously this is the wrong one. By far, the noise is the bigger concern when out there off-roading ... and it's not the 2T noise btw ...
 

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