My son just took a 750 Ninja for a partial trade on a pick-up. this guy was at least the second owner and didn't seem to know much about bikes. He had no manuals. he had a real hard time getting it firedup. but he did have a stack of reciepts for work that had been done. We don't want to do much to it, just clean it up maybe fresh plugs. I am figureing the engine and tranny oil are together. is that correct? Next is, on the right side there is something like a hose with a knob hanging by the clutch cover. is that an idle adjustment?
In the stack of reciepts there are two for rebuilding the front forks. it only shows 14000 miles on the odometer. are these forks a problem?
Anything else you can tell me about these things would be apresheated. it has been laid down also but seems to be just minor cosmetic damage.
OH yeah, for oil level do you just check with level bike half way on the sight glass?????
750 Ninja
I'm no ninja expert, but I do have a 2000 YZF 600R. The engine & tranny oil should be the same. On my bike on the right hand side above the clutch cover is the idle adjustment screw (small black knob). Sight glass is perfect way to inspect the oil level.
You should be able to do a thing called a carb sync. which will sync. up all of the carbs. through four vaccum hoses assuming that there are four. I ran a bottle of sea foam through mine and that really smoothed her out. Granted I have about 24K miles on mine.
Since it has been laid down once be sure to go over the entire bike to ensure it has nothing fishy going on (loose wires, wrong wire connections, steering, drivetrain, controls, etc.)
Good luck! Be safe!
You should be able to do a thing called a carb sync. which will sync. up all of the carbs. through four vaccum hoses assuming that there are four. I ran a bottle of sea foam through mine and that really smoothed her out. Granted I have about 24K miles on mine.
Since it has been laid down once be sure to go over the entire bike to ensure it has nothing fishy going on (loose wires, wrong wire connections, steering, drivetrain, controls, etc.)
Good luck! Be safe!
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm
Thanks. Its been a while since I have delt with the traditional Jap four stroke bike. I don't think there is anything major wrong with it and he has it up for sale, so we realy don't plan on riding it (much). I just don't want to tell the person who buys it anythig that might end up costing him a bunch of money.
yep, I did take it for a ride. rran it up through the gears and thought, this thing is quick. turned around to head back. I have no ideal what RPM I was running but, took it up to about 1/2 throttle then cracked the throttle open and found a new definition of "quick" and this is only a 750.
yep, I did take it for a ride. rran it up through the gears and thought, this thing is quick. turned around to head back. I have no ideal what RPM I was running but, took it up to about 1/2 throttle then cracked the throttle open and found a new definition of "quick" and this is only a 750.
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm
I believe its a 1993. the guy we got it from only owned it for a few months, he wasn't a biker IMO.
I know this isn't anywhere near the fastest production bike, but it is the first sport bike I have ridden in fact it has been many years since I have even been on a street bike. Its just that this one little ride has given me a whole lot more respect for the people who race these things.
I know this isn't anywhere near the fastest production bike, but it is the first sport bike I have ridden in fact it has been many years since I have even been on a street bike. Its just that this one little ride has given me a whole lot more respect for the people who race these things.
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm