Jump to content

290 Sherco


davidni
 Share

Recommended Posts

I have just bought an 2004 sherco 2.9 ex works bike but I have now came across the problem of having too much power as I am only 17 and only wiegh around 10 stone and am not great at trials. I used to ride a yamaha ty250 (pinky) and when getting an new bike I just went with my instinct and bought the biggest cc and most power I could find. Allthough now I am realising the extra power could get me into more trouble than it could get me out of. I'm not sure whether I should keep the bike and try and get used to the power or sell it on and buy a 200 beta rev 3 or something like that. Any advice would be appreciated!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

Oops maybe i should have posted it in sherco section is it the moderators that move it? I dont think i do have a slow action throttle but that sounds like a good idea for me. Any ideas how much that would cost roughly?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
 
 

Slow is black tube, fast is white tube, really fast is aluminum......

Might also look at your timing,

slowing down your gearing. 9 X 44 is slow stock, I run my family on 9 X 50.

Lots of practice will get you better in control as well.

There are some other engine things to do, but just guessing from your post, I would say these items will help you to get it more liveable without any great expense.

Probably the cheapest you can do is spend time on the bike gaining throttle control.

Oh, so Andy, does that make you a Fairy? <_< Wonder if that translates?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I checked and I have the white throttle so I think I will buy the black one and that would be more suitable for an amateur like me <_< I never thought the day would come were I would be looking to make my bike less powerful. I will have to look at some of those other things you said as well as a lot of practice. Is it completely unheard of unexperienced 17 year olds riding 2.9's or should it be allright?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Should be fine depending on the level of competition that you want to be at.

Most of it just revolves around practice.

www.rypusa.com has manuals and tons of tech info for your bike, it is worth taking the time and looking through to familiarize yourself a bit with the bike.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

The Boyesen reeds tend to smooth the bikes quick response as well.

You must PM Nigel Dabster to inquire getting them in the UK!

With a slow throttle, the Boyesens, and the timing knocked down just a bit, the 2.9 will purr like a lion, be easier to start, and less prone to stalling!

With the 9 tooth front alone, it will slow the bike considerably! Makes 4 and 5 gear more useable on the loop, but may need 2 more often in the sections, I found it standard practice.

Ps- proper jetting and airscrew adjustment is a must for smooth throttle response!

Not all of us have the last name of Jarvis or Cabestany, but the bike will do well as stated!

Cheers,

<_<

Edited by copemech
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
 

You could also put on about 6 stone. I find it calms mine down nicely without all the mods <_<

With the slow pull throttle I reckon you'll get used to it. It's much softer than many others. Softer than the Sherco 250 for instance and the Gasser 250 and 280 in my view. Got grunt, but not as snappy.

Good luck, I think you'll enjoy it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
 

After riding it for about a week now I am slowly getting used to it and I am getting a slow action throttle too so that should definately help. Thanks for the advice everyone. Putting on six stone is always an option to :thumbup:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
  • 3 weeks later...

I had an 03 290, then an 05 290.

The 03 bike I calmed down by retarding the timing significantly, the 05 bike didn't need it, it was much softer at the bottom end.

Costs nothing to try it, if you can borrow a flywheel puller:

Remove the plastic flywheel cover and let the water out :D

Use the puller to remove the flywheel. (windy gun helps). Catch the woodruff key, or take it off the inside of the flywheel.

Use a centre punch to pop mark alignment marks on the stator and the crankcase (so you can put it back to where it was)

Loosen the stator mounting screws and rotate the stator anti-clockwise. Don't do it a little bit, do it a lot, like half the slot at once (you'll see what I mean)

Tighten the stator mounting screws.

Put the woodruff key back in its slot then slide the flywheel back on

Put loctite on the flywheel nut and tighten it up (windy gun helps again)

Remove the o ring from the flywheel cover (it will have 'grown' and apply silicone sealant sparingly into the groove

Replace the flywheel cover and snug it down - don't distort it by torquing the bolts up to 50lbft!

Try the bike, see what it's like. If it's still too sharp turn the stator more anti clockwise, if it's too soft move it back towards standard. If after an hour or so you blue the exhaust, Then it's too soft and you're riding it too hard to compensate, bring it back towards standard. A slight straw or brassy colour for the first 6" of pipe is just about ok.

Top tip, whilst the flywheel is off, remove the stator bolts and lift the stator out, then spray the coils liberally (really liberally) with lacquer, helps keep the water out of them in future!

Should have mentioned,

These bikes only have 5 gears. First gear is the gear of choice for 95% of sections (they will rev really high), I hardly recall using 2nd, it was either first (most sections) or 3rd (long fast hill climbs)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

×
  • Create New...