Just seen that the new 3V engine for the Vespa LX125, LX150, S125 and S150 has 6,000 mile service intervals.
So come on Honda, WTF are you playing at with 2,500 mile intervals?
If the Eyetalians can do it, so can you.
Four decades on two wheels has taught me nothing, all advice given is guaranteed to be wrong
would say it is about earning easy money from you,being the bike is fairly cheap to start
Scoots so far- Peugeot jetforce 125,honda Dylan 125,yamaha x max 125,honda pcx 125,honda nss300 forza ;-) and bikes were kh250, zxr750L1,zx9B1,zx9c1,wr426,xjr1300sp,09-z1000
Honestly, the main thing in that 2500 mile interval is the valve adjustments. I'm not saying you could skip them with no consequences, but a badly adjusted valve is pretty noticeable, especially on a 1-cylinder engine. You could always just adjust them every 5000 when you change the oil and pretend to follow the manual.
Currently ride: Nothing right now - mostly mountain biking with my boys until they're old enough to ride Previously rides: 2011 Honda PCX 125, 2005 V-Strom DL650, 1974 Vespa Ciao, 2011 Honda PCX 170 (tons of mods - takegawa 170cc big bore kit, gears, etc), 1996 Honda Nighthawk 250, 1987 Honda Spree, 2000 KTM 125SX, 2003 Honda Silverwing, 2007 Genuine Buddy 125, 1998 Honda PC800, 2008 Buddy 125 (white), 2008 Buddy 125 (red), 2001 Honda Reflex, 1987 Honda Elite, 1988 Honda Spree, 2007 Yamaha Vino, 2007 Honda Metro, 2x 125cc pure-chinesium dirt bikes
My warranty is up and its approaching 2500 miles (although its had a service every year) and I'm going to get it serviced with valve checks, after that I'm doing it myself!
louthepoo wrote:My warranty is up and its approaching 2500 miles (although its had a service every year) and I'm going to get it serviced with valve checks, after that I'm doing it myself!
I've looked at the line drawings of the engine and it looks like there's only one inlet and one exhaust valve both with a simple locknut adjustment. Is that correct?
The plastics aren't too horrible, you just have to proceed carefully. Don't force anything...
I also keep clear plastic snack bags, using one for the screws for each component removed. When taking it apart, put all the parts in a row by order of disassembly to make reassembly easier later.
Currently ride: Nothing right now - mostly mountain biking with my boys until they're old enough to ride Previously rides: 2011 Honda PCX 125, 2005 V-Strom DL650, 1974 Vespa Ciao, 2011 Honda PCX 170 (tons of mods - takegawa 170cc big bore kit, gears, etc), 1996 Honda Nighthawk 250, 1987 Honda Spree, 2000 KTM 125SX, 2003 Honda Silverwing, 2007 Genuine Buddy 125, 1998 Honda PC800, 2008 Buddy 125 (white), 2008 Buddy 125 (red), 2001 Honda Reflex, 1987 Honda Elite, 1988 Honda Spree, 2007 Yamaha Vino, 2007 Honda Metro, 2x 125cc pure-chinesium dirt bikes
If you're asking wether or not it's spring loaded, yes it is. It will slowly unwind and auto tighten the cam chain as it stretches over time. You will probably never need to touch it at all.
If you're asking wether or not it's spring loaded, yes it is. It will slowly unwind and auto tighten the cam chain as it stretches over time. You will probably never need to touch it at all.