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A buddy asked me what is the difference between a WR and a regular bike. I really do not know. In particular a YZ 250 WR four stroke. How does this affect its rideability? Can we toss this around and give him a answer? Thanx in advance, Mike.
The Yamaha WR bikes are more or less a YZ with a wide ratio transmission, meaning the cogs have larger ratio gaps when compared to the gearbox of a YZ in which the cog ratios are closer with each respective shift.
Does that mean that say if you upshifted at 10000 RPM that on a regular bike the RPM's would drop to say 8500 but on a WR they would drop to say 8000 RPM? Would first be lower and sixth higher?
Not sure of the details of it, but that's how I understand the Yamaha WR....think it's only the 5th and 6th cogs. Again, not completely sure.
ya I think some people who ride yz250 for woods swap transmission gears for wr stuff
LRRS #399
MX #505
I always thought it stood for wicked rad, because riding my WR in the woods was rad, but riding my YZ in the woods sucked ass ass ass.
Well there is no such thing as a YZ 250 WR fourstroke
YZ250F and WR250F.
Not sure if the real reason it's called a WR is because of the wide ratio gearbox or not? I think it's just yamaha's designation letters to that bike
YZ = MX
WR = Enduro
There are many more differences in the WR vs the YZ than just gearbox. While the engine is similar in design, it's not the same. The WR has a heavier flywheel than the YZ which makes it much more rideable in the woods and nasty stuff. A charging system and E-start as well on the WR, and the WR suspension is much softer than the YZ, etc, etc
Yamaha
The WR also has the neutered carb (throttle stop - easily rectified), and will require a snip of the gray wire (timing retard?). The 450's had a cam timing change (again, easily rectified), not sure about the 250's.
In particular he is thinking about looking at this
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Dirt-...item19bc5cb44a
Nice bike! FWIW - The yamaha's have the strongest reliabilty reputation. That bike could Moto all day, but maybe not at expert levels.