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Old 04-15-2023, 10:54 PM   #1
Desuboi941   Desuboi941 is offline
 
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Thumbs Up Just bought a carbd hawk 250 help

Hi y’all, so I just bought my hawk 250 yesterday off Amazon and I live in Florida. Just wanted to drop in and say hi and kinda tell y’all my ideas for the bike and see if you guys have any improvements on what I have to say. So my first mod will probably be to put a nibbi 28fl on it and try either a 110 or 115 main jet on it( going off the carb calculator….I have no idea what I’m doing). Then I’m planning on a jfg exhaust and eventually want to get a 295 mm rear shock and raise the forks about a quarter of an inch. I’m also planning on getting an aftermarket head, thinner head gasket, and a 300 big block which I hear only makes it a true 250 somehow? Possibly looking at eventually switching the wheels and tires out with the smaller tbr7 ones… I just want a bike that I won’t die on riding on the highway, this is also going to be my girlfriends main mode of transportation so a drop in height would be appreciated too lol. Oooh also looking to get a 17/42 sprocket combo but I’m wondering if it could get better top speeds with another gearing. I’m 5’8” and my girl is 5’4-5’5 I weigh about a buck 40 and she’s right around 100. It’s nice to be a part of the community and I’m hoping y’all can help shed a little light. Thanks for taking the time to reach the end and I’ll be looking forward to hearing y’all’s responses.


 
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Old 04-16-2023, 12:13 AM   #2
XLsior   XLsior is offline
 
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It's not really a highway bike for starters...especially 2up.

All those mods a doable...But you will unlikely ever come close to 20hp.
17/42 will be ok for flat roads.

if you want to do highway miles with a GF on the back...get a different bike. 400cc or more.

If you both want to learn to ride back roads then get 2 bikes.


 
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Old 04-16-2023, 12:33 PM   #3
Desuboi941   Desuboi941 is offline
 
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Originally Posted by XLsior View Post
It's not really a highway bike for starters...especially 2up.

All those mods a doable...But you will unlikely ever come close to 20hp.
17/42 will be ok for flat roads.

if you want to do highway miles with a GF on the back...get a different bike. 400cc or more.

If you both want to learn to ride back roads then get 2 bikes.
Oh for sure I wasn’t talking about her riding on the back nor I, I just wouldn’t be comfortable with that. I have a car but her engine blew on her truck so I talked her into getting a bike instead of another pod car for the price.(we only had 2,600 and that’s definitely not going to get you something as reliable as this bike) I just wanted to see that after all this if she would be able to fit on it and also not get ran over on the highways. We’re almost never planning on dirt so I’m looking for top speed all the way. Florida is also flat where I live. I’m also planning on getting another hawk or maybe a tbr7 down the line so we can both ride. We’re basically going to be switching between who rides the bike and who drives the car. So I feel well both be able to ride the bike.


 
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Old 04-16-2023, 12:33 PM   #4
Bill Hilly   Bill Hilly is offline
 
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The 17/42 sprockets will quite possibly be too high for you, and your girlfriend. The Hawk has a big enough rear tire that you may be better to run a 46-47, and a 17. The exhaust, and proper jetting of your carb ,along with a better chain, Honda rear sprocket studs, and what ever sprockets you decide on , are probably the only mods that you may want to do to a new bike. If you are determined to go with a big bore, the you should also port the head, and then the PE28 may be a little smaller than desired. I would at least run the bike some with the common simple mods, before going the whole 9 yards with it.
You can get killed on any bike, and a light bike is especially affected by wind, and passing trucks. You stated that you may go with smaller wheels, or eventually buy a TBR7, but like the other guy said, these are not ideal highway bikes. One of the cheapest, and usually low mileage small cruisers is the Suzuki Savage/S40, LS650, and a pretty good one is going to cost you about what a new TBR7 would cost. They are easy for anyone to handle, because they are low, and they have plenty of torque, and a very wide ratio transmission to optimize the torque, There are other options out there as well.



Last edited by Bill Hilly; 04-16-2023 at 03:00 PM.
 
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Old 04-16-2023, 04:18 PM   #5
Megadan   Megadan is offline
 
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Originally Posted by Desuboi941 View Post
Oooh also looking to get a 17/42 sprocket combo but I’m wondering if it could get better top speeds with another gearing. I’m 5’8” and my girl is 5’4-5’5 I weigh about a buck 40 and she’s right around 100. It’s nice to be a part of the community and I’m hoping y’all can help shed a little light. Thanks for taking the time to reach the end and I’ll be looking forward to hearing y’all’s responses.

I weigh as much as the two of you together. My 2 cents, don't go lower than a 45 rear sprocket. It's the perfect sprocket combo for this bike, the power it makes, and the speeds it is capable of. With the exhaust upgrade and a 17/45 sprocket combo you will be lookin at top speeds of about 65-68mph, and a bike that will happily cruise along at 50-60mph all day long. That is the realistic best these bikes can do.

Just my 2 cents.
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Old 04-16-2023, 06:05 PM   #6
XLsior   XLsior is offline
 
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Yes the bikes can go on highways...but I would not recommend it.

Even if you spend the full $2600 modifying the bike to make better at a job it was not designed to do...The novelty will ware off on the highway.

I think the money could be better spent on another bike/vehicle platform with highway performance out of the box and probably safer for your girlfriend.


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 04:00 AM   #7
Desuboi941   Desuboi941 is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill Hilly View Post
The 17/42 sprockets will quite possibly be too high for you, and your girlfriend. The Hawk has a big enough rear tire that you may be better to run a 46-47, and a 17. The exhaust, and proper jetting of your carb ,along with a better chain, Honda rear sprocket studs, and what ever sprockets you decide on , are probably the only mods that you may want to do to a new bike. If you are determined to go with a big bore, the you should also port the head, and then the PE28 may be a little smaller than desired. I would at least run the bike some with the common simple mods, before going the whole 9 yards with it.
You can get killed on any bike, and a light bike is especially affected by wind, and passing trucks. You stated that you may go with smaller wheels, or eventually buy a TBR7, but like the other guy said, these are not ideal highway bikes. One of the cheapest, and usually low mileage small cruisers is the Suzuki Savage/S40, LS650, and a pretty good one is going to cost you about what a new TBR7 would cost. They are easy for anyone to handle, because they are low, and they have plenty of torque, and a very wide ratio transmission to optimize the torque, There are other options out there as well.
Thank you for the input! We’re definitely staying away from highways I just want to be able to hit highway speeds. What megadan is saying sounds good to me… I’ve thought about the 45 rear so what exactly would be the benefit of a 46-47 over a 45? Sorry I just don’t rly understand gearing yet. And I understand cruisers are perfect for a lot of people, but she seemed to really want a “dirt bike” and a wr250r has been my dream bike since I was probably 7-8


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 04:04 AM   #8
Desuboi941   Desuboi941 is offline
 
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Originally Posted by Megadan View Post
I weigh as much as the two of you together. My 2 cents, don't go lower than a 45 rear sprocket. It's the perfect sprocket combo for this bike, the power it makes, and the speeds it is capable of. With the exhaust upgrade and a 17/45 sprocket combo you will be lookin at top speeds of about 65-68mph, and a bike that will happily cruise along at 50-60mph all day long. That is the realistic best these bikes can do.

Just my 2 cents.
That actually sounds really good to me, we live off of a three lain main road (non hwy) and I just mainly wanted to make sure the bike wouldn’t be stuck going nowhere in an emergency. Also… to make sure. You’re saying that just with an exhaust upgrade and the sprockets it’s capable of 65-68?


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 10:09 AM   #9
Megadan   Megadan is offline
 
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When I got my first Hawk I rode it mostly stock with only 17/45 sprockets and a vm26 carb with proper jetting for the bike and it could propel my 6ft4 self along up to 63mph at full throttle after break in was complete.

I then installed an exhaust and did the airbox lid mod, adjusted my.jetting, and the bike could reach up to 68mph.

The stock exhaust is choked off by a rather crappy catalyst and is the.biggest single restriction on the carbed Hawk.
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Old 04-17-2023, 11:07 AM   #10
Bill Hilly   Bill Hilly is offline
 
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Originally Posted by Desuboi941 View Post
Thank you for the input! We’re definitely staying away from highways I just want to be able to hit highway speeds. What megadan is saying sounds good to me… I’ve thought about the 45 rear so what exactly would be the benefit of a 46-47 over a 45? Sorry I just don’t rly understand gearing yet. And I understand cruisers are perfect for a lot of people, but she seemed to really want a “dirt bike” and a wr250r has been my dream bike since I was probably 7-8
The 46, or 47 recommendation is in the same ballpark as a 45 rear. Dan said that he would recommend not going to a lower tooth count rear than a 45 with a 17 front. More teeth on a rear sprocket gears it lower, more on the front gears it higher, but at a lot faster rate. Say that if one tooth difference on the rear equals 2%, then one tooth on the front would equal around 6% difference.


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 11:18 AM   #11
N7sithis   N7sithis is offline
 
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I love my carbed 250, I weigh 300lbs and got it to 65 on a flat road BEFORE doing the sprockets and chain. Just a carb, air filter and exhaust put it there. Haven't tested top speed now that I have 17/45, 428 and an oil cooler, but I imagine it'll be higher lol

All that being said, ffor what you want and what you have, you'd be better off getting a different bike. Hawk is great for offroad/trails, getting around town, not great for the highway, especially for longer rides.

At the very least if you insist on the hawk carbed go ahead and pick up an oil cooler if you plan on redlining her to do highway speeds.


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 11:35 AM   #12
Megadan   Megadan is offline
 
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Originally Posted by N7sithis View Post
I love my carbed 250, I weigh 300lbs and got it to 65 on a flat road BEFORE doing the sprockets and chain. Just a carb, air filter and exhaust put it there. Haven't tested top speed now that I have 17/45, 428 and an oil cooler, but I imagine it'll be higher lol

All that being said, ffor what you want and what you have, you'd be better off getting a different bike. Hawk is great for offroad/trails, getting around town, not great for the highway, especially for longer rides.

At the very least if you insist on the hawk carbed go ahead and pick up an oil cooler if you plan on redlining her to do highway speeds.
If your are going by the stock speedometer, your bike realistically did about 60mph.

All of my speeds are via a GPS reading for that very reason.

Most people find the stock speedo to be 8 - 10% off at 60+mph
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Old 04-17-2023, 01:07 PM   #13
Desuboi941   Desuboi941 is offline
 
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Originally Posted by N7sithis View Post
I love my carbed 250, I weigh 300lbs and got it to 65 on a flat road BEFORE doing the sprockets and chain. Just a carb, air filter and exhaust put it there. Haven't tested top speed now that I have 17/45, 428 and an oil cooler, but I imagine it'll be higher lol

All that being said, ffor what you want and what you have, you'd be better off getting a different bike. Hawk is great for offroad/trails, getting around town, not great for the highway, especially for longer rides.

At the very least if you insist on the hawk carbed go ahead and pick up an oil cooler if you plan on redlining her to do highway speeds.
Already planning on getting an oil cooler, but again… not really planning on going on the highway, our roads speed limits are 45 and everyone goes 60 I just wanna make sure we’ll both be able to be safe out there (which I believe we will even if it’s stock.)


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 01:13 PM   #14
Desuboi941   Desuboi941 is offline
 
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Originally Posted by Bill Hilly View Post
The 46, or 47 recommendation is in the same ballpark as a 45 rear. Dan said that he would recommend not going to a lower tooth count rear than a 45 with a 17 front. More teeth on a rear sprocket gears it lower, more on the front gears it higher, but at a lot faster rate. Say that if one tooth difference on the rear equals 2%, then one tooth on the front would equal around 6% difference.
Thank you so much… I only have one more thing to ask. It may be stupid but higher? Lower? That’s really my main question idrk what the difference is… is it just longer in the gears or does it make top speed higher… I get that you’re losing torque for top speed or vice versa. I’m basically asking why would the 17/46-47 benefit us specifically over the 45?


 
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Old 04-17-2023, 01:30 PM   #15
Megadan   Megadan is offline
 
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Originally Posted by Desuboi941 View Post
Thank you so much… I only have one more thing to ask. It may be stupid but higher? Lower? That’s really my main question idrk what the difference is… is it just longer in the gears or does it make top speed higher… I get that you’re losing torque for top speed or vice versa. I’m basically asking why would the 17/46-47 benefit us specifically over the 45?
Higher and Lower are used to describe.changes in gear ratios. Other adjectives often used are the terms "taller" and "shorter"

Let's say the standard sprockets are a 17 front and 50 rear. This gives us a numeric gear ratio of 2.94:1, or 2.94 turns of the front sprocket to 1 turn of the rear.

A "tall" or "high" gear is one that is numerically smaller. So if we wanted to gear it higher we would install a 45 tooth rear, which gives us a ratio of 2.65:1

Essentially, it's a higher/taller gear because you get a higher output rpm since gear ratios divide rpm to multiply torque (vice versa if over driven.)
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