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Fogging oil for the winter?
- Alex_KZ1K
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Alternatives to the oil for winter storage? It will be stored indoors in a heated room BTW.
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- rstnick
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Bike up on centre stand and both wheels off the floor.
Some air out of the tires.
A bit of oil in each cylinder.
Battery out and inside, tricle charged once a month.
Oil and filter changed.
Bike cleaned and waxed.
Cover exhaust and air cleaner openings.
Rob
CANADA
Need a key for your Kawasaki? PM me
1978 KZ650 C2, 130K kms, Delkevic ex, EI, CVK32, PMC easy clutch, ATK fork brace, steering damper, Progressive Suspension, braced swingarm, ZRX shocks, 18" Z1R front wheel.
2000 ZRX1100
2011 Ninja 250R - Wife's
2005 z750s
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- RonKZ650
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321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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- galaxian
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Ron i have to completly disagree with you on your advice and you should concider yourself lucky if your bike has been starting the way you store it. I am not saying i am right and you are wrong just that i am disagreeing with you on how to store a bike.
There is tons of stuff out on the web...Google is your friend.
1977 KZ1000A1, 1979 KZ650 C3
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- Alex_KZ1K
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- dannyg40
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- JR
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1980 kz750E1, Delkevic exhaust
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- Alex_KZ1K
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- JR
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Sounds like to much bother.
JR
..................................................
Woodstock Ontario. Canada
1980 kz750 E1, 4 into 1, K&N pods
1980 kz750E1, Delkevic exhaust
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- GargantuChet
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If you're storing indoors in a heated room, you should have to no nothing. I would drain the carbs and tank if you don't want to smell gas all Winter. Still my opinion that if you do elect to leave the tank full, no need to add stabilizer unless it's going to sit >1yr. My bikes regularly sit as long as 3 yrs between starting, sitting in a shed covered in temps ranging from -20 to over 100. I drain the tank and carbs is all I do. Never had a problem with rust or any other aging problem, but this is Colorado, dry humidity most the time. I really doub't adding oil to the tank or cylinders helps anything.
Hah! For those who haven't been to Colorado, there's no need to close bread bags or packages of crackers there either. It's so dry that crackers stay crispy for days... here in PA it seems you get a few hours at best.
(My girlfriend is from CO and I've been several times. Yes, it's a huge difference -- between the dryness and the altitude you need to drink *tons* more water there, especially when you first arrive. It's strange, but a place well worth visiting. Without humidity, winters seem so mild... 20 in CO feels like 40 in PA.)
If you don't live in CO, you'll need to oil it all. If you do live in CO, why oh why would you ever park the bike?!?
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- Alex_KZ1K
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- luvmykaw
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My bike is stored outside in a garden shed. Like dannyg40 I put a teaspoon of engine oil in each cylinder. Remove the plug caps and turn the engine over a couple of times. This coats the cylinder walls with oil and prevents rust forming. Never used fogging oil and really had no propblems starting in the spring. In fact I always thought fogging oil was for spraying over the outside of the whole engine to keep it rust free if you were leaving outdoors.
I've done the same thing as JR the last couple of winters and spring starting wasn't a problem. The bike will chuff n' fart a bit, then start and burn out the cylinder oil.
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