warrior63 said:
new to the site! have 05 warrior and 05 rs venture. been reading about overheat problems, here to tell ya they suck! out in UP this weekend with buddy who also has 05 warrior all sled with less than 500 mile on them, and all three sleds overheated within 3-5 minutes of each other on a icey snow covered trail. also notice melted plastic smell from skiis even though we have double carbides on. any suggestions other than take the sleds back to yamaha and get another brand? previously owned sxr 600's which never had this problem even when it was 40++ degrees out. Thanks for your help
You need to get to the auto parts store and by a 3 dollar specific gravity antifreeze checker. This devise, will tell you ....and I have no doubt about this....that your machine has nearly 100% antifreeze in the system.
This needs to be changed to 50/50 mix, unless you live in 40 below area of the world. Then buy some stuff called "water wetter" comes in a bottle and is florecent orange, or yellowish, and put the whole bottle in, then if you still get overheat issues, go buy the $100 rear heat exchanger and expand the capacity of the cooling system.
It goes without saying that you have already "burped" the sled. This purges it of air bubbles if there is any. Next time it over heats, you need to grab the left rail (left heat exchanger under the rail) and if it is not hot like the right rail, then you have a bubble. Burp the sled by lifting the front or back a couple times and getting all air out of the system. You can also crack the water bottle while the sled is hot and turned off, but be careful cause you can burn yourself if you don't know how to do this last one.
Finally, I love the guy who says, naturally the sled will overheat everytime you run on low snow....cause he must only own yamaha's. I own two four stroke articats and you can start them winter or summer and run them on the ice, and they only warm to the point of thermostat opening and stay there. I HAVE NEVER HAD IT OVER HEAT ON ME IN 3 YEARS. Seems the boys in Minnesota know how to calculate the proper amount of heat transferance to the exchangers. Since aluminum heat exchangers are pretty light and could be put all over the sled, it would have been a simple solution to add more at the time they were in development, but apparently they decided to save the extra 5 pounds.