Hi all. I bought a new old stock TTR250 from a dealer in the UK back in 2007 and had it delivered to my home in Spain. I think it is a 2006 model year, maybe 2005. I rode the bike for 66 miles and changed the oil and filter and then put it on a lift stand in the garage where it has remained for the last 7 years. I did shut the fuel off and ran the carb dry, then drained the float bowl and tank. I did NOT put oil in the spark plug hole. The tires are off the garage floor. I was thinking about trying to get the bike on the road again, but I am concerned about the piston rings perhaps frozen to the cylinder wall. Any suggestions on a safe way to check for a seized piston? I was thinking spray abundant penetrating oil into the spark plug hole and wait a couple of days and try to rock the bike gently in gear and see what happens. I realize the carb may have to come off for a cleaning, but I am worried about a frozen piston. Thanks in advance for any advice.
If your bike comes from UK then it is likely to have a kickstart fitted.
To check on a sticking piston you can remove the spark plug, either put it in gear and then gently rock forward and backward or in neutral try turning the engine over using the kickstarter.
If the engine won't turn by either of these methods then, as you presume, it would seem something will be wrong.
I would advise caution before any cranking with the electric starter, after you've charged up the battery.
I reckon it will be ok, just tip some oil in though the spark plug hole a while before you do it and crank the engine over manually gently several times to get things moving, fresh oil in the sump would be good before starting/running with electric start, maybe you wont even have to take the carb off and clean it, because you drained it, you could add fuel system treatment to the tank the first time possibly....also after seven years rubber components on the bike may have gone hard/dry/brittle, but this is the bulletproof ttr we are talking about here though, it will probably be fine!....
Pour some engine oil down the bore and gently rock back and forth in gear and, if the piston moves OK, turn it over a few times on the kickstart to coat the bore in oil and then put the spark plug back in, put fresh petrol in the tank and give her a try on the starter.
One thought is to test the fuel flow before trying to start her as the float needle may have stuck in the open position. If petrol start coming out the overflow be prepared with a screwdriver and give the float bowl some sharp taps with the handle to free the float off.
Thanks for your advice guys. I will attempt to move that piston in a few days and see how lucky I am. I had not thought about the rubber deterioration, but the garage is humidity controlled and dark, so maybe that will help. It has been covered and still looks new...right down to the little rubber whiskers sticking out of the tires. I will post my result in a follow-up.