Cycle News

Cycle News 2025 Issue 49 December 9

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/1541867

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QUICKSPIN I Slavens Racing Yamaha YZ300X P88 Starting Point To save on cost, the Slavens crew found a used 2016 YZ250X as its starting point. 2016 was the first year for the YZ250X, the first production Japanese two- stroke off-road bike in decades. Since then, the YZ250X has seen updates, but at its core, it's still the same bike. Once the teardown began, the wish list kept growing, and the bar was raised very high: to create a KTM killer, since the KTM 300 two-stroke is consid- ered by many as the benchmark for all 300s. Slavens ended up going all-out on their project. No stone was left unturned, but for the sake of space, we're going to focus on the major changes, like, of course, the engine. Get To Work To compete against a KTM 300, like the XC (cross-country) or XC-W (enduro) models, the YZ250X's cylinder had to be punched out, so an aftermarket big-bore kit from Cylinder Works was installed. The retail price of the kit is just north of $1000. Not cheap, but at least it's an easy bolt-on operation that includes everything you need: a nickel silicon carbide-plated cylinder, a Vertex piston, rings, gaskets—all that stuff. Total dis - placement is bumped to 295cc from 249cc with the new 72mm piston. The YZ's 72mm stroke was not changed, so it now has the same 72mm x 72mm square bore-and-stroke configuration as a KTM 300. There's a slight bump in compression, too. The Slavens boys could have stopped there, but no. To complement the big-bore kit, they installed a re-mapped Vor - Slavens Racing selected a 2016 Yamaha YZ250X for this project, but it looks like it just rolled off the assembly line.

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