Yamaha Grizzly 700 gas boiling
Uploader Comments (Bwomp4343)
Top Comments
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I cant see it boil.... Can you hold a match a little closer???.....
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Honda has the reputation as the most reliable, but the ride,and front end diff, are drawbacks. Yamaha sales the most ATV's I believe, but Honda is pretty close. Yamaha has a reputation of good quality,and engineering. They have a more comfortable seat, diff lock. Can-Am has a awful sounding braking system. Kawasaki Brutes are gas guzzlers. 8-12mpg,but well built.Polaris are the most comfortable,and have AWD,but tend to have more problems.Suzuki's are reliable,cheaper,and quiet
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All Comments (81)
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ohhhh great add on I like it =D.. throw some noodles in there and hit the trails you wont be starving
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@199Foxracing my buddy has one that year too... he bought it brand new. He had the same problems and Yamaha did a bunch or recall work on his and it helped out
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@ShannCole888 thanks for the update Mr. Consumer Reports
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@frontier1701 lolololol
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@Grizzly700queen its true mine does the same thing
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lol... That is not boiling gas.
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Ok dumb ass it does not boil it realeses presures as you ride all for wheelers do it it helps the gas flow through and and the hotter it is the more it will do it so shut the fuck up every body
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@ShannCole888 guy just get smarter go CAN AM
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i have an 01 600 griz and it does it after 10 minutes of riding
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heres the thing gass boils at arround 35deg c(95F) and will still boil up to 210deg c(410F) but autoignition is at 250deg c (482°F) so i dont think it would ever set fire but if your temp. reading is correct it would make sense that the gass was boiling i mean your motor must have warmed it up an extra 15deg F it would be intersting to see next time what the actual temp. is
I have actually corrected this problem by replacing the rollover valve with an inline fuel filter and everything works just like it should, no bubbling, no boiling, nothing...the fuel flows just like it should.
Bwomp4343 2 years ago