I found this article interesting and would be interested to hear views and if anyone has experienced problems similar and relating to the premix ratio.
Article at http://www.sweller.co.uk/mz/articles/mz_eco.html
A few years ago "Motorcycle Rider", (the British Motorcycle Federation magazine), ran a series of articles on the "Eco Worthiness" of various machines. I have reproduced the bulk of the MZ related one.
Stephen Kearney wrote:
The MZ Supa 5 (TS 250/1) came out in 1975. This was the first bike that got MZ accepted as a serious contender, at least as far as we are concerned. Before that their decidedly odd shape and apparent irrelevance seemed to sideline them to the more eccentric end of the bike market. While one might complain about the looks of the Supa 5 also, I find its functional style quite attractive. Maybe I'm just joining the eccentrics.
Although never having owned one, I have some knowledge of the Supa 5, having shared a flat with twin brothers who operated one apiece as dispatch riders for five years. Further, more information was offered by another DR with a 1989 ETZ 250, bored out to 300cc.
Road tests at the time generally reckoned that it was quite good for what it was and particularly commended its bright lights, despite being only six volts. One magazine said they were so good they didn't need 12 volts.
Over the next few years they gradually became more popular and by 1978-1979 they were considered one of the more serious dispatch bikes. But even then rumours were beginning to circulate about dodgy main bearings.
For reasons best known to himself, Twin No 1 decided to go dispatching and in 1979 bought himself a new Supa 5 for about £500: all black and chrome, just like a Vincent (ahem). It seemed like an excellent bike right from the start, and we couldn't believe how bright the lights were. The whole bike displayed a quality of functional concept and execution and was pleasurable to ride too.
It might have been simple but it was also refined.
If you need this point demonstrated, try a CZ 250 from Czechoslovakia, a country then operating under the same socio-economic system as the former East Germany. The CZ was of similar specification: 250cc two-stroke single, petroil mix, intended for rugged transport. You'd imagine therefore that the two machines would be pretty similar to ride: not a bit of it. The designer of the CZ clearly intended that nobody should ever get any pleasure out of riding it - and he succeeded!
Twin No.2 decided to follow the family career and bought an 11,000-mile Supa 5 for around £200. Both twins then dispatched merrily away.
At 14,000 miles the main bearings on twin 1's MZ gave up, signalled by a very noisy engine. So the rumours were true! Folklore at the time suggested that poor quality East German (some even said Russian) bearings were the reason. Mind you, I knew a chap who got all of 2,000 miles out of a brand new Norton Commando before its mains failed, in Paris.
We decided to try British bearings and these were duly installed. They failed at 16,000 miles; so much for folklore. We had to try something different.
The recommended petroil mix for the Supa 5 is 50:1, which is remarkably lean for a simple two-stroke. My old Bantam, for instance, used to run on 20:1 and smoked to prove it. A friend who used to run his Lambretta on 16:1 suggested 33:1 for the MZ, so this was tried along with another set of British mains. That set was still going strong when the bike was sold 60,000 miles later.
Twin 2 had a similar story. His mains failed at 13,000 and the selling dealer, an MZ agent, was baffled, particularly as the engine sounded so well at 11,000. New bearings were installed and a switch made to a 33:1 mix. No further bearing problems were encountered and the momentary piston seizures that occurred from time to time on the old mix ratio now disappeared.
Some suggested it was the West's pollution laws which forced the MZ factory into recommending such a lean mix, but when I checked in the MZ shop in East Berlin in 1982 they told me that the recommended mix for them was 50:1 too. When I recounted our experiences, they were stumped. They had never heard of dispatch riders, by the way.
For general running and dispatching, both Supa 5s were well up to the job, providing reliable service under rough conditions with patchy and amateurish maintenance.
The big weaknesses were the electrics and the front brakes. Despite the glowing (no pun) account above, the electrics were just not up to the job, providing weak lights and virtually no horn - an almost fatal combination for dispatching. I can only assume that a combination of continuous town running and accumulated dirt and corrosion in the wiring harness caused the lights to fade from their original brilliance.
The single leading shoe front brake wasn't strong enough for city dispatch work; in fact, both twins complained that it was downright dangerous. The Supa 5 remains, however, the most rust-resistant bike I have ever seen.
The shortcomings mentioned above have been largely overcome with the ETZ250, which boasts a disc front brake and 12-volt electrics. With over 30,000 miles, no main bearing faults were reported. It has an autolube system but I'm not sure if this is the reason.