I've had three of the fat buggers, one in a Champion flat track frame and two stockers, both silver '73 models. The SC moniker stands for
SCramble as some marketing hot shot at Yamaha figured that the bike would make a good flat track TT bike (sometimes called scrambles in the US) and/or desert racer. Unfortunately the bike came pretty close to being a great thing but it was let down by details like piston distortion problems, a pretty abrupt power curve and godawful handling. All of the engine's weak points can be fixed however, as can some of the shortcomings of the chassis (
actually, much of the frames dodgy handling is caused by the weird power characteristics of the engine)....Edgar Phipps built an engine with a new sleeve that decreased the 90mm bore to 89mm using a much lighter yet stronger Honda CR500 piston. He also removed the balancer and fitted a 5 speed from, I think a DT250. That engine is now housed in Edgars ex Firko Champion flat tracker but it's so powerful and torquey Ed had to add hefty gussets to the swingarm to prevent it twisting but it didn't seem to help all that much. The stock pistons tend to crack around the gudgeon area which causes a lot of distortion and the bikes reputation for siezing however I never siezed one and to my knowledge neither has Edgar so we must have been doing something right
.
The advance curve on the ignition is all wrong but can be sort of sorted by fitting the ubiquitous external flywheel DT400 cdi or, like one of mine had, a points ignition from a DT360. Yamaha was aware of the problem and released Technical Bulletin No 348 for the 73 sc500 that suggested adding a small condenser (has a Yamaha part number) that controlled the spark advance curve and made the bike a little more ridable. My Champion and the other CDI equipped SC I owned both had this mod done by previous owners. The flat tracker actually had two condensors wired into the system with a toggle switch between them. To start it I'd flick the switch to the left which somehow advanced the ignition a tad for easier starting. One downside to this little home made mod was that the bike would sometimes start in reverse, causing lots of laughter as I'd zoom off the line backwards.
I have a soft spot for the much maligned SC500. If Yamaha had put a bit more effort into sorting the engine's shortcomings it could have been a really good thing. I've long had this little idea to fit an SC500 engine(with all of the fix up mods) to an MX250/400B roller to see just how good a bike it could have been if Yamaha had taken it seriously. I'd love to see someone do it or even better fit one to a YZ-250/400D roller, I reckon it has the potential to be the killer pre 78 class weapon. It's a hell of a better bike than the gnarly old Suzuki TM400.