I removed the thermostat last night and overheat problem is gone. Kymco part# 19300.
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In short - if you change your coolant and then the bike overheats, pull thermostat first! Don't listen to the shop technician and rebuild the motor top end like I did!
For What Its Worth (FWIW) The Grandvista 250 and certain other brands / models of scooters have super tiny passages where it is extremely difficult to get the air out after a coolant change. My local dealer confirmed this. I changed my coolant in the GV250 and ran it with the cap off to let out trapped air until the fan came on twice! But I still overheated once I drove on the highway! I then needed to do 3 or 4 more burp sessions to get all the air out. Since that time everything is back to normal - no over heats in 4K miles.
I don't recommend changing the coolant on the Grandvista for several reasons:
It is harder and takes more work than any car or motorcycle that I have ever owned and you risk damaging your motor or head gasket with an overheat.
You will introduce an air pocket that causes the engine overheat even if you follow the instructions in the book exactly. This happened to me after I changed the super dark green factory coolant on my 2005 GV250 @10K miles. I ran the scoot with the radiator cap removed to allow air to escape and reach full operating temperature - twice! I got on the highway and 8 min later all 5 bars were lit up and blinking on the temp gauge!! Not good!
Coolant is capable of lasting 100K miles and most scooters have much less than 12K on them. You might want to change the coolant if it has never been done AND your scoot is 15 years old or more.
Dark Dark Green - remember, the dark green color does NOT mean the coolant is bad. It comes that way from the factory so you can see the level in the coolant bottle.
If you insist on changing the coolant:
EZ method - Look up the quantity in the system and remove about 1/2 by pouring it into a container then measure it. Now fill up with new coolant. Next year or so repeat. While you don't change all the coolant or "flush the system" you DO refresh the chemicals and PH balance.
Correct full method:
As suggested users on this forum and modified by me.... Loosen one bolt from the thermostat and wire brush the threads to remove the factory Loctite - aluminum threads and a steel fine thread bolt - not a good combination and easy to strip threads! Consider lubing the threads and reinstall. Repeat for all other bolts. The reason is to make sure you are able to loosen the thermostat first! Now drain all coolant. Now add just enough coolant to insure that the engine block has coolant, reinstall thermostat. Fill the rest of the way and run the motor with the cap off to allow air to escape.
Rock & lean the scooter side to side (like throwing over on its side) to get more air out. My dealers mechanic said this is how they do it! Run scooter to full operating temp to ensure the thermostat is fully open.
Drive the scooter around the block and keep an eye on the temp! DO NOT DRIVE ON THE HIGHWAY or a long distance from home. The coolant is very sneaky the passages are so tiny air gets trapped and once the motor is running at 70%+ it gets hot then overheats! Expect to have several air expelling / burping sessions with you scooter before ALL air is truly gone.