None of that sounds bad to me, based on what I know about air-cooled engines in airplanes...
Two things:
1. You don't want to see cylinder temps above 380 or so dF. Above that, aluminum alloys can start to lose their properties (the technical term is "funky"
).
2. You want the oil to get hot -- to evaporate any water -- but not too hot. 175 or so is good, IMHO. 160 or below after the engine is thoroughly warmed up would be too low. Anything above 200 and I'd start thinking about ways to cool it down.
I guess one could get really anal about temps and mount oil and cylinder gauges, but it seems like a lot of overkill to me. If the rebuild went well, your jetting is right, you use a good-quality oil, the bike's cooling fins are clear and you keep moving (i.e., not a lot of stop and go traffic), I wouldn't give it another thought.
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