There are a few tests that could pinpoint your trouble. My guess is that your crankshaft position sensor is on the fritz (which will cause the vehicle's ignition system to not produce any spark when it is malfunctioning). If you have the v-6 engine, the crankshaft position sensor will be on the back of the block with a 2-wire harness plugged into it. This wire harness will run to the front of the engine and plug in to the ignition module. Don't forget to check the integrity of the entire length of wire running between the crank sensor and the ignition module. This is a common problem area on your type of vehicle. Good luck, and get ready to get greasy, and swear a lot.
Generally, the axles cannot be fixed, and will need to be completely replaced.
Check your crank shaft sensor
Check the timing.
check ignition module.
89 degrees Celsius is hot because water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
you might have a sensor issue, im assuming the master sensor its only about 20bucks in parts stores
Hot or cold is relative. Certainly 89 degrees Celsius is very hot. But 89 degrees Fahrenheit is pretty warm, but not exactly what most people would call "hot". Consider that water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit, so 89 isn't hot compared to that.
yes it is hot.
An ignition module problem could be the cause of your 89 Geo Spectrum not starting and not getting any fire. It could also be the pickup coil causing the problem.
you need to be more specific
A dead battery would cause an 89 YZ250 not to start. Another reason it might not start is because it is out of gas.
89*c