Thanks Guys! It was the end of a pretty long, and frustrating day. The main oil feed hose had to be replaced, and it was a bear of a job installing the fittings on the new hose. Fixing the accelerator pump took a few minutes in itself. Nice thing about a turbo bike...the carb comes right off
Then we got it started, and the plug popped off
I looked for ten minutes and couldn't find it...gave up, and was ready to pull one off a donor motor..then Omar found it
Ron's the genius behind the plug cover; a pretty quick trick that I wouldn't have thought of so fast.
It pretty much sounded like a Moto GP bike, I don't know if that came through in the video. Ron's buddy who actually goes to Bonneville came by...said I should go. But, it's in less than three months, and I start my job next Monday...can't take a week + vacation that quickly.
Now that I've heard it run it's decision time. I think I'm going to make a street bike out of it. The frame has already been modified for the tank, and the seat, so I'll stick with them as my base. The lengthened swing arm could really be something special. I'll have to measure it when I pull it, but I will keep it in a box with some of the other parts that would bring the bike back to 'original.' I'll throw a stock swinger on with fresh bearings. It will look as close to before as possible for the street.
Ron has invited me to learn the English Wheel at his hangar on weekends. He brought along a cafe seat he'd made from two pieces of flat metal, and I was hooked. If I'm good at it, I've found my new side profession, because he knows people who pay good money for specialty race bike body parts. Needless to say, I'm taking him up on his offer