Okay, I've decided I'm going to restore the K0 and ride it a few times before I sell it. I'm not doing a full restore, just enough to get it looking good and to ride it. The top items on the list are the following:
1) replace front and rear wheels either as complete units from another bike, or even model year, or just the rims and spokes (the rims and spokes are garbage)
2) replace the seat (and keep the original) with any other seat that fits. I'm not interested in buying a new or repro duck tail seat, but I do want a seat to...well... sit on. The original seat is shot with tears in the cover and degraded foam.
3) Pull the two dents out of the tank and possibly paint and prep the minor amount of rust where the dents were the worst. Supposedly, the dent experts in town can remove the dents by accessing the tank from the inside with specialty tools. That way I only have to sand off the rust where paint chipped away and spot paint (which I'm actually pretty good at). If I spot paint, then I'll go to a local paint shop to get the correct and original paint... and possibly match to the slightly faded paint!
4) glue on a broken piece from the top airbox cover and fashion a replacement piece for the small chip that is missing using 2-part epoxy (it mixes like putty). Then, paint it with the paint I get from my local paint shop.
5) polish the engine cases and wheel hubs
6) paint the upper triple tree black (VW black is a very close match)
7) replace the throttle tube and handlebar grips since they are shot
install the correct carb set that I recently bought (this is actually the least likely of the entire list)
9) new drive chain and probably sprockets.
10) replace the leaking oil pucks, and possibly the head gasket (can I do this in the frame, and do I need to buy any special parts?)
There are rust spots on the front and rear fenders that lifted some of the chrome. I removed the rust, but the spots remain. Definitely worse on the front than the rear, but I figure I'll leave them to keep it factory original rather than buy new parts. The original exhaust should clean up well without any serious rust, and all else is there.
Does anyone see any major red flags with my plan? Any suggestions on how to do it without breaking the bank? Any good lessons learned for a newbie to 750s? I'm not going for a full restore here. I just want it to look nice and run well.
Thanks,
Camelman (aka newbie to the 750 phenomenon)