More progress! And it's seriously late again, but here's a rundown of the night's trials and tribulations.
It started with taking the head back down, 2.5 lbs at a go. Not much to report there- it went pretty quick. Then we snapped a strong magnet to the forceps to the snag the nuts out of the wells. Easy peasy, but the only way possible.
Next, we carefully peeled the head off without disturbing the head gasket, and shook the washers out. In the process, we also shook out the oil channel o-rings. Right! Forgot those were there. They went in the parts pan with the washers and nuts. Then somebody bumped the gasket (the guilty party shall remain unnamed, but suffice it to say they own the shop), so the gasket came out entirely to avoid damaging it.
Then the fun began. Raise the cylinders without disturbing the base gasket. OK, they don't want to go... OK, your side's high... now my side's high... we got it finagled up a bit, and the chain guide out and flipped around, but then couldn't get the tensioner seated right. In, out, up, down, finally got the tensioner seated and the cylinders down and went for the head gasket when we saw the guide sitting on the rag next to the engine.
We got the cylinders back up, the tensioner out, the guide in, the cylinders seated, the tensioner in, rotated the engine to make sure everything was working, and boom, we were golden! Head gasket on, OK, let's torque this bastard!
Luckily, my brother glanced into the parts pan, and noticed two black little O's standing out from the white lacquer finish. That pretty well earned him a forgiveness for the gasket screwup earlier, so we carefully raised the head again, inserted the o-rings, and put it back down. Then in with the washers, the nuts, drop one, fish it out, get one crooked, swear a lot, finally got them all situated, hand tightened, and finally torqued to 17.5 ft-lbs of pressure. I'll come back and back them off a bit and torque them back up to spec next time I attack this beast.
My brother rigged a proper surgical illumination so so we could see the patient and the torque wrench values.
Next I tried to find the torque values for the headers in the manual, but no dice.
We went at it without torque values, and got the right exhaust hung.
We found a Heineken in the recycling bins out back. Not sure who drinks Heineken around here, but it reminded me of my dad who has a soft spot for Heineken (although we've taught him to drink decent beer, for the most part). A pair of tin snips...
And boom! A custom made exhaust crossover! 4 minutes and 25 cents is a hell of a lot cheaper than a week and $17 (each) ordering them from Honda.
The left side didn't go nearly as smoothly. Looks like the left exhaust hanger was bent, and the pipes weren't lining up correctly. You can also see the left passenger footpeg sloping out. The right driver peg is sloping in a bit, but I'm OK with that, and it isn't nearly as bad as it looks in this picture. You can see the half-finished crossover dangling off the left exhaust as well.
We yanked the exhaust back up, and attacked the exhaust hanger with vigor and some very large pliers. By the time we were done it was tolerably straight, but the fat washer thingy inside the hanger had shifted a bit and we couldn't get the bolt through. My brother's a bit of a tyro, so he got the bolt threaded as far as it would go and then slammed it the rest of the way through with a framing hammer. Crude, but effective- the hole was clean and the bolt, surprisingly, wasn't damaged.
Both exhausts hung. Something about this picture just
works.
The left footpeg still slopes out a bit, but I think the footpeg itself is just a bit loose. The kickstand is a bit wobbly too- some washers out to fix that, but I don't think it's an issue at the moment.
All straightened out, with both crossovers in place.
And there we sit for now. Next step is to get all those bolts backed off a smidge and re-torqued, then the cam and chain, head cover, tappet adjustments, breather cover, carbs, hoses, cables, tank, gas, go.