So a good day for me. HondaMan's ignition showed up in the mail and I got my tank and stuff from painterman!
They got a couple more layers of clear coat, sealing in the decals. I will let them cure inside for a few more weeks and then wax em up rel gud.
I have started front end rebuild endeavors. Tripple tree, forks, rotor/caliper and swing arm have all been harvested from the '77 parts bike and cleaned up. (I'll eventually be rebuilding the front wheel too but all in good time.) I have new All Balls steering and wheel bearings too, cause that's better right?
All the harvested parts will go out for blasting and powder coating sometime soon - next week or two? I'm planning on painting the calipers myself. That may be a waste of $$ and time. Maybe just throw them in for powder coat too. Hmmmm.
The forks have been all cleaned up and polished with new seals installed. The only difficulty I encountered was the old seals were tough to get out. A couple of days soak with PB then some firey heat + a big slotted screw driver eventually did it. I gouged the aluminum seat for one of the seals a little bit, but it sanded out fine and shouldn't cause any further grief. I slightly tapered a piece of 1-1/2" pvc with some sand paper for a seal install tool. I put the seals in the freezer and gave the forks a little heat prior to installation. They certainly needed pounding with the hammer, but went in as they should.
The inner fork tubes were in near perfect condition. For the outer/lower tubes, 600 wet/dry, 1000 wet/dry, and Mothers made for surprisingly quick work of things once I got the clear coat removed. I was going to take them into work and spend some time on the buffing wheel but the hand rubbed finish worked out just fine.
For the clear coat, I did the seal-them-in-a-bucket-with-some-acetone-overnight trick and the clear came off easily with a rag the next day. Now I'm just waiting on new piston rings and snap rings for the fork seals and they can be reassembled, ready to install. (I'm interested in the idea of tapping the top fork nuts, installing shrader valves and making air shocks. I will ask about this in a real thread.)
I've settled on a hole pattern for drilling my rotors. We have a laser cutter at work and I cut out a drilling template from 1/4" acrylic. That seemed much more straightforward and less likely to @$H*& things up in my head than setting up the rotary stuff on the mill etc. (At work, we have a Bridgeport and a Kondia mill as well as a three lathes. And a spray booth, electronics shop, welding shop, and bunch of other stuff. We're free to use the shop off the clock. I'm spoiled.) I have some cobalt bits and other sundries coming from McMaster in a day or two and then I can get drilling.
(If you don't know McMaster Carr, check them out! Amazing website and they have great customer support.)
That's it for now. I'll be digging into the donor front wheel next. I've laced countless bicycle wheels but no motorcycle wheels. I wonder where this will lead...