Sorry Chewbacca....I didn't see your build thread name till this weekend so I renamed this!!
As I said in my into in the other section, I'm a two stroke guy. I restore and own several H1's, h2's and GT's and love them all! While I've owned and built many 4 stroke bikes, this is only the 4th or 5th four stroke machine I've worked in the past few years.
Hope everyone had a great Memorial weekend and just weekend for our friends outside the US. My GF and I spent some time with my neighbor having a cookout and generally sharing some good old fashioned BS for a few hours.
After we left, we changed into our "grungies" to take the Honda out of my Expedition where it has lay dormant since I brought it home a week or so ago. Removing a 400 some pound motorcycle, laying on its' side from an enclosed area like the back of my truck is never really simple but after doing it nearly 50 times, it's pretty much like clockwork. I back it up to a gentle hill in my front yard, she redirects me three or four times, first this way, then pull up, no the other "up", then "move it over here"....you get the idea but it's all in fun and only slightly aggravating but it's all good.....then she climbs in from the side door and I open the rear door and make sure it's in gear. I lay a huge comforter then a slippery vinyl tarp on top before loading it so the idea is that it will slip right out. I pull it ALMOST to it's tipping point, then she hops around to the rear with me and takes her position on the very back and we pop it out of gear and roll it right out as I stand it upright.
We all know it's never quite like that and sometimes can be downright comical when a brake pedal or foot peg lodges itself in one of the trim pieces or gets hung up on a seat belt strap but the 400 came out fairly easily and neither of us got hurt. Then, after moving the truck, we took it around to my back yard for a bit of rinsing before wheeling it down the long home-made ramp and into my basement work area. My "shop" is right to my work area so it affords me some decent space to work without taking up valuable space in my garage.
Once we got it around back, I fire up the pressure washer and connect a feeder full of baking soda to it to help remove the gook from the engine. I'm very careful of where I point it and it does a good job or removing 25 years of gook without pealing the paint, if I'm careful.
I took these pics after rinsing it off and just before we took it into the basement where the work will be done.
I'll probably start the actual work next week or so since I have a couple of other things going on too. I removed the forks from my '07 Vstrom1000 yesterday morning to replace the seals and head bearings and found that I need to replace the guide metals so they are still disassembled in my shop until the parts arrive so I kind fo want to reassemble them before doing any "dirty work" around them which might get dirt in places I don't want. I had ridding it over to Kerry's(GF) house the night before and the fork was chattering badly on right hand turns. She lives around 50 miles away over the bay bridge from me and even though the temps had dropped into the low 50's by the time I came back home, that front fork kept me plenty warm worrying about it so when I woke up, it was job one to get them off and apart so see what was wrong. I'm going to ride it out to Vintage days again this year and need everything to be right on it before leaving for a thousand mile trip.
More to come as I get the work done.....two things I'm looking for for now is a brake pedal and front fender so if anyone has a really good one that they would be willing to sell, let me know......
jeff