A couple of weeks ago I picked up a good condition '78 CB750K. A few years ago whenI lived in England I owned a cafe racer '77 CB750F2, and I have been kicking myself for selling it ever since. So I jumped at the chance to pick this one up, and figure I will tinker with it over the winter. Strangely enough, my buddy has a '78 K as well, so we will do some of the work on them together. The bike came in good running order, mostly stock other than the bars and exhaust, and came with a giant rack and back rest that hurt my eyes just to look at it (those came off right away...). Here's the bike, with the horrible rack, next to my buddy's '78.
The bike was in pretty good shape. It needed a cam chain adjustment, a carb clean, and a new set of rear brake shoes, but other than that was great. I plan to do a "semi" cafe racer conversion on it. I want to retain a double seat, because my other bike is a rigid-frame 1953 Harley Panhead chopper with a single seat, so I want to retain at least one bike that I can take my wife or daughters for rides on. So no single-seat cowl or rearsets. But I do like the look and feel of lower bars, so I am going with clip-ons. With that in mind, I will be cleaning up the cockpit with a triple tree from Bullit Custom Cycles in Toronto, a set of mini gauges, and a mounting bracket with mini-LED lights. (BTW, you can see the build thread for my Panhead here:
http://www.chopcult.com/forum/showthread.php?t=8406&highlight=panhead)
The Bullit triple tree is a beautiful piece, but still looked a little too modern and "CNC-ish" for me, so I put on on my grinder and rounded out all the edges roughly, and then sanded it progressively with 250, 400, 600, 1500 and 2000-grit sandpaper before putting it on to my buffing wheel for the final polish. Here is the before and after:
The engine is getting K&N pods, and I want to find a smaller reverse megaphone for the exhaust. I have a second seat pan and tank, and I am planning on getting a (slightly) lower, flat tuck-and-roll seat upholstered on the second pan, but which retains the stock hinge and lock (which I find quite handy). If I don't have to cut the stock frame bridge, I won't. For the tank, I am going to try to do a similar cut-out "cafe'd" tank that Vinnie did on his CB:
http://www.dotheton.com/forum/index.php?topic=13529.0My friend Remi is probably changing his significantly, so I will likely be using the hand-hammered mini fender with some custom LED taillights that our buddy made up for that bike (here it is with the seat up to show how it is mounted):
Other than that, I will be mounting some much smaller solid aluminum turn signals to replace the giant stock pumpkins (I want to keep this bike as legal as possible), and will give the whole bike a thorough clean. I will be pulling the forks, removing the pitted clearcoat and polishing the lowers, and then dissassembing the wheels to powder-coat the rims before trying my hand at relacing (I am going to order fresh stainless spokes and nipples from Buchanan's.) I welcome advice from anyone who has experience rebuilding wheels!
With respect to wheels though, I was disappointed to find that Honda switched to a 17" rear wheel for the '77-'78 K's (I was hoping to go with Dunlop K70's front and rear, but they don't make them for a 17" rim). I suppose if I am rebuilding the wheels anyway, the logical thing would be just to buy an 18" rum and then figure out what size spokes I would need to match them up to the stock hub (I have heard Buchanan's can be very helpful with stuff like that). Is there any reason that wouldn't work? The other option would be just to use an 18" off an earlier Cb750K. Would one fit? (I understand there are differences with the swingarms on the 77/78's, so I am not sure if the axle or brake/hub size would be an issue).
While I have the forks apart I will probably take the opportunity to install a set of Progressive springs as well.
So overall, nothing really exotic, but should be a nice little rider by the time I am done. We have about five solid months of snow and cold up here in Ottawa, so I have lots of time to work on it!