WOW plastikjock that's some FANTASTIC work on this bike! Great fabrication skills.
Hell - if there's anybody out there who's good with the yoke mods like this, who'd be willing to weld in the undersides? I'd do all of the file and sander work afterwards - but if a person can do a good colour-matched filler weld like this on the yoke undersides?
I'd ship 'em both top AND bottom of some 39mm CB900F yokes and ask that they be filled in solid all the way left to right. Oh yeah, and I'd send some $$$ along with it. Ha-ha.
That top yoke is GORGEOUS.
Just think of it though - if it's filled in all the way, left to right, then it could be rounded edge to edge like a Ceriani yoke. Or more to the point, like the '76 RCB Endurance Racer's flat-top yoke. THAT'S what I wanna do with my "CB900K0 Bol Bomber"!
And by the WAY - wtf is the diameter of those CB550 front rotors? I realize the 500 & 550 have the smaller lighter DRUM hub for a lighter rear wheel - but I'M concerned with a smaller lighter rotor for the rear DISC brake. I wanna swap the 296mm discs onto front carriers to use with my CBX caliper hangers, instead of the '83 CB1100R type vented rotors like I've got on my Comstar wheel right now, cross-drilled for weight of course - AND I wanna use a 276mm MAX diameter rear brake, with say, a CBR1000F rear caliper & hanger. A CB350F/CB400F four-bolt/six-rivet disc also has it's appeal at 260mm - but if there's a six-bolt/nine-rivet version somewhere close to that 260mm or even better the 240mm of the GL500 (CX) Silverwing front disc (five-bolt Comstar type) that I could mount to the OEM rear carrier for the CB750F1 '75-'76 rear disc-brake wire-spoke hub, then I'd be happy as all get out! Of course, I've got an additional 4.25x18" Akront rim which is drilled for the Harley rear hub ergo it can work with a Honda FRONT hub, and I suppose if I could flatten the 2nd face of a DOHC CB750K wire-spoke front hub OR a rare Unobtainium front hub from the SOHC Canadian Police model CB750P7, which is a dual-disc five-bolt hub, from a wire-spoke wheel in a CB750F2 type fork, VERY interesting wheel that one! Anyway yeah, at THAT point I could build a rear wheel using the GL500 240mm rear brake. But in the MEANTIME using this identical rim with the larger heavier hub is far simpler & cheaper, and a 260mm/270mm-ish brake rotor would make it work!
By make it work, I mean that I've got Marzocchi Strada-II shocks on the bike right now, and the gas reservoirs have to be flipped around forward due to interference with the rear caliper. Now, I'd go with an underslung caliper - easy enough when the DOHC series has mirror image components available from the Goldwing series of the same year - yeah IMHO even the '75 CB750F1 could use a '75 GL1000 caliper flipped upside down and a spare bleeder hole drilled into it's underside. (((OR it could simply be disconnected from the stay arm while bleeding is performed))) But I've also got this Cal-Fab swingarm, meaning it's not as simple as swapping out to the equivalent drum-brake type swingarm for a torque-arm connection on the underside. Well if there's anybody out there who's GOT an identical Cal-Fab swingarm which is made with the lug on the underside, and they want to TRADE....
Anyway suffice it to say there are about a thousand and one reasons to shrink down the rear disc brake diameter and shed some weight. AND increase the front brake diameter. WHILE shedding weight. (At least, over my current '83 CB1100R type vented rotors, it's a decrease in mass!) It's just common sense to do ALL of this stuff. Though a 4.25x18" Akront rim and 160/60ZR18 sport-touring radial is NOT necessarily a sensible choice. That rim weighs up the same as the OEM Comstar 2.50x18" hollow-shoulder rim, removed from it's hub. And the SOHC wire hub weighs more than the Comstar hub. AND the wire spokes weigh more than the ten alloy triangle plates and five bolts, ten small rivets etc. There's only ONE way I can bring the rotational inertia & un-sprung mass down to the OEM levels - shrink the rotor!
It's HUGELY important that I do this right, and just the one time. YEAH I realize that a person can just whip up a rotor carrier and use off-the-shelf CROTCH ROCKET parts from CBR/VFR or Gixxer etc. But I'm shooting for a very "Period-Correct" look here, albeit not for the actual 1982 vintage of the bike itself. The wire wheels are a huge part of the "Retro-Fried" treatment on this bike. So I wanna figure out the best possible combination of '70s-era brake parts so as not to disturb the vintage vibe of the thing. Heck I've spent far too much on original AKRONT rims instead of going with modern replicas from Excel/Sun etc. I don't wanna screw that up with a cheap quick rush-job on the rear brake, let alone swap to the CBR900RR rotors (from the 2nd of the 3 versions of that model) which I know would also fit the GL1000 front hub. This is gonna be a bit of a hassle, and an expense what with drilling all of the rotors, sourcing rotors and multiples of each of 'em at that. Then the replacement rivets, or hardware barring that.
They SELL rotor kits with just the outer disc and bolts to reassemble it - "METALGEAR AU" - so it's not a completely ridiculous idea.
ANYWAY yeah - it would sure be nice to find somebody who would weld-up some fork yokes into solid lumps. Maybe I should just ask my machinist to make a new set from billet? SO much work to get 'em looking like actual Honda parts though. I HATE the look of billet - I've gone to some lengths to disguise any & all billet parts on my bike, filed & sanded 'em down to look like they're cast. I realize they wanted to save some weight, but is it really that much weight? Wouldn't it be better to have solid yokes and drill 'em out to shave some weight? That way we could all feel really smart figuring out where and how big of holes to drill!
Bah. I guess I should ask myself how much STRONGER the thing would be if it were solid. Probably not that much. But it COULD be re-shaped & flat-topped a lot easier! There are other models of bikes which have solid bar clamps - Ducati yokes are simple to cut the clamps off. A lot of the Brit-bikes. Of course, for the most part they're all inferior to the Honda stuff. I should focus on finding the right 41mm yokes to use with the Goldwing 1500 forks, that I can file THAT down to a nice sexy curvaceous shape.....
But I still wanna do stuff with these here TWO sets of 39mm CB900F forks, so if there's anybody offering a service like that, DO please send me a message about it!
Whatever - bloody nice 550 café here. And barely any response to this thread!
"BUMP"!
-S.