Back in 1976 I was wrenching at a Honda shop in Davis, California and a '75 CB400F came in for its second crash repair with only 1,200 miles on the clock. The rider was a reckless kid and his parents wisely pressed to sell the bike back to the shop to save their son from himself. Bayard, a good buddy of mine, bought the bike from the shop and proceeded to ride it for the next 25 years, accumulating 35,000 miles. He quit riding at some point, as did I, and for the last 15 years or so the bike has been sitting unused in the front room/indoor shop of his house.
Fast forward to a couple of years ago and I attended a local vintage motorcycle show with Bayard and another old riding buddy and I got the bug again. I soon bought and restored my CB125, two GB500's and my XL250. Since then, while on rides I've stopped off regularly at my pal Bayard's place to chew the fat and talk about the old days, how we both started out on C110's, graduated to S90's, 305 Super Hawks, his CB450 Black Bomber and so on. During each visit I would walk past his dusty, dormant 400F and have the urge to grab some wrenches and polish and whip it back into shape. Bayard was on board with the idea so I brought the bike into my shop a few weeks ago and got started.
Being only a two owner bike and always stored indoors makes this a dream project. Its only problems were lots of oil leaks, slipping clutch, and lots of tarnish and dirt. So step one was doing a thorough cleaning prior to top end tear down to fix the oil leaks. Some before pictures:
As I mentioned, the original owner had crashed twice. I did an insurance repair the first time, but Bayard bought the bike as-is after the second crash. The damage was fairly minor, slight scratches on the exhaust and this nasty scrape on the alternator case and cover plate.
The case was originally painted silver with a clear coat, so I did an epoxy fill on the case and repainted. We obtained a NOS cover plate from David Silver and one major scar was fixed.
The engine was in good shape, but with 35K miles I went ahead and freshened it up with a light hone and new rings. Amazingly the piston-to-cylinder clearance was still well within spec at .001". Bayard changes his oil religiously. The head is out having the valve seats ground for new valves. I replaced the cam chain and clutch discs, along with all O-rings and gaskets. Meanwhile lots of cleaning, soda or glass bead blasting, painting, and buffing is bringing out the eye candy in this wonderful bike.
The forks got new seals, buffing and clear coat. Master cylinder and caliper got new seals, paint and brake lines.
Center and side stands got painting and hardware polish and clear coat.
The frame only needed minor touch up and polishing.
Engine covers got new silver paint and a coat of catalyzed clear coat.
The front hub is buffed and clear coated, and relaced with new spokes.
After buffing I decided that yes, this has got to be the world's sexiest exhaust system.
I cleaned the carbs and replaced all O-rings. Still to do are cylinder head install, then replacement of swing arm bushings, rear wheel rebuild, and clean up of the aftermarket Koni shocks. Oh, and taking my buddy out on some favorite local rides.
More to come.
-Bill