Author Topic: One For The Books....  (Read 786 times)

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Offline gwallis

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  • 1976 Honda CB550F 1973 Honda CB750
One For The Books....
« on: September 21, 2016, 07:31:11 pm »
Ok.... so I go to the local Honda dealer to have a new K70 front tire mounted on the rim of my 1973 CB750.  When I got it home and installed the wheel it seemed to fit into the brake caliper correctly but the wheel would not turn.  After removing the brake caliper I noticed that the brake disk was rubbing against the lower leg of the front fork.  I removed the wheel and replaced at least three times thinking that I must have done something wrong.

It turns out that the Honda dealership removed the axel, while mounting the tire, and installed it on the opposite side of the wheel.  the spacing of the tire in the center of the forks appeared to be correct... but it was not.

I have tried to remove the axel by inserting a screw driver into the hole on one side of the axel and using a crescent wrench on the nut end.  The thing will not budge.  I assume that the axel follows the 'Righty Tighty... Lefty.. Losey' threading.  Is this correct?  Any ideas on how to remove the axel that I am missing?  Or is back to the shop?

Offline Don R

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Re: One For The Books....
« Reply #1 on: September 21, 2016, 08:06:40 pm »
 That's how I do it, bigger screwdriver and crescent? On one that's frozen I've used heat but try to avoid that.
No matter how many times you paint over a shadow, it's still there.
 CEO at the no kill motorcycle shop.
 You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.

Offline evanphi

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Re: One For The Books....
« Reply #2 on: September 22, 2016, 05:42:23 am »
Use a deep 15/16" socket. It'll fit over everything. Also good for torquing it back down.
--Evan

1975 CB750K "Rhonda"
Delkevic Stainless 4-1 Header, Cone Engineering 18" Quiet Core Reverse Cone, K&N Filter in Drilled Airbox
K5 Crankcase/Frame, K4 Head and Cylinders, K1 Carbs (42;120;1 Turn)

She's a mix-matched (former) basket case, but she's mine.

CB750 Shop Manual (all years), searchable text PDF
Calculating the correct input circumference for digital speedometers connected to the original speedometer drive