Update time:
RestOratioN Fan (Ron) did me a massive solid, dug out a top bridge I need, and hustled down to the UPS store to get it on its way, on Friday afternoon while a significant snow event was bearing down on Atlanta. I appreciate that so much Ron. So this nugget can get retired as soon as that arrives next week.
We had plenty to entertain ourselves with including the manky fork and steering head bearings.
We skinned the stem of the lower bearing and knocked the races out of the steering head, blasted off the horrible rust and masked and painted it with some appliance epoxy, massive, fast improvement. My welder friend fixed the busted steering stop on the right, and I figured, well, AS LONG AS I WAS IN THAT AREA ANYWAY, you know, JUST AROUND THE CORNER FROM THE PLATER I'd re-plate all the fasteners I had removed. I suck at flipping bikes.
The fork got the usual spa treatment, disassemble and clean, although one damper rod bolt gave us Extra Fun, and so it got the good soak in PB Blaster and then I heated up the leg with the map gas torch till the brew was bubbling, and then the cordless impact made short work of that one too.
Muahahaha
Fork tubes were surprisingly good near the seal area, had some fine scratches that I polished with 1000-grit wet/dry and a few drops of 3-in-1 oil. The area under the clamp was ugly, so I thought I'd try something I haven't used for a long time, and give them a good soak with Naval Jelly, after knocking the loose rust off with red Scotchbrite.
I was unimpressed. I put it on nice and thick, and its a gel so it stays put pretty well. Tried two applications of it as thick as I could get it on there and it didn't do much. I bailed and soaked them overnight in Metal Rescue and that did a decent job of derusting. Hosed them down pretty well with WD and called it good.
We naturally vapor blasted the fork legs, and this is kind of a good illustration of the finish, and why some hand finishing is sometimes necessary to get parts to look just right. The further leg is vapor blasted only, the nearer is too but was then hand finished in the vice with WD40 and red Scotchbrite, shoeshine-style, then polished up with white Scotchbrite.
Both done, derusted tubes behind, about to get reassembled:
Heated up these copper crush washers to glowing red, let them cool slowly, buzzed off the scale with the wire wheel, good to go.
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