Been off the air for a bit. Had a 76 CJ5 to work on and it was no less fun than working on the 350 Four.
But it is done and I am back on the 350. Been searching for a NOS rear wheel and got excited to see one on an overseas website, a well known and reputable supplier of vintage Japanese parts. So in my excitement I bought the rim. The rear wheel on this 350 Four had a 1.60 x 18 rim and I searched to see if the 350 four ever came with that size rim. Needles to say I couldn't find anything to suggest the 350 came with a 1.60 x 18 rear rim.
So....I get the rim and lo and behold it does not have the proper DID stamp and the big giveaway was the made in Indonesia label. Went back to the website and the pic clearly showed the rim with the correct DID stamp in the center, then I saw it, the dreaded superseded part number, clicked on that and a whole new set of pictures...Arrgghh. I wrote the business but after three days of no reply I figured I wasn't going to get one. Needless to say I decided to lace it up until I could save up enough to get the right rim.
This brings another interesting issue. This rim while not having the correct stamp marks does look nice but once laced it became very difficult to get runout and wobble to specs. I studied the wheel and pondered some thoughts. First is the runout, I have it pretty close but there is an area where the wheel was butted together and welded, poor machine work here as there is a positive deflection of the dial indicator at this spot every time, the only way to fix this would be to machine the wheel true and re-chrome.
Wobble, close as in hand grenades, that's as close as I could get. I managed and overall average of .0025 deflection on the dial indicator. Studied the wheel and discover specific points that deflected the dial indicator, they were definitive points that did not change no matter how I adjusted the spokes. looked closer at these points and found dips in the lip. I suspect this is due to old dies used to mold the rims, I have no idea of the quality control there at the factory but it is not as good as when DID was making rims for Honda.
I spoke to a few others who restore bikes and their opinion mimics mine in regards to these Indonesian made DID rims.
Beautiful looking chrome, overall an okay rim but I would choose differently and had the rear rim been the correct 185 x 18 I would have had it re-chromed.