What a day I’ve had! Is it really a month already since I updated?
I started out this morning finishing off the rebuilding of my carbs. This had been abandoned yesterday evening when I discovered I had put two of the slides in the wrong carbs - the third mistake of the day requiring me to retrace my steps. So here I am taking the carbs apart again and whilst applying a bit - only a little bit, honest – I managed to snap one of the plastic fuel pipes joining each pair
I reassembled as much as possible and then set it aside till I get a replacement.
Next I decided to check the tension on the primary drive chain, as I’d been led to believe it was probably slack. All went well till I started putting the starter clutch together and discovered one of the rollers missing. I know I had it last week so it must be around somewhere. An hour or more later, after a full tidy up and search had revealed nothing, I decided to move on with the check; I discovered DSS had replacements at £2-3 so not a big deal. Then just as I was starting to put the chain in place, there it was, sitting shining in the upper case - happy days!
So I dry assembled all the parts - well quite wet really – and the chain seems slack, and I mean really slack!! Does anyone know if there is a recommended limit to the vertical slack? I haven’t been able to find one. In any case, a new one is on the way.
But I don’t want to give the impression that there has been no progress during the month. The bike is now a rolling chassis, just waiting ....
The powder-coated “chrome” parts look pretty good; obviously not as good and newly done shrimped would look, but a
lot cheaper, and since this was never intended as a full-on restoration, perfectly adequate. I did decide the tank and panels had to be painted, even if only to remove the mammoth shadows on the latter, so I have cleaned both and sent them off to be painted.
I have finished repairing and repainting the rear outer mudguard. - looks fine from a distance.
I have renovated the wiring loom, adapting it slightly to take account of the handlebar switches I have; remove the clutch safety switch; and install some relays to save my ignition and light switches. I also cleaned terminals, overhauled the solenoid, replaced some damaged wires and replaced the fuse box, which was in a very sorry state. With the exception go the rectifier, the electrical parts seem to be working OK. The bike came with an original rectifier and one that looks like it came from a 750; this one works, but I don’t really see how I can fit it in place, so that’s a new one of those.
So there is progress; not as much as I’d like, but I’m getting there.