My first question is "How in the hell do those Iron Butt" riders do a thousand miles in one day on a motorcycle?" I certainly have renewed respect for them. After unloading and doing a quick assessment, I am satisfied but not jumping over moon, with my purchase. It is a 1974 with a shade under 17 K on the clock, and yes it has had the same owner since being bought new. Of course it has spent the last 15 years or so living in a conex shipping container and shows all of the signs of a bike sitting for too long. I found the bike on FB Marketplace and the seller and I communicated for quite awhile over price, but he held out and I relented, probably paying too much for the bike in the long run, but dammit it is a one owner machine. I drove to TN. to pick the bike up and had to wait for the seller to come out of Coivd quarantine procedures to complete the purchase. Needless to say I was overly careful during loading and even used some hand sanitizer in my beard leaving his driveway.
Now for the good, the bike is very complete. All lights, horn, and goodies function when temporarily hooked up to a battery, and it does turn over nicely. The motor seems to have decent compression, hard to tell by kicking on a 750, so I will put a gauge on it after I pull the carbs, which believe or not are free. The clutch is also free and smooth and bike goes through all of the gears easily. The bike has a clear title from 1974 and the inside of the tank looks good, although Kreem has been applied, I really hate that product.
The bad, PO had the bike repainted blue, from the OEM green years ago and it probably looked good back then, but not so much now. The rear wheel is toast, a couple of broken spokes and it looks like an attempt was made to repair them by loosening the remainder. Since re-spoking a wheel has always seemed like some type of Voodoo magic to me I will probably look for a good used wheel. Seat and mufflers are not original, and yes I checked to see if he kept them rusted or not, no such luck. The front caliber will have to be replaced. It apparently froze, repair method, drill a hole in the back side to relieve pressure and repair with a washer, screw, and piece of inner tube.
Well I have a project and will throw some shots up as I progress. I have given it a bath and that really didn't help a great deal. I will have to say that apparently the price of vintage Japanese motorcycles is on the rise, finding project bikes at a decent price is almost impossible now days, probably another thing that I enjoy impacted by Covid 19. A lot of folks are still at home looking for something to keep them busy.
Here are some shots, feel free to comment, offer condolences or congratulations, at my age you can't hurt my feelings anymore......