Technically, I should've made this post earlier but I was honestly having a lot of fun digging into this project.
A couple of weeks ago I finally finished my degree and as a present to myself, I picked up my brand new (to me
) 1976 Honda CB750F in Candy Antares Red. I drive my dad's RE Hunter 350, which is a small and fun bike but honestly, 20 horses ain't cutting it anymore and feels less than safe at highway speeds. I wanted a project that would be simple, not overly expensive, and most importantly worthwhile, hence the SOHC CB750 platform. Also so I can have my own motorcycle.
The story goes that the dude I bought it from "found" the bike on a property he had recently purchased and just wanted to get rid of it. No title, no keys, and no history whatsoever but it has a plate on from '98 so it's most likely been sitting since then and definitely looked the part...sort of.
Lots of rust and the seat was shredded but it wasn't missing any parts, engine wasn't seized, and all the electronics worked. However, I didn't try to start it or do a compression test cause I planned to do a full rebuild anyways. Also the bike has 40,000+ miles with no real history so I needed to do a full rebuild for my sanity. Sorry for not grabbing more pictures of when I picked it up or "the before". I have pictures of all the parts but that's the only photo I have of the bike put together.
At this point I've completely taken the bike apart and it felt like a good point to make this post before I start inspection. Basically I love this bike and I haven't even driven it yet. I've never taken apart a vehicle to this extent but it was so simple and everything just made sense, plus with all the support this bike has it's pretty hard to get lost.
I'll be honest the mouse skeleton that was guarding the fuse box was a bit of a turn off but nothing a garden hose couldn't fix. Dealing with the JIS screws also sucked cause I couldn't remove the breather cover on the head so I had to remove an exhaust stud to drop the motor instead(just one
). The brakes were seized and the rear caliper wouldn't come apart so I had to drop the whole rear wheel so I could smack the caliper off the rotor. Then yesterday, I snapped the very last lower case bolt sending me into a deep depression till reddit informed me that both cases aren't threaded so I could still split the cases. Which I did
.
For now the main plan is to get the bike back in working order with an emphasis on reliability, not looks for now. Unfortunately, I too quite dig the cafe racer look that many of you hate and eventually that will happen with this bike but NO FRAME MODIFICATIONS, i promise. Soon I will send the frame and some brackets to get sandblasted and powder coated black but everything else is just gonna require a lot of elbow grease. I'm also going to get rid of all the chrome as most of it is rusted too heavily to restore and rechroming is not in the budget at this time but black paint is. The tank is going to get painted with a bunch of spray paint cans but properly with epoxy primer and 2k clear and most likely in either Porsche Malvern Red or Ferrari Rosso Fiorano. New steering head bearings, swing arm bushings, lower shock bushings, sprockets, chain, all transmission bearings, all gaskets, all o-rings, exhaust studs, probably more I'm missing. Then I gotta do the engine inspection and figure out what else I need (or don't
).
That's kinda everything that's planned for now and I would love to hear any and all questions, comments, or concerns.
Also I don't know who's going to see this but if you're thinking about jumping into the SOHC CB750 platform then frickin leap cause you (probably) won't regret it. And get yourself Hondaman's book and the $20 craftsman impact screwdriver cause it worked flawlessly and the PH3 bit you get with it I think is designed to work with JIS fasteners.