Well with the motor in the frame it was finally time to tackle the double sided brakes. MAN! What a nightmare!
The early 750 (K0/2) fork leg bottoms were installed and the forks into the yokes. Then begins a right saga to get it all into one functional piece and the main problem was the Dunlop KR124 front tyre. It is so wide at the shoulder, you can't put the wheel on with both caliper hangers installed first as it just won't clear them even with brute force and a flat tyre.
So, wheel placed between the fork legs with no discs installed and no spindle, raised up on a three inch wooden block. This gave me space enough to turn the fork legs out a quarter turn and bolt the caliper hanger/caliper assembly in place with correct length bolts. Turn them back in and bingo - brakes on and wheel in.
Next the disc was place in on the left side where the wheel hub mount is thickest and where the old speedo drive went. The right side disc then slots just up onto the shoulder of the hub and into the gap between the pads. Bolt them all up.
Finally, I had to reinstall the spindle and bolt up the fork leg spindle caps and voila! Job's a good 'un. Those discs look huge installed - well I suppose twin 290mm discs are pretty big for an old CB750. The only downside I can see is that the hangers and the fork legs don't align for the caliper tensioning spring and bolt. I know a lot of guys who race CB350 K4s junk this altogether and let the caliper arm swing free - any opinions on whether that's a good or bad thing?!
Next job is to measure the brake lines and get them made up while work continues positively on the front fender brackets thanks to the great K0 patterns I had off this forum - thanks guys.
Ah - Terry will be wanting another picture no doubt...will really seriously try and do that soon to get the brakes in shot, the motor in the frame and the trick little bits like works replica foot levers and that ooh sooo deep sump!