Not a ton of progress yesterday, had to do some grocery shopping and help the wife's friend install a shelf.
I got one fork torn down, cleaned up, polished, and rebuilt with a new oil seal. Also, I used dust covers/caps for a '77-78 750K from David Silver Spares instead of the ugly fork gaiters.
There's some pitting on the top of the fork tube but that will be hidden by the headlight ears.
And I got a coat of paint on the triple trees. I put another coat on this morning and a third over lunch break today.
And my plan for the gauges, made in Autodesk Inventor and Gimp:
I'm thinking of taking the Honda logo off of the speedo and just leaving it on the tach. The speedo will look busy enough with the odometers. Right now the priority is getting the bike rolling again by Thursday night, as I'm leaving Friday for Arizona and Tuesday for Venezuela, and I'd like to get my car into the garage while I'm gone. The gauges were easy to design during work though, which is why that much is done. My old roommate does screen printing and vinyl cutting so we'll see if he has a nice, durable solution for applying these designs to the gauge faces.
I'm hoping to finish the other fork tonight, and hopefully get the front rim masked/painted. Obligations keep me busy but I'm trying to work around them.
Work left before it's rolling again:
- Finish second fork tube
- Finish polishing valve cover
- Put engine back into frame
- Paint front rim
- Install new steering bearings
- Sand spot putty on headlight ears (filled in old reflector holes) and paint black
- Reassemble front end (triple trees, brake, wheel, fender, etc.)
- Reinstall swingarm (still waiting on some CB900f shocks)
- Reinstall centerstand (sure it's ugly and heavy, but damn it's useful)
- Finish cleaning chain (it's been soaking in Simple Green) and install new master link (lucky find at the hardware store)
- Reinstall handlebars
I can get that much done in three evenings, right?
After that I need to:
- Finish up the exhaust
- Run the wiring harness
- Mount all of the electrical pieces in the new box
- Mount the battery (we'll see if I can do this without ruining the frame paint)
- Install some sort of splash guard between the rear tire and the rest of the bike
- Install headlight (waiting on this to arrive)
- Install turn signals
And at this point it's a runner. All that should be left is bodywork. Right now I'm thinking hammered black paint on the seat and tank with silver or white racing stripes down the middle. My mom does upholstery work so she can handle the seat. Wal-Mart has Stadium seat pads for $5 that should work for padding.