So, I have now proceeded to get the drum brake loose. A 2x4 on the end of the brake lever, and my trusty framing hammer (I never thought I'd use a dang hammer so much on a bike build....). Two whacks, and I could take the brakes right out of the wheel. Pretty bad shape, lots of corrosion, luckily, it doesn't look like it goes too deep. One of the pads came off of the shoe and is still stuck to the inside of the wheel, I'm betting that is what seized the wheel up. I'll get it out, it's soaking in...wait, you guessed it, PB Blaster! I love that stuff!
After I got the brake off, I decided I would test the rear bearing, so I put the axle back on the bike. From what I can feel, there is no play whatsoever in it, and the wheel spins very nice and free (no vibrations or rough spots in the rotation!). This makes me happy, I think I'll just pack the wheel with some more grease (is there a wheel bearing grease to use for this purpose?), clean the axle, coat it with the same grease, and slide it all back together. I am gonna have to fork up about $35 for a new set of brake shoes.....dang. The pictures tell the brake story. Don't mind my feet. It's hot here in Michigan, I was letting them air out a little.
So, I also found the little "glove box" under the seat. No tool box or owner's manual....that stinks. But, I did find an interesting bit of history on the bike. I found the old registration in it, half-burned (literally, I'd take a pic, but I don't know if the guy on it is even alive anymore, I don't want to violate his privacy). Despite the paper nearly crumbling in my hands, I found out that the last time this baby was registered was in 1982. So, we're looking at 26, maybe even 27 years of sitting in that field. Wow. I'm impressed, now. The way the sidecover crumbled with barely a touch makes me believe it. I wanted to save that cover, too.....oh well, can't fix it now.
Next task is to loosely mount the rear wheel so I can move the bike to a more accessible spot, and then, electrical time. This is probably not going to be fun. I know some of it works. I manually turned the ignition (ignitoin lock is shot), hooked the battery up to the nasty, rusty terminals, and pressed the horn button. At first, I didn't think it was working, but, everytime that I let go of the horn button, it would make a small "thunk" noise. Then, of course, after about 5 times, it stopped doing even that. I'm pretty sure I just need to go through and clean and grease every connection, meticulously. Is there a special grease to use for these? I thought I saw someone use Vaseline in their project....
More to come, once my dang kids go to sleep. They're being absolute hell tonight....it's nights like tonight that I don't see the purpose of these children. They're both boys, one is two and the other is four, and active would be an understatement.
Doug