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I spent a glorious day in my new super sized workshop.Put a Virago 250 back together to then sell.Cleaned up some Honda parts for the road racer.Made space for the 1968 Yamaha YCS1 I bought a few days ago - pick it up tomorrow.That's the thing about having space for more bikes...
I learned (thanks to this forum) how to take out the emulsion tube from my carbs. I didn't do this on the first clean. Holy crap! No wonder I couldn't get the bike to run right. Thanks SOHC4!
I ended up preparing a spare swingarm. This has a bit of work to go but will eventually go on my K2 cb750 as there is about 3mm side-play at the rear wheel on my current one. Just cleaning the 40 year old dirt off it, then paint stripping, then more cleaning, then brush on some phosporic acid and wash off some 15 mins later. Then I moved on to getting the old bushes out as they were borderline out of spec. As expected, they were happy being in there so they needed a bit of persuasion. Applying heat does wonders. I'd say i'll end up going with item (Part #: 28-1026) from here. http://www.vintagecb750.com/products/3/suspension/57/swing-arm-bushings-steering-dampersPS: The site says these are for 76 to 78, but could i get someone to PM me & confirm that these are also ok for the K1 to K5? Mine is a K2. I'm pretty sure i've read that this part will fit all bikes if you leave out the end cap and felt washer but just wanted a confirmation from someone.
Quote from: AJK on May 25, 2014, 12:39:49 AMI ended up preparing a spare swingarm. This has a bit of work to go but will eventually go on my K2 cb750 as there is about 3mm side-play at the rear wheel on my current one. Just cleaning the 40 year old dirt off it, then paint stripping, then more cleaning, then brush on some phosporic acid and wash off some 15 mins later. Then I moved on to getting the old bushes out as they were borderline out of spec. As expected, they were happy being in there so they needed a bit of persuasion. Applying heat does wonders. I'd say i'll end up going with item (Part #: 28-1026) from here. http://www.vintagecb750.com/products/3/suspension/57/swing-arm-bushings-steering-dampersPS: The site says these are for 76 to 78, but could i get someone to PM me & confirm that these are also ok for the K1 to K5? Mine is a K2. I'm pretty sure i've read that this part will fit all bikes if you leave out the end cap and felt washer but just wanted a confirmation from someone.G'Day Alex, I PM'd you, but yep, the later bushes are great, as you don't need the OEM felt grease seals and plastic end caps. If you go to Milestone Chemicals you can buy 5 litres of pure phosphoric acid (not that watered down crap from Bunnings etc) for 30 bucks. It's branded as "Phos Wash" (used for cleaning dairies) and you can dilute with up to 10 litres of water, and then just dump your swingarm in there for an hour or two, and it'll clean up like new. Don't leave it in for too long (like for a couple of days) or it'll eat the cast axle plates. Don't ask me how I know................
Painted the frame, HATING it, damned rattle cans spit instead of spraying. The primer didn't do that thought? Swingarm stripped, wirewheeled and primed, could be all for nothing if the paint looks like $hit.
Quote from: edwardmorris on May 27, 2014, 04:54:17 PMPainted the frame, HATING it, damned rattle cans spit instead of spraying. The primer didn't do that thought? Swingarm stripped, wirewheeled and primed, could be all for nothing if the paint looks like $hit.Using Rustoleum by any chance?...Larry
You gotta really shake the #$%* outa spray paint, who knows how long it's sat on a shelf for. Once the paint solids have settled to the bottom the tube will suck that #$%* up and spit it out, when in doubt ask the paint dept to put it in the paint can shaker for a bit.
Quote from: 750K on May 27, 2014, 09:07:53 PMYou gotta really shake the #$%* outa spray paint, who knows how long it's sat on a shelf for. Once the paint solids have settled to the bottom the tube will suck that #$%* up and spit it out, when in doubt ask the paint dept to put it in the paint can shaker for a bit. I work in the paint dept and never would put a can in the shaker. Have you ever seen one explode?...Larry
Quote from: MoMo on May 28, 2014, 01:03:06 PMQuote from: 750K on May 27, 2014, 09:07:53 PMYou gotta really shake the #$%* outa spray paint, who knows how long it's sat on a shelf for. Once the paint solids have settled to the bottom the tube will suck that #$%* up and spit it out, when in doubt ask the paint dept to put it in the paint can shaker for a bit. I work in the paint dept and never would put a can in the shaker. Have you ever seen one explode?...LarrySeen them blow up in a camp fire, lol. We used to buy vintage rusto at a hardware store in the late 90's, they had been sitting for 10+ years and the paint had settled at the bottom as a sludge. We always put them in the paint shaker, never did one blow up. Not saying it couldn't but from my first hand experience I've never had a problem with it, I'd do it in a heartbeat and not worry about it at all. You need heat in the equation for a can to explode, it might puncture but you'll just get a big mess if that happens.
That looks good Alex, did you have any trouble tapping the holes? Cheers, Terry.