Although I am old enough to have owned a new CB500 Honda in my youth and other "vintage" bikes, I am not that experienced when it comes to racing a bike of that vintage. In the last ten years, although I always had a CB900f in my stable, I have been spoilt by the newness of modern machinery. My 900f is a great bike, but it is never ridden as hard as my modern sport bike.
Modern bikes have new parts, not like some of the parts on my 550 racer. Thrash a modern bike at a track day or elsewhere, all I give it is a casual glance to make sure the tires are fine and there are no oil leaks.
In my first races I applied this complacency to my 550. It ran very well. I'd come into the pits, look at the tires, and give a quick glance for oil leaks. Inspection over, cursory at best.
A few races later I had a lesson. I came into a fast right hander, which is followed by a left hander. When I went into the left hander I had a major slide. Luck kept me from initially going down, and the bike straightened itself. A certain amount of skill kept me running off the track. It turned out that I had oil all over the left side of my rear tire.
The 30 odd year old oil pressure switch on top of my oil pump had developed a leak. I put this down to old age, and possibly myself, for not heating the engine up sufficiently before the race and causing excessive pressure in the engine. Oh it didn't help that the casing over the chain had been drilled (sure looks pretty though) which gave the oil somewhere to drip off.
This pressure switch leak, as I am now told, is not that unusual. I cured the problem by getting another pressure switch, which did not leak, and JB welding the top plastic area. This pressure switch is the same part number as my 1982 CB900F, so Honda have used it on many bikes from the 70's and 80's.
I would suggest that on occasion it might not be a bad idea to take the cover over the oil pump on CB500/550's off and take a look at the switch. If there are no holes in the cover the only way the oil can get out is to creep past the cover gasket. Somehow I think this problem will only arise if the engine is basically used for racing.
So, does anyone else have information in racing vintage bikes that might possibly save one of use from possibly hurting ourselves in the future?