Thinking about what work I've done lately, I think I can confidently say I'm mangling this pile of honda parts and I won't be shocked at all if it seizes up, explodes into flames, or just comes to a smoking, shuddering halt right about when I think I've gotten away with it.
I basically needed a carb with a functioning slide because I killed mine, probably with glass bits, and my original bowl really didn't like the degreaser I dunked it in. I bought a semi complete carb off of a member and ended up with more or less two carbs worth of bits.
but it turned out the the carb body I bought was.. well, there was enough corrosion in the bowl that I didn't think the main jet's oring would actually seal:
I couldn't use the bowl it came with either - after a soak in the carb cleaner bucket and some pb blaster, this happened, and when I tried to use a bit extractor it just broke the bowl as I figured it would:
My last original bowl had some funky corrosion from some degreaser which really liked to eat aluminum..
so I went from ~240 grit up to 1000 and then steel wool:
to deal with my original carb/slide that I damaged like a moron (see above), I used some 1000 grit really gently on the inside of my original carb in the slide's cylinder and now we have a carb with a functioning slide. I used a dremel buff but it didn't seem to be having the intended effect since the gouges had a bit of height to them and possibly a few kernels of glass. The 1000 grit seems to have freed it up and it slides fine. I'm wondering what effects it might have if I took a little too much off in there. To the eye, it looks fine?
All the rubber and gaskets are new, but I'm a little concerned about the mains - they're a little rough/corroded/pitted on the outside. Looking through them, the actual orifices 'look' even and round and all the same size... but, well, if the outsides were pitted, I don't see why the insides wouldn't be funky. They're good and clean after lots of carb cleaner and compressed air at least. Once I get around to actually having a muffler and have a running bike, I'll worry about jetting and new jets.
Also, I lost one of my original float valves (the one on the left) and the carb I bought had the kind on the right. I have to admit, I don't know how the hell these things affect the carb and I don't know what difference they make, but they seem to be designed pretty specifically and something tells me I can't just mix and match in there...
also, lugged my cases over to doowntown:
gave them a good blast down:
I tried using tal strip, it did nothing. I tried jasco, it did very little. Wire brushes, dremel tips.. I don't know how you guys do it. I tried blasting with walnut but that just seemed to piss the paint off. In the end I taped things up and used glass bead, telling myself I would clean everything so thoroughly that I wouldn't destroy the engine. Maybe that was the dumbest thing in the world.. maybe it'll be OK.
Paul advised getting the bearing out from behind the oil pump with the oven method which worked like a charm:
something else I may regret - since it's a '77, the rocker arm shafts are held in with wedge bolts. These bastards were seriously, seriously tight. Like I was hitting it hard enough to risk destroying the nut/thread/bolt end or just breaking the cover. I tried pb blaster, I tried using a clamp rigged up properly, but in the end, I just got it good and hot and it gave way with a few hits. I didn't like the idea of getting just one spot hot an then hitting the thing.. seems like a good recipe to warp it, but then again it has lots of bolts forcing it flush with the head. Probably should have used the oven.
and as a final note: seriously? a good screwdriver vs this lil old screw? wtf?
now to clean, clean, clean, clean, clean the cases. I'll use every single method I can find someone mentioning being a good idea and then do it again. I think I've got everything I need to assemble except a camshaft and some engine paint.
I realize a lot of people do a build the other way around - the chassis and fun bits first. Makes sense to me. For me, I'm going from the engine out. Engine/carbs/electrical/exhaust, then frame, then seat/tank/fender, then wheels/tires/suspension/brakes, then controls and lighting. Doing this the first time, it's amazing how much persistence it takes. I wonder if when I'm done I'll want to start again, thinking it will be easier, or if I'll never want to even consider it. I wonder how I'll take it if/when it turns out that the motor I've built has some serious issue (glass? compression? piston wear? rings? head gasket? journals/bearings/crank? contamination?). Y'all are committed, I'll give you that.
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