Interesting work today:
I was having a problem where the seat wouldn't lock at the second (tighter) setting. I tried to torque down the lock pin on the seat pan tighter...and in the process, sheared off one of the mounting bolts. Couple of hours later with an M6 bolt with the head cut off, some 1/16" 6013 rod, the arc welder set at DC 45A, and some water/wet rags, I had a new bolt...but the problem remained.
Turns out the fix was that the adjuster nut on the locking pin was too low. Near as I can tell, it'd always been too low, and the threads were in terrible shape. Removing the pin, cleaning up the threads, and making the pin slightly longer (pulling the nuts one turn up) locked the seat perfectly. I've always had to "slam" the seat closed to get it to latch - no more!
I also realized that the top bridge on the fork "triple tree" is the wrong one for a '78F3; it's missing the holes to mount the instrument cluster. The PO was using an older cluster and some 630 master chain links to mount it to the ignition holes. This lead to all sorts of problems, not the least of which was that the ignition lock itself was buried on the fork, and the key had to be cut down on one side to actually turn.
Instead, I took a small bar of 1/8" aluminum and cut a new backing plate. It attaches at the ignition holes, and the instrument cluster and idiot lights attach to it. The ignition is still a bit low in the idiot light cluster - about 1" below the top - but the key still fits and turns without too much trouble, even to the fork lock position. I had to swap out the rubber bungs that hold the instrument cluster in place with some extras I had for the rear fender. And the plain aluminum colour doesn't even bother me, though eventually I'd like to get the proper fork bridge for this model.
I also got most of the chrome bits back on, all of the turn signals & rear lights & both fenders, speedo/tach cables, headlight bucket, handlebars and the left controls. I rechecked all torque values, except for the rear axle, which is awaiting the chain to be master linked before final adjustment. I've temporarily popped the old side covers back on, as I want to ride her ASAP! Also realized I'd put the front sprocket on backwards, but unfortunately not before scratching off a bit of paint behind it with the (misaligned) chain... :/
Tomorrow (a holiday for us Canadians): final wiring in the headlight bucket, remaining controls and cables, a relay or two to save the headlight switch and cut out the headlight during starting (per Hondaman's suggestions), and some engine testing/carb syncing. Oh, and a call to Z1 to get the front master cylinder rebuild kit and a new 630 chain O ring split link. Am hoping they'll let me ride by and pick it up...I'm impatient!
Pictures online tomorrow.