And machinist still should beable to cut them down for 100.00 or less, I have done quite a few..takeout the cap, pull spacer out..the length of that is probably how many over the fork is.
Say, thanks! I may end up doing that if I either get confused or am unable to find cheap forks.
The lowers 'look' to be original 750 from what I can see. Lots of swapping on some of these over the years. It does not look raked but then again very hard to tell in those pics. Look the steering stem area over well for what looks like non-factory welding, cutting etc..
Yes I'm sorry, the bike isn't here at my house and these were the only pictures I had. Thanks for the information though! Since it has no brake caliper assembly, do you think it's still pretty vital to get the T shaped ones from 1973 or does it really matter? Thanks
I mentioned T brackets as a way to identify, the earlier lowers are not compatible with newer fork tubes - first you need to find tubes that will work for you, lowers are easier to find.
The T brackets are easier for dual disc setup and also more available = cheaper than the early C bracket brakes.
Hope this is not too confusing for you, check out the CMSNL schemas too.
No no, you actually did a great job of clearing that up for me so I appreciate it too! I'm definitely going to check out the schematics for a better understanding of what I'm looking at and what I need. The guy threw this bike together with spare parts from all different bikes so it's a bit of a challenge for me to identify this part and that in regards to the model they came from. Now I know I can just find the forks and worry about the lowers after and that took a lot of weight off my shoulders
I'm a fairly young person (25) which means I never grew up with these bikes so my understanding of all this is limited, and this is my first bike build too so I probably sound pretty stupid
The lower frame rails are pretty near parallel to the ground on a stocker. With extended forks, and if it hasn't been raked, you might expect them to be at an angle? As said, hard to tell from the pics, try and get one side-on and facing forward if you can.
Just a thought, some builders used fork top extensions instead of extended forks. Before you source new ones, worth removing a fork to see if there is a joint hidden somewhere? You never know your luck!
I'll be disassembling the bike here in the next few days so I'll take a look to see if this has been done. Hoping so because that would make my life a whole lot easier at this point!
Look closely at your fork lowers' caliper and fender mounts. If they look like these, you need the C bracket...
here is what the c bracket looks like...
this is what lowers look like that use the t bracket...
thanks so much for the pictures! This will help me identify what I have, and as well as the other posts on this thread, you've made it a lot easier/stressless for me so thank you so much! I have a visual reference now and that is always a plus