Hey guys, time for an update.
So this weekend just gone in Australia was the Queen's Birthday Weekend. It was suppose to be a 3 day weekend where I could get stuck into stripping the bike. As has been the case with this bike so far, it didn't actually turn out that way.
So I spent Friday getting my parents garage (yep, still living with them) organized for the long haul. There's limited space (Dad has a '71 Kamann Ghia cabriolet) that obviously has pride of place. A Mum's not walking outside in the winter to get in her car, so I get the corner.
So my mate Andy and I went about taking bits and pieces off. The goal being to get down to the frame for powder coating. Whilst that is being done I can do the seat, forks, wheels, etc. We started from the back, taking photos of everything and trying to keep the bolts together.
Getting the battery box off was a real pain in the behind. I'm not looking forward to putting that and the mess of wires that attaches to it back together. Surely there's got to be a better way to mount the battery and wires than this hunk of junk?
I got the headers off. I hand a friend sandblast the finned clamp things that hold the header pipes to the engine, and they look brand new. I was pretty excited to see something shine that had come of my bike. However I don't think there's any saving the header pipes themselves. I'm getting some prices on some custom ones to match the originals. I don't like the reproduction ones at davidsilverspares.co.uk and I can't afford the originals. Maybe I'll get something close to originals but cheaper. But perhaps when I factor in chroming etc it might be easier to just get the originals. Unless I paint the replicas I have made matte black until I can afford to chrome them.
I took the rear pegs off (I'll grind off the brackets as I don't think I'll need them). If I want to make my exhaust upswept, do I need to keep the mount for the exhaust or can I cut that off too?
The tiling and skateboard kneepads came in very handy.
I'm going to have to fabricate a new seat. The seat pan on the original is totally shot. However my mate Andy has a spare seat off a CB350, I haven't tested it to see if it fits, but maybe it does and I can start from that. I know what I want to do with my seat, I'm just having a hard time finding a photo of something I can work from. Basically I don't want a fiberglass base or taillight light housing like the BCR seats. I want it all leather but shaped. Kind of like
Swan's but a bit smoother. I know this has probably been asked a million times, but does anyone has a good link/tutorial/project on making your own seat from scratch?
Now this is where the trouble started. Serial numbers...
This is complicated. Here I go. When I bought the bike unseen from the next state over, the dealer said that he'd make me up a receipt with the serial number etc and send it out to me. When I got the bike via the shipping company, the address written on the bike was my street address, not my postal address. So I rang the dealer to confirm that he'd sent the receipt and papers to my correct postal address. He said he hadn't had a chance to get the serial number from the bike before the truck had come to pick it up. He asked me to get the serial number off the bike for him and let him know what it was so he could write up a receipt. I thought that was a bit sketchy seeing as he
appeared to be from a legitimate dealer and shouldn't he have that on file? Anyway by that stage I'd given the bike over to a mechanic as I mentioned in my earlier posts. Today was the first time I'd had a chance to look at the bike. And guess what? The serial number on the frame is quite obviously ground/filed off. #$%*.
I called the dealer, asking what the history of the bike is because obviously something's not right. He assures me that the bike was a friend of his and it's not dodgy and that he'll track the paperwork down on Tuesday after the long weekend is over. I don't buy that so I called VicRoads (our version of the DMV for the Americans) and start the process of jumping through hoops to try and establish the history of this bike. I have the plate number and an engine number, but no frame number. VicRoads say that because the bike is from South Australia, that I must call the SA Transit people. However VicRoads were amazingly helpful in explaining how the information system works.
I learnt that after a bike is out of registration for 6 years it's details go into archives and are no longer accessible on the national database. You have to go to the specific state and ask them to check their archive. Bikes earlier than 1989 didn't have VIN numbers. Plate numbers can often be used on bike/cars from other states, it isn't a unique number. Engine numbers can be the same, it isn't a unique number.
VicRoads also tell me to contact Consumer Affairs in SA as they believe it is highly likely I was duped and have legislative protection.
So with that knowledge I call SA transit or whatever it's called over there. They were frustratingly difficult to talk to. They had records of the bike, but seeing as I wasn't listed as the owner, they couldn't tell me anything because of privacy concerns. However I did get out of them that the bike isn't listen as stolen, they have the engine number and a serial number (but couldn't give it to me), they hinted that it might not be a 1977 (how can I tell what year it is without the serial?). They suggested I call the South Australian Police Records Response Section. I do.
I am connection to what appears to be a officer in training. She has a heavy Asian accent and I can hear another person behind her coaching her. No problem, I ask the questions to the girl on the phone, and wait for her to relay it to her trainer then listen to the trainers response because I can't understand the heavy accent of the trainee. Anyway the look up the plate number I give them. Surprisingly they correctly read back my engine number. I was encouraged by this. They then say they don't have my frame serial number. I ask for it again, they then say they've found it. I write it down, it doesn't look correct as it doesn't start with CB400F like I was expecting. They tell me it is correct and the bike is not stolen but the bike is listed as owned by someone named McKenzie and perhaps the system hasn't been updated with my details yet (I doubt the dealer even have my details).
So I call back VicRoads buoyed by the details the Police have given me. When I give my serial number to them, they promptly tell me it is for a 2000 Mitsubishi car, not my Honda motorcycle. That is when they explain that plate numbers can me the same in different states.
All this happened late on the Friday afternoon. VicRoads said I should get the bike inspected by someone at my local branch and explain to them my situation. So I'm going to wait and hope that this dealer gives me a proof of purchase (what other paperwork should I have from him?) and take that down to VicRoads, explain that I bought the bike, it doesn't show up as stolen with the SA Transit people of the SA Police, and could I please get a new serial number to stamp into my frame. Until that happens, I'm reluctant to work further on restoring the bike in case they confiscate it from me as stolen property or something similar.
If anyone has stuck with me this far and read all of the above, do you have any advice with filed off frame serial numbers in Victoria? I really hope this is just a red tape thing and not a stolen/wrecked/whatever-else-it-could-be bike.
Rick.