I hope you guys don't mind an occasional non-SOHC build in here. I've had a SOHC before- does that get me in the door?
Some of you may recall, I sold my CB550k a little while ago. I was getting to be a chicken about riding it in the overpopulated area that I live in so I cut it loose, but later I missed having a motorcycle. Mostly I think I missed having a project bike to work on. One day while out and about I came across a bookstore selling a coffee table book about British motorcycles, and when I came to the BSA section in that book, I knew I wanted to find one to fix up. A quick search on Craigslist, a phone call, and an hour drive away from my house was all it took; Next thing I knew, I was loading up the "rolling chassis" of a 1966 BSA Lightning. Here's a picture of it stuffed into the car for the ride home..
Buyer's remorse set in as soon as I got it home and looked it over. For $365.00, I got a frame, forks, triple clamps, swingarm, rear shocks, front rim/brake, rear rim and brake/sprocket, and oil tank. I knew damn well that, unless some sort of miracle happened, this would be the most expensive and difficult way to acquire a complete motorcycle. Also, considering I've never worked on a British bike before (I've never even sat on a BSA before) this would be a really ambitious project. To top it all off, after cleaning some 30+ years of gunk from the rims, I found that the chrome on both of them is shot (rust through to the steel in several spots).. Damn- I know better than to buy a bike like this- no title even!! What was I thinking?! Only one thing works out in my favor- the frame is straight, and upon further research, it turns out both brakes/hubs are the proper type for this model/year.
I later lucked out big time by finding a British bike show nearby, and when I went it was raining heavily. I think the guys selling parts were anxious to sell what they could to the few people that were crazy enough to look for parts in the rain, and because I was one of the crazy ones, I think I got a price break on some major components needed for this project: I bought a complete motor and carb (1 carb setup- so this will now be an A65 Thunderbolt instead of an A65 Lightning), a gas tank with decent chrome, a seat, a headlight bucket with ammeter, Smith's magnetic tach/speedo, and side panels- all for around $500 bucks. The motor turns over and goes through all the gears OK, and isn't missing any bolts or cooling fins. The seller of the motor has a title for that motor, and all-around I think I did pretty well.
Jason