4
46hand
Guest
I bought this bike from a buddy who rides a ridiculously built bike, who was moving halfway across the country, but needed the dough. I was discouraged by what I considered to be an ugly fairing and saddlebags (for that bike, not oem at all), but more so by the nearly impossible act of finding neutral while rolling, among other things. I could make a list... So she sat for a year and a half. Then my landlord said "When are you gonna do something with that?" and I figured, hell, I need a project... So, armed with a Clymer and a basic understanding of mechanics, I took it on.
While wrenching on that SOB, here are a couple things I encountered/rectified-
1- Secondary gearbox topped off with water, flushed gear oil
2- Rear caliper bleeder screws busted off, replaced caliper
3- Handlebar-brake light connection open, replaced wiring (thanks goodness for solder!)
4- Clutch cable stretched beyond serviceability, replaced
5- Faulty turn signal wiring, associated with aftermarket fairing wiring
6- Tachometer cable connection busted, replaced
7- Shifts remarkably more smoothly after changing the engine oil
8- Can find neutral since replacing clutch cable
9- Mufflers (both) are completely shot
10- Adjusted seat latch, lubricated, and now the seat latches (!)
...among other things...
My largest victory involved the replacement of the choke cable. The aftermarket cable would not thread in the receiver in the tree, so I tapped it to make it work.
Now I am working on tuning the carbs...
I will update progress as it happens, but hopefully tomorrow I will take her out on the open road for the first time.
While wrenching on that SOB, here are a couple things I encountered/rectified-
1- Secondary gearbox topped off with water, flushed gear oil
2- Rear caliper bleeder screws busted off, replaced caliper
3- Handlebar-brake light connection open, replaced wiring (thanks goodness for solder!)
4- Clutch cable stretched beyond serviceability, replaced
5- Faulty turn signal wiring, associated with aftermarket fairing wiring
6- Tachometer cable connection busted, replaced
7- Shifts remarkably more smoothly after changing the engine oil
8- Can find neutral since replacing clutch cable
9- Mufflers (both) are completely shot
10- Adjusted seat latch, lubricated, and now the seat latches (!)
...among other things...
My largest victory involved the replacement of the choke cable. The aftermarket cable would not thread in the receiver in the tree, so I tapped it to make it work.
Now I am working on tuning the carbs...
I will update progress as it happens, but hopefully tomorrow I will take her out on the open road for the first time.