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    Sometimes you wonder...

    Among the bikes the unskilled shouldn't own or work on the RC30 Honda is prominent...
    I'm pulling one down for a client at present. It's a race bike with some history. The previous owner apparently never got it running - he'd taken it as a trade on a Laverda.
    I'm not surprised it didn't run - and pleased he didn't persist.

    So far...No alternator rotor retaining bolt. Rear inlet cam is I think a front one and has been timed up on the wrong marks. Yes, the pistons are marked so the inlets on that side are probably bent...There are 3 X 6mm capscrews as head bolts in each cam gear tunnel. All 6 finger tight only.
    Those fasteners that are tight are of course over-tight. And it's covered in aluminium capscrews which I loathe and should only be single-use.
    I can see three different gasket sealants on the case joint...all to excess.

    I'm looking at the bearing shells - particularly the outer mains - and realising I've got to put the crank between centers to check for straight.
    Don't like the look of the outers at all.

    About par for the course when you're dealing with old race engines....

    #2
    Sounds like a nightmare. Some just don't care to do things right!

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      #3
      Just an update - the cases had been welded which is why the end mains showed odd wear marks. Looks like a low mileage crank and rods which had been assembled without paying due attention to the mesh of the cam drive to the crank...Luckily it's still usable. Gear on the crank is ugly but passes crack testing.
      My biggest problem is identifying just what in it is racekit, the sump probably is and the cams are marked and lightened like kit ones....but lift is stock.

      At this point it looks like it'll be rebuilt into VFR750 cases. I suggested going big which is quite feasible with those cases but it's looking like they'll keep it 750 for the "750 formula" class at Philip Island.

      I also have an A65 BSA engine apart at present. Thank the gods they don't make them like they used to, LOL. The BSA twin parts take up one more box than the RC30. It's the difference between an engine that was designed - and one which simply evolved.

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        #4
        RC30's are amazing machines. One just sold at auction with 14 "push around miles" for $90,000. Nice ones still go for 35K and more. I painted one a number of years ago. The hardest paint job I ever did. If I ever do another one I would charge 3 times as much. With how crazy rare and expensive as they are, (although magnificent to race) I would be afraid to put it out on a track.
        1979 GS1000S,

        1982 Honda CX500 Turbo, 1982 Honda MB5 w/CR80 motor, 1977 Honda "nekid" Goldwing, 1976 Honda CB550F cafe', 1972 Honda XL250 cafe'

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          #5
          Originally posted by nvr2old View Post
          RC30's are amazing machines. One just sold at auction with 14 "push around miles" for $90,000. Nice ones still go for 35K and more. I painted one a number of years ago. The hardest paint job I ever did. If I ever do another one I would charge 3 times as much. With how crazy rare and expensive as they are, (although magnificent to race) I would be afraid to put it out on a track.
          Funnily enough it's often the ex Honda dealers who have them with "push around" mileage. I know of one here in NZ who was over the moon when his one arrived, put it on display in the shop and rode it home for lunch a couple of times.....Then the parts fische and price list arrived.
          He took it home in the shop van the same day and put it in his lounge where it stayed for years.

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            #6
            An update - and minor rant...
            The spares kit arrived finally so i was able to move things along a tad. Found a usable valve and refaced it so at least the damaged bit is sorted.
            But...Given it's unknown history, we want to replace head and rod bolts. Discontinued, NLA. Head bolts are 9mm - and socket heads - which they have to be as the access to each is via a 10mm hole. Honda...
            At this point it looks like we'll be using modified 10mm head bolts BMW/Audi/Merc which have torx socket heads. And retapping the block.
            Oh and a mob in the UK have had ARP do a run of head bolts - 47 Pounds each. You need 16 of them...Don't think so, thanks.
            Rod bolts - 8mm and unusually long. The Ti rods are a bigger section than steel hence the length. May have scored here, still to check but I think I've found an ARP bolt for a Mitsubishi which is correct

            The cams are interesting. There were some stockers in the spares so I could do a comparison. Yes, we have one genuine early kit inlet - and one I'll call a later evolution inlet. Pretty much the same duration and lift but a fraction more area under the curve due to a higher acceleration rate from half lift upward.

            So now the neverending plastigage sessions followed by cam drive shimming sessions start...Oh joy.

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              #7
              Oh boy, not for DIYer racers.
              Kawi EX500 race bike makes sense for me.
              1982 GS1100G- road bike
              1990 GSX750F-(1127cc '92 GSXR engine)
              1987 Honda CBR600F Hurricane

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                #8
                Originally posted by Buffalo Bill View Post
                Oh boy, not for DIYer racers.
                Kawi EX500 race bike makes sense for me.
                A single cylinder 2 stroke is looking like a holiday to me, LOL

                I wouldn't like to have to pay a specialist to rebuild this one. I do it as occupational therapy and to supplement the pension. The owner had the choice of sending it to the UK or to me. The bike was in NZ and will be used in Australia so I drew the short straw.
                Talking to a known specialist in Aus, they're very keen to find out what alternative parts we use. Their customers are rationing the use of active racing RC30's due to exactly the problems we're finding. There have been some sources for parts in Japan but apparently they're drying up.
                We ran into the parts problems earlier than most due to the poor condition of the bike on purchase.
                But hey, you take your RC30's as and where you find them. This one was cheap.
                Last edited by GregT; 08-21-2019, 01:03 AM.

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                  #9
                  Thanks for starting this thread, Greg.
                  It has sent me for a couple Google searches about these gems about which i know little.
                  I had thought the RC45 was just a replacement for the RC30 but i have found that is not the case.

                  A guy near me has a NC35 that he imported with great difficulty. Unfortunately i haven't seen it for a couple years.
                  2@ \'78 GS1000

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by steve murdoch View Post
                    Thanks for starting this thread, Greg.
                    It has sent me for a couple Google searches about these gems about which i know little.
                    I had thought the RC45 was just a replacement for the RC30 but i have found that is not the case.

                    A guy near me has a NC35 that he imported with great difficulty. Unfortunately i haven't seen it for a couple years.
                    We got quite a lot of the 400's as grey imports. VF's were sold new here but the gear driven cams versions - VFR, NC30, NC35 were greys. Plenty of NC30's but very few NC35's. The first two NC30's in Christchurch immediately hit the track...and both spun rod bearings. I had both apart and fixed before the local agents could source manuals or the parts fisch. I'd had a VF400 apart and realised the shells were the same. Both cranks were undamaged luckily.
                    The problem turned out to be the one endemic to the V4's - poor finishing on the cranks. Sharp edges on the oil holes. Fine in road use but put some real stress on them and you'd do a bearing. I've had to properly radius the RC30 crank oil holes too....

                    Rod bolts....Mitsubishi Evo ARP bolts are ordered. Heads are correct, shank OD and unthreaded length is correct, just need to shorten the threaded portion.
                    Quite cheap too.
                    Last edited by GregT; 08-21-2019, 01:06 AM.

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                      #11
                      Patience is a virtue much sought after...
                      Attached Files

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                        #12
                        Such an intracate motor
                        No wonder the 2 local ones I know of are on display
                        1978 GS 1000 (since new)
                        1979 GS 1000 (The Fridge, superbike replica project)
                        1978 GS 1000 (parts)
                        1981 GS 850 (anyone want a project?)
                        1981 GPZ 550 (backroad screamer)
                        1970 450 Mk IIID (THUMP!)
                        2007 DRz 400S
                        1999 ATK 490ES
                        1994 DR 350SES

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                          #13
                          This thing is turning out to be a trap for the unwary...Mocked up #1 and #2 to set up the gear drive shimming.
                          It would appear that the block has been decked so far in the past when it's been re-linered that the squish clearance has been almost halved...
                          Luckily there's a very good machinist in ChCh who can take the required .015in off the piston squish areas.

                          Bearing clearances were at least OK - one step forward, one sideways...

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                            #14
                            Moving slowly along. I've got the 'flu and don't want to work on it while I'm wobbly....So the pistons are going for machining tomorrow.

                            The odd inlet cam- a front one in the rear bank - needs modifications too so it can go while i'm down. I did at least manage to establish the correct timing - something I wasn't sure was even possible. Fixed gear drive, no adjustment. It's flipped end for end and running in reverse. But the profiles are symmetrical anyway.
                            BUT - the oil feed arrangement is into the center of the cam from the RHS. A drilling carries oil through the cam and there are oil holes on the base circles of the lobes. Flipping it end for end would make it run dry...
                            So the remaining 15mm or so of the center drilling has to be completed then the original open end plugged.
                            But - Mr Honda said " You're not going to futz around with my cams, sonny !" It's hardened right through..
                            Luckily a precision engineer of my acquaintance has a range of carbide drills....

                            I've also got to contact a FIAT specialist. Guy I know who's an internet search specialist has come up with a FIAT head bolt identical to the discontinued OE Honda. Might yet avoid retapping the block...

                            Talking to the owner's rep today, he's been imagining what it would have cost if they'd sent it to the UK....
                            Last edited by GregT; 08-27-2019, 03:27 AM.

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                              #15
                              Pistons in for machining, should be a quick turnaround. Rod bolts hadn't arrived. FIAT parts specialist searching his databases to find the head bolts I want. Could be anything - tractor to industrial motor to car...
                              Cam bored while I waited and sweated. Try finding another. Carbide drill wasn't much cop but a carbide milling cutter did it eventually.

                              Now to put me feet up for a couple of days. Actually as soon as I'm up to it there's the usual maintenace work to do here. It never stops.

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