I sold my last bike 18 years ago when I got married (wife's a nurse). She had a senior moment about 3 months ago and I picked up a very clean '79 Cooley replica. It has about 19K miles and is mostly stock. I put in an electronic ignition and K&N pods, had the carbs cleaned and reset and it runs very strong. Dials up quickly to the redline with a slight hesitation in the mid-range. May have something to do with the Kerker header??? I re-packed the baffle with steel wool as per a recommendation from this site, which did quiet it down a little bit. Still a howler. Maybe I need to re-jet?
It also has rearset pegs, which are comfortable, but the rubber is shot and I can't find replacement rubber anywhere. They may have been custom fabricated. Anyway, I have the OEM rear brake pedal and shifter, so I may take the pegs back to stock as well. I think that the turning signals are after-market also. Black plastic & square instead of round chrome.
My question is related to the paint. I'd appreciate some advice. The paint is okay. Some dings and scratches, but it isn't the original paint. Looks like factory colors and pattern, but it isn't original. I've been told to try to restore it to the original and that it will appreciate in value a lot more if I do. The stock paint colors were great in '79, but I'm toying with the idea of going to a metal-flake with the same basic colors if I repaint it this winter. Possibly Shimrins from Plasti-cote if I try to do it myself. I priced a paint job and it is pretty pricey ($1800).
Any ideas as to pro and con of this approach? I don't really intend to sell it. It sounds like it is a pretty rare bike and is in really good condition. Do I bastardize it too much by tricking up the paint a little bit?
I've attached a pic; questionable quality, taken in my garage last night. I'd appreciate your learned advice.
Thanks to everyone for what I've learned so far. It has been a long time since I've done my own wrenching and the advice in this forum has been invaluable.
Cheers.
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