been a while since i screwed with a big suzi, so its about time again.
am combining the good bits of dads old 1074 shaftie and a spares bike, on a budget, and this time there's no "get ready for a birthday" one month deadline. lets just call them BLACK, and BLUE. BLUE now runs again though the electrics are interesting. i stripped its siezed solid starter motor to base components and got it working again and fitted BLACK's ignition signal generator and carbs which were clean from using on the orange GSX1100 last year. added fuel, wound over and she fires and runs after 9 years. began by oiling all 8 pots on monday and making sure they spun freely so into fifth on their centre stands they went, and with the plugs out i twirled the rear wheel for all i was worth and with an ohmmeter on the brake pedal and the oil light switch we got oil pressure up.
BLACK's bodywork is in good nick luckily except for paint condition as BLUE's tank has had the dick but BLACK's got issues of her own with non functional front brakes, wiring harness, and other bits and bobs. BLUE was dads work bike and has running gear issues with rusted fork stanchions, seat base, shot steering head bearings, and kawasaki clocks.
i got her carbs off earlier this evening and the number one float chamber is full of the same green antifreeze lookin crud that was in the identical bowl as on the GSX from sitting on the sidestand. verdigrees and unleaded, oh so pretty. biggest hurdle so far has been the rounded out 6mm signal generator bolt which refused to come out and allow me to move the sig gen from BLACK onto BLUE (or onto the GSX 14 months ago so you could say it was a long term niggle) by any normal method so i drilled the guts out then let a 3/8" bit eat the bulk of the hollowed bolt head till she succumbed and now it's mobile to use to test both motors and determine the best candidate.
the best thing is that I'M MISSING NOTHING FOR THIS BUILD! bar obvious new gear like o-rings, fork seals, and gaskets, all other items are duplicated and that cuts out searching for and buying parts, keeps my costs down, and brings the completion time down only to laziness and distraction levels (though with no deadline this time, who cares). should have some pics up maybe tomorrow evening of the congregation of dismembered items inhabiting my shed.
cheers, glen.
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