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1980 450 Un-L

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    1980 450 Un-L

    Hi guys, thought this might be of interest to the folks on here. I picked up this 1980 450 L from my cousin about 4 years ago when they moved out of state. When he bought the bike it was all stock, hideous bars, seat, etc. He had a custom seat made for the factory mounts and fitted clubman bars. I spent the first year I had it reading everything I could on here and got caught up on the basic maintenance:

    GSR approved carb strip & dip with cycleorings
    New tires
    Valve adjustment
    Wiring clean-up
    Coil relay mod
    Shindengen R/R
    New RK X-Ring chain and sprockets

    At that point, I just rode it as-is for a couple years, enjoying it for what it was, but always anxious to remove the last bits of 'L-ness.'

    Well, I decided this was the year to get it done. I Bought a nice 450 S tank with great factory paint from that auction site a few weeks back, and thanks to the help of a good friend, got to work on the continued "Un-L-ing" of my bike.

    Here is what it looked like before we got started, custom seat and clubman bars, but otherwise pretty standard 450 L:



    We removed the stock tank, cut off the front tank mounts from their L position and re-welded them to the E position. There is a provision for this already on the L frame, just needed to weld the posts to that spot. The rear mount is in the same place on all 450 models with single bolt rear tank mounts, so this remained in place.

    The more difficult work involved relocating the ignition coils. Looking at the frame diagrams, we thought we could fab brackets to mount them in the factory E position, but there is a slight frame difference here. The E frames flare very slightly out rearward to accommodate them in that location, the L frame does not, the tubes remain parallel between the cross bracing in that area. I have no pictures of this since I was busy working, but will post some next time we are working on it. We were able to fab brackets and mount the coils in a slightly different location below the tank, everything still reaches and connects to the factory harness.



    We also mounted a set of Tarozzi clip-ons, and test fit the new seat. Once the rear frame hoop shows up in the mail, its final location will be set and that will be welded in.

    I also picked up a set of 450 E side covers, which will fit the L frame after moving one of the upper mounting tabs on each side.

    The side covers and seat will then be sent out to paint, matched to the factory tank color.





    I will then need to figure out what to use for a headlight, tail light, turn signals, and license plate mount.

    I'll try to be a bit better about stopping for in progress pictures next time we work on it, and will post detailed pictures of the brackets we made for the coils if anyone is interested.

    Thanks to everyone on here providing so much knowledge and expertise about these bikes, it likely wouldn't even be running today if it weren't for this forum.
    Last edited by Guest; 05-11-2015, 02:08 PM.

    #2
    Nice work ! Check in more often and steer others who are looking to do similar.
    Nice R/R , but guess what ..... Shindengen has new offering , search for SH-775 and protect your nice work!
    1981 gs650L

    "We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin

    Comment


      #3
      Thanks Tom, great suggestion. I've read up on the SH-775 here and think that upgrade is in my near future as well. I should have plenty of room to mount it now with this new setup.

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        #4
        A few parts I was waiting for showed up in the mail this weekend, so I headed back over to my friend's place to finish up the first part of this project.

        We moved the side cover mounting tabs from their L to E positions, welded on the rear frame hoop, and installed 4 rivnuts to use for mounting the seat.

        Here is the basic idea with the tank, side covers, and seat on.





        Back home yesterday I got started painting the frame areas that we welded. Here is a shot of the coil mounts that we made. They are 1" EMT electrical conduit clamps, which snap down over the frame tubes. They were then clocked to the proper position and welded to the frame. This is very similar in concept to the factory E mount.



        Rear hoop welded and first coat of paint on.



        Next up is to continue cleaning up the frame and touching up paint in areas that need it. The side covers and seat will be sent off to paint. While they are being painted, I need to clean up the wiring and figure out a headlight, tail light, turn signals, and license plate mount.

        More updates soon.

        Comment


          #5
          Update: After a long and frustrating hassle waiting on USPS to deliver the rear tail/stop/turn signal lights, the bike is back together and rideable again!

          The tank, side covers, and seat came back from the painter, I'm not too impressed with the quality, but hopefully after a cut and buff it will be a bit better.

          I've been slowly reassembling everything while waiting for parts to trickle in through the mail: upgraded to an electronic flasher relay, wired in a diode for the dash turn signal light, and installed dual intensity, dual color LED tail/brake/turn lights in the rear. These units are tiny, but seriously bright!

          I couldn't bear the thought of drilling into my newly painted seat cowl, so I made a license plate mount out of 3/4" square stock and mounted it to one of the now unused rear passenger foot peg brackets, my least favorite thing on this bike, but unfortunately necessary for riding on the street.

          I still have a few odds and ends to sort, I need a shorter brake line now with the clip on bars, and need to go through a finer polish of the engine case covers, but am just excited to be back on the road, I only got one ride in before the tear down this spring and our weather has been awesome so far.







          Comment


            #6
            Nice transformation. I dig it.
            sigpic
            When consulting the magic 8 ball for advice, one must first ask it "will your answers be accurate?"

            Glen
            -85 1150 es - Plus size supermodel.
            -Rusty old scooter.
            Other things I like to photograph.....instagram.com/gs_junkie
            https://www.instagram.com/glen_brenner/
            https://www.flickr.com/photos/152267...7713345317771/

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