I've been on the forum for a while, but never posted, due to being able to get most of my questions answered by a post I found, or BassCliff's site.
I bought a GS100GL April of 2013 as a "birthday present" to myself. It wasn't my first choice, but I went ahead and bought it, not knowing what I was getting into. 2 years later I still haven't started it up since I bought it.
So far I've managed to rebuild the carbs, which were filthy. New O-rings from Robert Barr. I used a crockpot with a pinesol solution at the time. It got most of the gunk off, then I scrubbed with a tooth brush, and re-assembled.
The air box has been cleaned, and sealed, bolts replaced and rust cleaned out. I cleaned the foam filter that was inside, over the cage, it was in good shape so I cleaned with mineral spirits I believe, and the put some filter oil on it.
Rebuilt forks with new seals, and progressive springs.
Went through valve shims, replaced ones that weren't within tolerance. Also got silicone valve and breather gaskets.
I went to replace the bearings with needle bearings, when I took the yoke apart I saw that this motorcycle already used needle bearings, and the races were in good shape.
Then I went ahead and disconnected all my electrical connections, sprayed with contact cleaner, and coated with electric grease. Some of the connections were in bad shape, so I cut them out and replaced them. I also extended the R/R cable to ground to the battery. There are two 9 pin connectors next to the coils that have melted together (1 blue, 1 white), I couldn't get them apart, so I sprayed contact cleaner into the and will be ordering new ones from Z1.
Electric box all rusty out of motorcycle frame.
Wire wheeled off all the rust. Then two coats of rattle can black.
I re-installed the battery box and replaced all the bolts with plain steel allen bolts with zinc washers. I hope the bolts in this area don't need to be specific type of metal. I feel that I remember reading somewhere that stainless steel isn't good for electrical connections, so I figured plain steel was the way to go.
If you look close you can see the allen head bolts connected to the fuse box and other electric parts.
Exhaust gaskets have veen replaced.
Carb boots are all new, with stainless steel hardware. The right two intake ports had all of the screw holes, to bolt them up, stripped. I wound up installing stainless thread inserts, and they seem to be fine.
Replaced motor oil, oil filter, secondary gear oil.
Bike when I bought it.
I now know that as is mentioned in the welcome, buying a 30 year old bike without much knowledge isn't ideal. I've spent time on and off over the past two years working on this bike, and I want to get it rideable by August. There always seems to be something that pops up, so that I have to put this project on hold, or a wonderful little gremlin to stop me in my tracks.
Last things I think I need to do are replace brake lines and rebuild calipers, and master cylinders. At this point I'm wondering if I can just swap out the whole old brake system, for some slightly more modern direct bolt ons. I grew up riding BMX, and learned that just because it isn't the same company, it doesn't mean some parts aren't interchangeable. In the end I hope to change a lot about this bike, but first I know I need some type of baseline to start from, that way when I do change something, I'll know what went wrong,
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