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750 Katana Resurrection
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Been a slow couple of weeks. Unfortunately Auckland, where I live has been battered by an extreme rain event and severe flooding, and a week later cyclone Gabrielle came through and has just smashed us again.
I did manage to make a chain guard out of some scrap sheet, and will work on tidying up the old exhaust. It's the last piece required for a start up. I'm thinking of building my own 4 into two into one. I've never made a exhaust before. But I'll give it a crack.
Hopefully the next post will be the starting video.
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Originally posted by Suzukian View PostIf you fill tubing with sand, and weld caps at the ends, you can bend it without the pipe crumpling.
Last edited by KiwiAlfa156; 02-15-2023, 01:57 PM.
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I thought I was being so careful... The seal looks damaged and I doubt I'll find a replacement, which is a problem as I don't want to risk leaks and pressure loss. So a new gasket has been ordered.
The carb leaks turned out to be the o-rings in the fuel gallery tube between carb 1 and 2. So replaced these with the appropriate rings from my o-ring kit. Two of the drain plug seal washers were aso leaking, so I renewed these too. Didn't have the correct size washers so made some using thick gasket paper, cut with a 10mm and 6mm hole punches. Pressure tested the whole shebang overnight using the auxiliary tank hung way above the carb set. Nice and dry after 8 hours. Note to self about doing this testing before fitting the carbs over a freshly painted engine....
I'm finally getting excited about finally riding this thing. I guess extended period resto/rebuilds happen either because you're time-poor, or have no deadline or pressing need to set a deadline, or any combination of the above. Also when starting with something a bent and abused as this Kat, it's basically eating the Elephant one spoon at a time, so the focus is very immediate. And it's only now after (briefly) running it, with not much left to do, that I've started imagining actually riding it.Last edited by KiwiAlfa156; 03-08-2023, 04:45 PM.
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Well, as I write, it's Easter Sunday in New Zealand. It seemed an appropriate day to finish the resurrection of the 750S Katana. It's not road legal yet, and I don't have time today for a cheeky spin, but I've been up and down the drive a couple of times. So I'll call that the first ride .
In the past couple of weeks I've fixed the oil and fuel leaks, replaced the head gasket, set the mixture screws and balanced the carbs.
When I first ran it there was a distinct cam chain noise and not much chain slack, with the top end off I rocked the crank back and forth while pulling on the cam chain, front guide removed. It suddenly gave me extra links worth of slack . I think the chain had a static 'bubble' of slack hanging beneath the crank sprocket. As the crank rotated, the chain jumped a position. But the guides held the chain on the sprocket so the slack remained under the crank and maintained the timing relationship between crank and cams. It never turned into chain jumping teeth, throwing the timing out and trashing the valves. Reassembled the cam noise is gone. So the oil leak was serendipitous.
Last edited by KiwiAlfa156; 04-09-2023, 02:28 AM.
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