I took this little project on, a '66 305 Dream. It's not my cup of tea, but I enjoy working on the old analog stuff. I have had fun fixing my son's '79 ATC110, a '74 Trail 90 and a '67 Vespa 150 in recent years. They are cute little buggers. This one hmm.. It's an interesting bike, so important to Honda. Comparing to my '66 Norton was inevitable as they sat together in the garage. Honda: electric start, neutral indicator, enclosed chain, grease fittings all over, oil tight, reliable, docile. Norton: none of that stuff.
The 305 is surprisingly (to me) a 360 twin like the Norton, but OHC. It is a bit BMW-ish in black with steering damper, leading link forks, covered shocks, and big funky fenders. 16" wheels. It's tiny. I did the complete 'treamtent' on it which didn't reveal anything terrible. It sat a long time and fuel was varnish, the slide stuck. Put the carb body in the Berryman's (CA formula) can, and the can in my ultrasonic, which did the trick.
The headlight is a sealed beam square-ish thing, impossible to find, so I drilled out the bulb and cut an opening for an H4 LED. Others have done this, If I could find a metal H4 mounting base for a reasonable price, I wouldn't have Gooped it. This is reversible. The brake lever was very bent and I gave it some heat and a long pipe over the end to bend it back, It came out nice.
I also opened up the horn to file the points, adjust the screws and clean it. Now it's fine, quite loud. That horn is quite the little piece of engineering. It runs great, tomorrow I'll ride it around the 'hood and hope nobody recognizes me haha.
The bike really hits home how Honda made a bike that was appealing to non 'bikers' and opened up a huge market for themselves, and others of course.
The 305 is surprisingly (to me) a 360 twin like the Norton, but OHC. It is a bit BMW-ish in black with steering damper, leading link forks, covered shocks, and big funky fenders. 16" wheels. It's tiny. I did the complete 'treamtent' on it which didn't reveal anything terrible. It sat a long time and fuel was varnish, the slide stuck. Put the carb body in the Berryman's (CA formula) can, and the can in my ultrasonic, which did the trick.
The headlight is a sealed beam square-ish thing, impossible to find, so I drilled out the bulb and cut an opening for an H4 LED. Others have done this, If I could find a metal H4 mounting base for a reasonable price, I wouldn't have Gooped it. This is reversible. The brake lever was very bent and I gave it some heat and a long pipe over the end to bend it back, It came out nice.
I also opened up the horn to file the points, adjust the screws and clean it. Now it's fine, quite loud. That horn is quite the little piece of engineering. It runs great, tomorrow I'll ride it around the 'hood and hope nobody recognizes me haha.
The bike really hits home how Honda made a bike that was appealing to non 'bikers' and opened up a huge market for themselves, and others of course.
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