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what did you wrench on today??

More work on the XS... Cleaning, buffing the painted bits, restoring the chrome bits, wire wheeling the rust, lowered the forks, refreshed the brakes (no rebuild necessary looks like the PO did that already)+new pads then painted the calipers, Cleaned and polished the engine, new plugs for the hell of it... Next is painting the diff and changing the oil of the diff... Needs a front tire too and the fuse box is... Well not anymore. Runs like a champ though!
11870846_10203146048970983_8164376249992798047_n.jpg

11243638_10203153043745848_3790678281518934332_n.jpg


Grimly, IT's really not that big of a bike compared to the C14 or even the FZ1. Weighs in at 520lbs which if memory serves me right is 50ish lbs less then a GS750 and only 10lbs more then my FZ1 which I consider a light bike. I removed a couple of chrome bits. The exhaust looks to be a big weighed item as well... So cutting that down (pipes are rotting from the inside on this one too) will lighten the bike up. Sure the shaft drive is heavy but this thing with it's lower stance seems pretty nimble under me and is no way top heavy. Pick up is pretty decent too, get's into illegal speeds pretty quick. I'd say it's on par with my buddies modified Kawasaki SR650. The claimed 70hp is probably true it picks up no problem. I'll tune it once it meets my daily riding requirements in a few more weeks.
 
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The weight disappears once it's moving, and the economy is not bad - no matter how I rode it, it returned 48mpg. Like many of its contemporaries, it was jetted lean from the factory, which explained why it was so sensitive to exhaust condition.
 
I never seem to remember to recycle my old tires, and I had 3 of them after changing the rear on my 1100G. So I decided to try and cut one into quarters, bag it and dump it in my garbage.
Worked, but it took some special technique. A saws-all don't work because you can't hold the tire still for the blade to cut, it just vibrates with the blade, and the bead has steel wires in it so that is the toughest part.
This is how I did it: first cut the bead through by hand with a fine tooth hacksaw using WD40 to lube the blade. Then I cut the rest of the carcass by hand with a bow saw. A saws-all would work IF you can hold the tire firmly enough, lube with WD40 because the spray is convenient. Cut it into 4 quarters, then nest each section into the other so you have a nice compact stack, bag it and can it.

Tire factories use band saws to cut tire beads and steel belts. Blades are lubricated by continuous spray of soapy water. That is for special work. To destroy a tire before landfilling it, special equipment is used. Scroungers will weld beads from scrap tires, slap some black goo to cover them, and sell them. When the tire fails in service, the manufacturer gets sued.

Most tire store will handle scrapping tires for about $3. Saves some time.
 
Cleaned up some wiring on the Goldwing. Had a fairing at one time and the wires had holes from the scotchlocs..so I took shrink tubing and mended all them.

The PO had also installed dual element sockets in the rear signals..which i like for the extra light at the back in the dark. But he ran the wire from the front signal under the left shelter half and then to the back, so I took all that out and wired it up via the hot wire going to the tail light. Shrink tubing and its all now under the seat and out of sight. Much cleaner looking now.
 
More work on the XS... Cleaning, buffing the painted bits, restoring the chrome bits, wire wheeling the rust, lowered the forks, refreshed the brakes (no rebuild necessary looks like the PO did that already)+new pads then painted the calipers, Cleaned and polished the engine, new plugs for the hell of it... Next is painting the diff and changing the oil of the diff... Needs a front tire too and the fuse box is... Well not anymore. Runs like a champ though!
11870846_10203146048970983_8164376249992798047_n.jpg

11243638_10203153043745848_3790678281518934332_n.jpg


Grimly, IT's really not that big of a bike compared to the C14 or even the FZ1. Weighs in at 520lbs which if memory serves me right is 50ish lbs less then a GS750 and only 10lbs more then my FZ1 which I consider a light bike. I removed a couple of chrome bits. The exhaust looks to be a big weighed item as well... So cutting that down (pipes are rotting from the inside on this one too) will lighten the bike up. Sure the shaft drive is heavy but this thing with it's lower stance seems pretty nimble under me and is no way top heavy. Pick up is pretty decent too, get's into illegal speeds pretty quick. I'd say it's on par with my buddies modified Kawasaki SR650. The claimed 70hp is probably true it picks up no problem. I'll tune it once it meets my daily riding requirements in a few more weeks.

Nice looking bike! Looks like a fairly comfy ride too!

Ive been messing with jetting on my Kawi H2 project, WHEW? finicky little thing. Learning a lot about 2 strokes and vm mikunis and timing curves. Getting closer. I now have to remove the clutch cover on it also, I have an intermittent ticking sound, it will give me a chance to inspect a few things and it isn't very hard to do on that bike.
 
Ive been messing with jetting on my Kawi H2 project, WHEW… finicky little thing. Learning a lot about 2 strokes and vm mikunis and timing curves. Getting closer. I now have to remove the clutch cover on it also, I have an intermittent ticking sound, it will give me a chance to inspect a few things and it isn't very hard to do on that bike.

The Kwak 2T triples were notorious for seizing the middle pot. Istr the fix was to go up a jet size there.
 
Made this video for the Connie 14 group I'm apart of... Doing your own tires??? What a concept!!! LOL Anyway you can watch ole' Jedz123 do some shade tree mechanic work.
 
Yeah I heard that too, make it a bit more rich for cooling.
Mostly rumor and conjecture, they burn up pistons randomly!!
Most of the triple experts out there will tell you it's mostly false I have the same jets in all three the middle is just a touch warmer 15deg or so. The big thing is carb sync AND carb balance you have to do both and you have to do it VERY accurately or you will get one "pulling" and running hot. If one is running hot there is something wrong, air leak, timing, carb balance or sync. There finicky for sure! Makes tuning my Gs seem easy.
 
Pulled down a GSXR1000 motor today. It's one I built for a roadrace sidecar outfit about a year ago, it's done a pretty busy season on tracks around NZ and gone pretty well. The owner wanted to go to a practise day at a local track so pulled the sidecar out of his garage and did an oil change in preparation. Noticed the water was down a little so topped it up...and suddenly it needed a lot more water...and the oil was going cloudy....
He drained everything and did an engine change ready for the practise day...and handed the motor to me, expecting it to need a head gasket.

Ha - our winter has been colder than he thought...it's popped all the frost plugs in the head. The one at the camchain end wasn't visible so I stripped a little more off and found it sitting on the crank sprocket - undamaged...He's a lucky boy. When he told me what had happened, I asked where he had it stored and was it possible it had frozen. He said no, good garage, not much above sea level. But of course we're not allowed antifreeze in race motors...

But the whole motor is full of vanilla milkshake...a day at least pressure washing everything before reassembly. At least all the bearings appear fine.

This should teach him to drain it between meetings.
 
More work on the XS... Cleaning, buffing the painted bits, restoring the chrome bits, wire wheeling the rust, lowered the forks, refreshed the brakes (no rebuild necessary looks like the PO did that already)+new pads then painted the calipers, Cleaned and polished the engine, new plugs for the hell of it... Next is painting the diff and changing the oil of the diff... Needs a front tire too and the fuse box is... Well not anymore. Runs like a champ though!
Grimly, IT's really not that big of a bike compared to the C14 or even the FZ1. Weighs in at 520lbs which if memory serves me right is 50ish lbs less then a GS750 and only 10lbs more then my FZ1 which I consider a light bike. I removed a couple of chrome bits. The exhaust looks to be a big weighed item as well... So cutting that down (pipes are rotting from the inside on this one too) will lighten the bike up. Sure the shaft drive is heavy but this thing with it's lower stance seems pretty nimble under me and is no way top heavy. Pick up is pretty decent too, get's into illegal speeds pretty quick. I'd say it's on par with my buddies modified Kawasaki SR650. The claimed 70hp is probably true it picks up no problem. I'll tune it once it meets my daily riding requirements in a few more weeks.

I did a lot of work on one here for a pre 82 race bike. Brembo calipers, cams, ported, VM35's, braced frame. Goes quite well too.
The heads show Toyota influence - very similar porting to the 2V dohc Toyotas of the period. Inlet ports too big, exhausts too small....

Nice bikes though.
 
I did a lot of work on one here for a pre 82 race bike. Brembo calipers, cams, ported, VM35's, braced frame. Goes quite well too.
The heads show Toyota influence - very similar porting to the 2V dohc Toyotas of the period. Inlet ports too big, exhausts too small....

Nice bikes though.

Greg I'd be very interested in seeing your build! I would like the bike to be a bit of a fire breather. It's snappy but would like it to be quick. I hear the brakes are more then adequate if paired with modern master cylinders and stainless lines. They actually are pretty decent as is... Their design seems to create an odd wear to the pads (a diagonal wear across the pad).

Please shoot me a link or PM.

Thanks for you share!
 
Greg I'd be very interested in seeing your build! I would like the bike to be a bit of a fire breather. It's snappy but would like it to be quick. I hear the brakes are more then adequate if paired with modern master cylinders and stainless lines. They actually are pretty decent as is... Their design seems to create an odd wear to the pads (a diagonal wear across the pad).

Please shoot me a link or PM.

Thanks for you share!

The owner has done a long thread about building and racing it on one of the triple forums...The details of which one I've lost.
I'll ask him for the link.
I seldom keep pics of racebikes I've only partially done. The owner did the final buildup.

Greg
 
Mostly rumor and conjecture, they burn up pistons randomly!!
Most of the triple experts out there will tell you it's mostly false I have the same jets in all three the middle is just a touch warmer 15deg or so. The big thing is carb sync AND carb balance you have to do both and you have to do it VERY accurately or you will get one "pulling" and running hot. If one is running hot there is something wrong, air leak, timing, carb balance or sync. There finicky for sure! Makes tuning my Gs seem easy.
Well, I can only tell you what I saw in person - three people I knew with triples had middle piston seizures and disintegration. Turned out it was actually quite common, but they were hooligan bikes in their day and got thrashed all day long (for a very short day) - until they went 'cronk' 'bang', at the end. Modern synthetic oils will make a huge difference, of course.
 
Well, I can only tell you what I saw in person - three people I knew with triples had middle piston seizures and disintegration. Turned out it was actually quite common, but they were hooligan bikes in their day and got thrashed all day long (for a very short day) - until they went 'cronk' 'bang', at the end. Modern synthetic oils will make a huge difference, of course.

Ya it is where the problems will show up quickly, but the lowly middle cylinder gets a bad rap for taking on the problems of the other two. In general a well tuned triple will not show big middle cylinder temp differences but they will when there is a problem. If you own a triple 2 stroke it needs a bit of attention and most guys monitor the cylinder temp periodically or regularly. When there is a rise in any cylinder temp it means theres a problem and all the over jetting and over boring that has been done to the middle cylinder is only a bandaid. I too have been monitoring regularly and can say the difference so far no matter how hard I beat it is about 15 deg. Some guys show well under that. I have been told 50 deg difference is where the concern really starts to get big.
I have also believe if you own one of theses bikes prepare to rebuild top ends if you beat the snot out of it! Its not a matter of IF, but a matter of when it will happen?LOL And thank God for better oils. I don't plan to beat it to bad, Im already having some clutch issues and parts are hard to come by:(.

Tabs are hitting the cases inside when I pull the clutch in, they need to be filled down, the clutch pusher is showing odd wear and the bearing on the clutch hub is wiggling a bit:confused:


And just because I like showing it off;
 
Got new points and put stock coils on the Goldwing. Took the aftermarket coils..that had 4 ceramic resistors... about 3 inches long each off. Set the static timing and shes really running top notch now. Its a process and not a destination with these old bikes...LOL.
 
Pulled down a GSXR1000 motor today. It's one I built for a roadrace sidecar outfit about a year ago, it's done a pretty busy season on tracks around NZ and gone pretty well. The owner wanted to go to a practise day at a local track so pulled the sidecar out of his garage and did an oil change in preparation. Noticed the water was down a little so topped it up...and suddenly it needed a lot more water...and the oil was going cloudy....
He drained everything and did an engine change ready for the practise day...and handed the motor to me, expecting it to need a head gasket.

Ha - our winter has been colder than he thought...it's popped all the frost plugs in the head. The one at the camchain end wasn't visible so I stripped a little more off and found it sitting on the crank sprocket - undamaged...He's a lucky boy. When he told me what had happened, I asked where he had it stored and was it possible it had frozen. He said no, good garage, not much above sea level. But of course we're not allowed antifreeze in race motors...

But the whole motor is full of vanilla milkshake...a day at least pressure washing everything before reassembly. At least all the bearings appear fine.

This should teach him to drain it between meetings.


Are you allowed and/or recommend something like Water Wetter for a track bike?
I know a track day with a street bike is a different ballgame i was just wondering if you thought distilled water would be good enough.
 
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