So, back from vacation and back to work on the Honda. It will be shown in among the Canadian Vintage Motorcycle Group display at the February motorcycle show, so it's gonna take precedent over the Yamahas for the next week and a half.
Some goodies, an aftermarket headlight bucket from Thailand (28$ :agave
as well as a carb rebuild kit, a new float, a new kickstarter (or two) and a couple sets of contact points. The black thing is for under the fuel selector on the carb but this is for the wrong year it turns out. Damn oddball carb...
I picked this up to help reduce the time I am scrubbing stuff with a toothbrush. My first test is the CT90 carb, to see if we can fix that fuel mixture issue with a good carb cleaning. This is a 30L model, with a tank big enough to take the crankcase halves of my Yamaha engines, or the airboxes off that bike. It will pretty much take anything except tires, which I still have to scrub by hand (yay)
Before (this is after I "cleaned" it the first time with simple green and a toothbrush). The inside had a film on it, perhaps from the leftover fuel while it sat for the last few months.
Nasty
Here are the parts after. The photos are bad, but in person they look quite a bit better after 30 mins or so in the ultrasonic
My favourite part of the carb,
So I put the carb back together with the new jets and o-rings.
Unfortunately, while disassembling the carb I broke a plastic plug near the fuel selector, so I couldn't run the bike today. Actually, there are 3 parts I am missing before I can start it up. Another is the throttle cable stop which goes under the throttle grip, and the last is a rubber stopper which prevents the center stand from hitting the chain when its up.
Here are the broken parts in that order. The top one, the plug, had a hex head on the top which sheared off when I was trying to remove it. The throttle cable stop had an ear fall off, and the rubber stop for the center stand was so old it disintegrated
My friend and I built a 3d printer a while back, so we decided to try to print three parts which would substitute, so we could get the bike running.
So here are the results. For the carb part, I will epoxy the new head onto the plug, which should work fine. The throttle cable stop turned out pretty good, almost an exact copy of the metal original. We designed the center stand stop quite a bit larger than stock, because I think it needs to be spaced farther, and we can also cut it down if need be. In the coming days we'll fit these parts to the bike and see how they will hold up compared to the originals.
The bike in its current state. Today we mounted the headlight bucket (and indicators) and installed the new speedo and finished the wiring. We fixed the rear exhaust mount and added the heat shield. I also installed the engine guard.
The carb is still off the bike, the throttle cable is removed, and the down tube cover has yet to go on.