Broke Again Bikes

Bikes on the Bay – June 28th

June 28th in Soquel is the 4th annual Bikes on the Bay Vintage motorcycle show and swap.

http://bikesonthebay.com/

Posted 3 years ago at 12:28 pm.

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new(er) parts

I’ve been waiting for a better rear wheel I bought to come in. Thanks Fed-ex for caring enough to hide it under my doormat so nobody would be able to steal it.

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Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 11:19 am.

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4/12/09

Gauges mounted

Foot peg and brake back on

Made a bracket to secure the battery

It was warm and clear out so nothing else got done…

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 11:03 pm.

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progress…

Bottom end in

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 6:01 pm.

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SLO Classic Motorcycle Rally – October 8-11th

Taking the place of the Lake Cachuma event is this one.

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 1:18 pm.

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Triumph T100 bobber

There isn’t much to say on this right now. I’m working (slowly and cheaply)on acquiring parts to put together a bobber. My spare T100 motor has been robbed of a few parts for my 63 so it currently has the worst of all my T100 parts. I got plans and they involve metalflake…

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 2:39 am.

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1964/66/68/71 BSA Thunderbolt

This bike has been the bain of my entire existence. I bought this in January of 2007.  It was originally put together by another builder with a 1964 Lightning Rocket motor in a 66 frame with a 68 front end.  I spent a considerable amount of time getting it road worthy. Unknown to me it was basically in need of a complete rebuild when I received it and the motor blew up after 37 miles. Very little of it was salvageable. It’s just about complete in it’s  rebirth with a 1971 Thunderbolt motor now in it along with a few other changes I’ve made.

Before the previous builders work started

Some powder coating was done. Frame and bits

The bike was re-assembled

Some paint was done and it was sent out to me.

It was in no condition to ride when I received it. The top end was noisey and not in a any sort of normal way at all. The clutch had been described to me as heavy. It almost took two hands to work it and upon further investigation it was not due to heavy springs. There were several factors in the clutch action. One was just poor cable routing and easily fixed. The pressure plate was severely warped. Spinning it on a drill press showed about a 1/4 of a inch of warpage. The clutch push rod was about 1/4 of a inch too long and broken in two pieces. Not one of those trick setups with a ball bearing.. it was just broken.

Wet-sumping was another big issue with this bike. I figured it was a weak spring behind the oil pump and decided to replace it. The inner timing cover had never been removed at all when this bike was put together. I had no miles on the bike and there was sludge and metal shavings in their. The oil pump turned out to be warped and in ugly shape. The tangs on  the tach drive looked chewed up and barely turned so the pump was replaced. There was a bigger problem at play here but i didn’t know that yet. I still hadn’t ridden the bike yet even.

I got the bike back together and took it out for a spin. The zener diode went out on me and I had to be towed home. I replaced that with a solid state unit and was on the road again… well that is before the bike started smoking and sounding much much worse. It was December 31st 2007, my second actual ride on the bike. Since buying it I had gone a total of 37 miles and that was the end of the line for that motor.

Here it is after I blew up the motor new years eve.

So I got to tearing the motor apart to bring it down to Rabers

Where the valves were actually hitting the pistons. The bearings were spun and the crankshaft was wobbling. Actually the only thing really holding the crankshaft in place was the new oil pump I put it, which was chewed up like the last one.

Metal in the sump

Metal in the primary

Funky welding in the woodruff keyway

I might make a throwing star out of this

Bent rod

If you remember the previous incarnation of the site then you’ll remember I had some choice words for the original builder of this bike. While there were probably more things done wrong on the bike than done right, he is a stand up guy and paid for the entire cost to have a new motor rebuilt at my local shop.  He’s done everything possible to make this right and his name has been omitted on purpose as I don’t feel the need to rake him over the coals any further.

More importantly, I should be picking up the new motor this week. It’s been a long time coming and I spent the majority of my tax refund money on a few extras for this bike. Updates coming shortly

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 2:25 am.

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1973 Triumph TR7RV

I picked this up in trade and rode it home from Sacramento.  I haven’t done much of anything to it except change the bars, tailight and put new rubber on it. It leaks a lot of oil from the front of the head or tappet blocks. There are no threads  for the exhaust spigots to screw into at all. It was repaired poorly at one point. It runs great so I’m not in a hurry to fix it, but the head will likely have some work done on it when I get around to it.

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 1:11 am.

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1963 Triumph T100ss

Picked this up in January 2008 down the street from a friends house. Last registered in 1992. Wassal tank and original dirt.. semi-original rust

I was going to get a new tank painted up nice and make a pretty clean looking bike… that is till I bought this tank off a T100SR and I liked how the paint is worn though several layers in spots.. so this tank is being used as is (If I ever find the original bikini sidecovers it will go totally back to stock.

I replaced everything in the primary: clutch basket,hub, put a sparx alternator in it, and one of the MAP pressure plates which I’m fond of.

The fork oil was a little dirty

The tubes had seen better days also

I took apart and rebuilt the entire front end, put new bearings races,new tubes, painted the trees and lowers

Put a stock wiring harness on it and overpriced sidecover

Added a pazon electronic ignition and completely re-wired the bike. I made so many changes to the stock harness I bought it would have bee easier starting from scratch. The monobloc was toast and after i shot a flame out of it I sprung for a nice new concentric carb.

I was getting some smoke out the left exhaust and it wouldn’t do anything but idle. Took apart the head. The valve guide were sliding up, at some point there had been some wrong sized spark plug that had struck the pistons. Had the head rebuilt and the cylinders honed. I also built one good gear box out of two mostly good ones.

Gearbox back in. Got distracted polishing up covers. Next: Putting the top end back together.

Posted 3 years, 1 month ago at 12:57 am.

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