Showing posts with label carb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carb. Show all posts

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Valentine Day Parts Sale

Moped bling $35 SOLD
$100
$10 - Honda CB450 tank






Dellorto SHA for Vespa Kinetic 1 + 1 parts - $15






All the 103 stuff $40 SOLD













All this puch stuff + E50 crank and seals for $100.

Plus shipping - flat rate boxes when possible $13-$18.  More for oversize such as wheels & pipes.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

00138 CL 175


Ignition switch needs some wires & connectors replaced, and the battery was totally dry & must be replaced. A traditional lead-acid battery like the original is about $35. Depending on atmospheric conditions, they lose electrolyte through the breather tube and distilled water and acid must be added. If the fluid level or the charge drop too low, the battery is ruined. I highly recommend using a sealed battery, even though they are around $75, they last a lot longer because they don't evaporate electrolyte, hold a charge better, and often are warranted for a couple of years. When the ignition switch was bypassed and a spare battery used, I could hear the ignition solenoid go "click," which means it's working. It fired up and ran on one cylinder. Could be a new battery is all it needs for the electric starter to work, although I noticed the turn signals didn't work, and a couple of loose wires. I'd be surprised if there weren't a few other shorts. Condensers could need replacing as well, but those are cheap. Did the bike run better cold and then do worse as it warmed up? The petcock had some rusty sludge in it and wasn't draining well. I took it apart and blew some compressed air through it and it works fine now. The screen for the reserve is missing and should be fixed sooner than later, or else sediment will pile up in there again. The #2 carb seems to not be getting gas, although the float seems to be functioning.

Hotwired.



Lotsa rusty sludge.


Carb on right is dry.

No sludge!


One of the spark plugs was a extended reach plug, which caused the electrode tip come into contact with the piston head. Fortunately, this simply bent the tip of the electrode. After carb and wiring rebuild & setting all tolerances to spec, the bike fired up. It ran on both cylinders, but one kept losing spark. This was narrowed down to a short in the spark plug cable. I replaced the ignition coil and broken tail light with parts from a CB750. The battery was replaced with a sealed unit, a Power Source WP9-BS. Pulls great at 6-7k (Red line @ 10.5k!) with a wonderful throaty exhaust note - brash but not obnoxious. Suprisingly gentle clutch. Bike is beat but has a lot of life left to it and even more character. 

 

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Ahmed's Whizzer Rebuild

Ahmed had wrecked the shit out of his 60cc whizzer. I replaced the front end, rebuilt the front hub with a solid axle instead of quick release (!),  re-attached the clutch cam housing and added a lever with the correct amount of cable pull so the clutch would work, rebuilt the axles, tuned the carb, fixed the kill switch, replaced the broken throttle with an old Suzuki control, rebuilt the back hub so the brakes would work and the chain ring wouldn't rub on the brake arm, added a front brake (!),  trued the wheels and generally tightened everything to spec w/loctite. My final verdict after the test: whizzers are fun but totally dangerous. I gave Ahmed an extra helmet and told him he wasn't allowed to crash anymore.



Cute!