Monday, December 26, 2011

CB750K Resto Mod Project

Back in November a gentleman gave me a call regarding a resto project around a '76 CB750K he was interested in buying. After a couple short phone conversations, He and his newly purchased bike wind up on the shops door. The CB was a good runner. Obviously used regularly by the PO and had some basic mods and a home done metal flake green spray bomb job over all the tins. After giving it the once over it was established the bike over all was a solid foundation. Just needed some basic maintenance and some TLC to make into a nice bike again. The original idea was to try and bring the bike back to original factory condition. A second parts bike was sourced a few days later for a bargain price and dropped off the following day. Unfortunately, the original intention of the parts bike was to scavenge what was supposed to be "perfect" Chrome. Once face to face with  our donor we were more then disheartened. But regardless, the price was right and there was still quite a bit of usable parts available. So forward we went. Little by little the 2 bikes were disassembled picking and choosing the best parts of the bunch to create one good bike again.


The Runner.
The Parts Bike.

With much of the desired replacement parts in bad shape, and the cost of chrome out of the customers budget. We decided to lean the project more in a resto mod direction. Then the real work began. The entire bike was stripped down to the frame. The original paint removed, surface rust sanded out, primed and repainted Gloss Black. 






Pretty much everything was repainted Gloss Black, minus the engine, which was treated to a coat of Semi Gloss. The Chrome engine covers where retained and the valve cover, stator cover badge and fins given a brushed finish. 





Instead of the original chrome 4 piece exhaust, we stuck with the MAC 4-1 system. The badly pitted chrome fenders  were resurfaced and panted Gloss Black. The aftermarket superbike bars were retained, as well as the HD black and chrome shocks. A vintage Travlecade seat replaces the factory unit. The Comstar wheels, Dual disk front breaks and air forks that the PO installed have been retained for the time being. The entire project was completed in 4 days. From tear down, refinishing, repairing small issues such as clutch rebuild, brake rebuilds all around, rewiring the entire bike, And completing a full top to bottom service, and reassembly. 





Saturday, December 17, 2011

Saturday Night Specials

80's Superbike meets modern day performance. Love this stuff. From the talented hands of GIA Engineering and RACE FIT, respectively.












Thursday, December 15, 2011

Single Siders Rule

VFR750 Single Sided Swingarm swap into a 94 ZX7. Fully polished arm, Shorty exhaust with cut down mid pipe.






CB400T

Finally getting back to the little Honda after months of it being, literally, Shelved. Last Saturday we did some brain storming and figured there was no better time then the present to start getting it back together. It's a very simple build that is reusing much of the original parts, but that's the beauty of it. There's not a lot to the bike to begin with, and we've managed to get it down to 2 wheels an engine and a seat.

This is the quick mock up with the seat rails tacked in. Front forks have been lowered 2", scratch built clip-ons XS650 gas tank, the stock front fender moved to the back.



The majority of the hardtail was finish welded last night. Still need to add the cross braces and clean up the axle plates before it gets painted and put back together.  

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Project XS650 Street CHOPPER

New progress on the Street CHOPPER. R1 front end is in with Vortex top clamp and bars. Swapped in the rear wheel from a ZX7. Started chopping away the lugs and brackets to start making new ones for the the engine and tank mounts.





Dent Removal

Trying to pull the dent in the tank for the StreetRACER. It's getting there...



Shovel Head

Customer brought in a Shovel Head with a 93"cid S&S. He thought the rocker boxes were leaking. Once it was apart the real problem became obvious. Note of caution, stroker motors and fat bobs may not be the best idea.



Busy days in the shop