Hello there fellow wrenchheads! I mean, you kind of have to be if you're posting and reading build forums...
Little background here. I worked as a parts kid at a MC shop 30+ years ago, definitely a kick-ass high school job, but my real interest was cars and trucks and I gravitated down that road, building a few 70's-80's trucks - most recently a 1970 C10 resto-mod that went from a six month project to a never ending rabbit hole I needed to pull myself out of as the truck was getting to the point that driving it wasn't that fun or even remotely practical and it was either really ramp up spending and go for a straight up drag truck, or bail. Had a guy make me an offer I couldn't refuse, which left me without a project in the shop. Enter another offer I couldn't refuse:

So, we got to work (my 11 yo son, myself and the shop supervisor). Unloaded the bed of the truck, started tearing everything down, sorting parts, figuring out what was supposed to be where with some really bad diagrams and no real "before" look - anyway, none of that mattered, just dove in with the evaporust and many hours of scrubbing, sorting, scrubbing, sorting, we had it fairly broken down, and a massive parts/seals/gaskets order placed right in time for the holidays to jack up any service availability, shipping, etc. So we do what we can do, and break out the project plan by phases, stack each part of the phase in a labeled tray, and get to work on the frame/mounts/etc. Someone had apparently installed the last swingarm with a 15lb sledge and bent the crap out of the bolt inside the sleeve... that was a fun extraction.

I'll spare you photos of my highly OSHA-Approved, totally safe, spray rig in a 40 degree shop (timed just right with a nasty cold snap and a heater failure), but my son did a fantastic job priming and spraying - and gave me one of the best lines, when he put the sprayer down at one point and just said "dang 3D objects", when he realized he was missing an angle on all of the pieces.

Still waiting for parts, we started doing some planning on the look we were going for, color scheme, etc. I happened to have some Honda/Acura paint from code B-518P, Midnight blue - and since it seemed it was always late nights on this thing, the name Midnight started bouncing around and stuck with Texas. So, it'll be that midnight blue on the tank, side covers, and the speedometer/control panel/headlight mount (eliminating handlebar controls other than brake/throttle clutch/turn , with a fairly aggressive cafe racer- inspired look. The rough mockup started here:

Then we graduated from the table to the stand, and since it's too cold to paint, Still waiting on parts and there's this... we move on to electrical:

OK, Yes... I know, it's not technically the correct color wire to the neutral switch (and the high temp loom wrap isn't on yet), but it's hidden and this is why you never source extra wire from Amazon out of desperation and impatience., I guess it did say 7 colors, I just wildly assumed it was 7 different ones. Although, I will say, Amazon isn't all bad - I've been using those connectors below the wire in that pic for a while now and they're really awesome. Takes a little more work than a butt splice or crimp on blade connectors, but they look WAY cleaner, take an absolute beating and are temporarily submersible. Basically perfect for redoing 50 year old connections, or really any electrical build out.

So, today is the last one I'll have for a week or so to really grind - what better time than now to build the harnesses and component pigtails, map out locations for everything and go pick up a battery that fits that weird size (I had 3 12v12a, all basically the same, but sideways so they don't work). OK - back to building the harness. In case you're wondering what it looks like to plan out something you've never seen, don't have a majority of the parts the harness terminates into, but have no intention of waiting. You plan the crap out of it. I like to take the schematic to a drawing of the area (frame in this case), so I can visually map in my head the structure, take notes on aftermarket connections/color swaps, etc. By the time you go through this exercise of transferring the line drawing from black/white to color and then from the color line drawing to the sketch, you've also damn near memorized all 30+termination points and 12 different colors and where they go.

So, today, under the watchful eyes of the shop supervisor, we start pulling some wire. Little DIY tip here on 12V modular wiring that I've always used to save money, since wire is freakiing expensive when purchased in small amounts. I bought a ton of different colors of shrink tubing years ago (I think it was 1500 or so pieces), and I just buy white wire in bulk and use that for all "non-critical" modular wiring, and just tag every 9-12" of line and the ends with a little piece of that shrink wrap to keep the circuits separated, while being able to get a higher-quality wire. so it'll look like a mass of white wires inside the loom wrap, it's just an identifiable mass of white wires. Also a firm believer in planning and dry fitting and testing before wrapping, my OCD and messy wiring don't mix at all, so I tend to go a little crazy here.

Sorry for the long-winded post. Admin, please feel free to tell me if I need to break these up or remove photos. Next round will be determined by parts arriving. Most likely it'll be the hub and suspension rebuilds, slaughtering a goat to the rust gods to see if I can get the spokes polished or if I'm going to have to break down and remove/powdercoat/replace all of them, brake system rebuild, then tackle the engine. Incidentally, if anyone has a 450 motor that is out of the bike, but complete - some pictures of all four sides would really help me out here. It just helps make the exploded diagram work in my head.
Until next time - just remember that you only have to be 2% smarter than what you're working against, always check for ground and continuity before panic, righty tighty left loosey goes backwards when your looking at the wrong side of the bolt, and anyone can do this. They built these things with technology and equipment that wouldn't even manage an oil change on some of today's cars, always be patient and when you get stuck, start talking about it (that's where these forums are great).
tl/dr: Some idiot with a wrench got ahold of a pile of scrap, took pictures of it.
Little background here. I worked as a parts kid at a MC shop 30+ years ago, definitely a kick-ass high school job, but my real interest was cars and trucks and I gravitated down that road, building a few 70's-80's trucks - most recently a 1970 C10 resto-mod that went from a six month project to a never ending rabbit hole I needed to pull myself out of as the truck was getting to the point that driving it wasn't that fun or even remotely practical and it was either really ramp up spending and go for a straight up drag truck, or bail. Had a guy make me an offer I couldn't refuse, which left me without a project in the shop. Enter another offer I couldn't refuse:

So, we got to work (my 11 yo son, myself and the shop supervisor). Unloaded the bed of the truck, started tearing everything down, sorting parts, figuring out what was supposed to be where with some really bad diagrams and no real "before" look - anyway, none of that mattered, just dove in with the evaporust and many hours of scrubbing, sorting, scrubbing, sorting, we had it fairly broken down, and a massive parts/seals/gaskets order placed right in time for the holidays to jack up any service availability, shipping, etc. So we do what we can do, and break out the project plan by phases, stack each part of the phase in a labeled tray, and get to work on the frame/mounts/etc. Someone had apparently installed the last swingarm with a 15lb sledge and bent the crap out of the bolt inside the sleeve... that was a fun extraction.

I'll spare you photos of my highly OSHA-Approved, totally safe, spray rig in a 40 degree shop (timed just right with a nasty cold snap and a heater failure), but my son did a fantastic job priming and spraying - and gave me one of the best lines, when he put the sprayer down at one point and just said "dang 3D objects", when he realized he was missing an angle on all of the pieces.

Still waiting for parts, we started doing some planning on the look we were going for, color scheme, etc. I happened to have some Honda/Acura paint from code B-518P, Midnight blue - and since it seemed it was always late nights on this thing, the name Midnight started bouncing around and stuck with Texas. So, it'll be that midnight blue on the tank, side covers, and the speedometer/control panel/headlight mount (eliminating handlebar controls other than brake/throttle clutch/turn , with a fairly aggressive cafe racer- inspired look. The rough mockup started here:

Then we graduated from the table to the stand, and since it's too cold to paint, Still waiting on parts and there's this... we move on to electrical:

OK, Yes... I know, it's not technically the correct color wire to the neutral switch (and the high temp loom wrap isn't on yet), but it's hidden and this is why you never source extra wire from Amazon out of desperation and impatience., I guess it did say 7 colors, I just wildly assumed it was 7 different ones. Although, I will say, Amazon isn't all bad - I've been using those connectors below the wire in that pic for a while now and they're really awesome. Takes a little more work than a butt splice or crimp on blade connectors, but they look WAY cleaner, take an absolute beating and are temporarily submersible. Basically perfect for redoing 50 year old connections, or really any electrical build out.

So, today is the last one I'll have for a week or so to really grind - what better time than now to build the harnesses and component pigtails, map out locations for everything and go pick up a battery that fits that weird size (I had 3 12v12a, all basically the same, but sideways so they don't work). OK - back to building the harness. In case you're wondering what it looks like to plan out something you've never seen, don't have a majority of the parts the harness terminates into, but have no intention of waiting. You plan the crap out of it. I like to take the schematic to a drawing of the area (frame in this case), so I can visually map in my head the structure, take notes on aftermarket connections/color swaps, etc. By the time you go through this exercise of transferring the line drawing from black/white to color and then from the color line drawing to the sketch, you've also damn near memorized all 30+termination points and 12 different colors and where they go.

So, today, under the watchful eyes of the shop supervisor, we start pulling some wire. Little DIY tip here on 12V modular wiring that I've always used to save money, since wire is freakiing expensive when purchased in small amounts. I bought a ton of different colors of shrink tubing years ago (I think it was 1500 or so pieces), and I just buy white wire in bulk and use that for all "non-critical" modular wiring, and just tag every 9-12" of line and the ends with a little piece of that shrink wrap to keep the circuits separated, while being able to get a higher-quality wire. so it'll look like a mass of white wires inside the loom wrap, it's just an identifiable mass of white wires. Also a firm believer in planning and dry fitting and testing before wrapping, my OCD and messy wiring don't mix at all, so I tend to go a little crazy here.

Sorry for the long-winded post. Admin, please feel free to tell me if I need to break these up or remove photos. Next round will be determined by parts arriving. Most likely it'll be the hub and suspension rebuilds, slaughtering a goat to the rust gods to see if I can get the spokes polished or if I'm going to have to break down and remove/powdercoat/replace all of them, brake system rebuild, then tackle the engine. Incidentally, if anyone has a 450 motor that is out of the bike, but complete - some pictures of all four sides would really help me out here. It just helps make the exploded diagram work in my head.
Until next time - just remember that you only have to be 2% smarter than what you're working against, always check for ground and continuity before panic, righty tighty left loosey goes backwards when your looking at the wrong side of the bolt, and anyone can do this. They built these things with technology and equipment that wouldn't even manage an oil change on some of today's cars, always be patient and when you get stuck, start talking about it (that's where these forums are great).
tl/dr: Some idiot with a wrench got ahold of a pile of scrap, took pictures of it.





























