Vintage bikes are really just a wonderful but expensive way to vaporize time and dollars.... New bikes may cost more and work flawlessly but they lack the charm of the classics.
I've been discovering that my CB450 came with plenty of surprises and oddities. Silly me, I bought it sight unseen this summer, after an interview of the prior owner, who of course swore that it would be running perfectly after just a tune-up.
1. Turns out it was running on just one cylinder and the engine was flooded. Problem fixed now, cleaned the oil filter and gave it fresh synthetic oil. Installed new and stronger coils and an electronic ignition kit from Charlie's Place. It all works nicely and the bike runs on both cylinders now.
2. The cables were routed by someone with a serious preference for bending them over forcefully. I bought a set of new cables from those guys in Houston.
3. Lubricating moving parts was probably considered a unnecessary burden for years, and neglected accordingly. That explains the vibration level.
4. The seat and turn signals, plus other random parts came from another bike (K3, 4, or 5). The seat was mounted on a home-made bracket that pointed sideways.
5. The grab bar was absent. I found a new one in Vietnam on eBay. Now I need a pair of K6 turn signals.
6. The brake line had been replaced with a steel one, which is too long and wrongly routed. The brake light relay was not working, I replaced it but that didn't fix the issue, next step is chasing electrical gremlins.
7. The carbs were gummed, of course. A rebuild-plus-cleaning took care of that.
8. The air filters are way past expiration date. They look as if they were made from cement. I ordered a new aftermarket set, the Honda OEM parts are ruinous. The new ones are announced for delivery this week.
9. The gas tank started leaking for no obvious reason (rebuilding the petcock should be relatively easy). Once I drained it completely, I discovered a layer of white and brown deposit inside as well.
10. Since the tank cap is coated in some whitish cake, and the cap seal is of course old and cracked, I'm replacing it with an aftermarket part. No big deal.
And the list goes on and on. This thing really needed some TLC.
So I just bought a second 450 K6 as a parts bike. All I needed was another project... At the end of the day though, it doesn't matter so long as it puts a deep grin on your face, right?
Btw, thanks again to our forum fellow 2wheel, for providing a correct K6 replacement seat!