CB450DX
Veteran Member
I promised myself it wasn't a project...
It's a project. And a Japanese 360 twin of a project. Could've not picked a more specific one if I wanted to (there was a Yamaha TDM 850 for the same price though.......)
Pictures will be at the end of the post, check them out!
After my first post (check it out for the whole story, and all the plans that fell through lol):
Click here (It's just another thread on the forum)
Here's a couple of things that happened:
-Finally learned to centerstand. It's so freaking easy once you know how to. I just put it down and keep my shoe on it, lean the bike to the right side till it touches the center-stand, and pull it up.
-Tested battery voltages while bike was running, pretty healthy, 13~13.6v.
-Had to tighten some of the turn signals, they would just randomly stop working, probably due to grounding to the frame. Tightened the nuts, no issues since.
-Ended up liking the original bars, quite a lot shoutout to @LongDistanceRider for suggesting I keep them and try them out.
-Put 2 brand new NGK spark plugs on it. DP9EA-9. (older bikes use D8EA gapped to .6~.7mm)
-Rode almost 300kms with her, mostly late evenings and dawn rides to and from my girlfriend, all chilling and with no one in the streets. Stretched her 3rd gear towards 100km/h once on a empty street that was being built in the back of my home, no issues. Haven't got my full license yet, so I'm pretty proud of what I rode so far and how comfortable I feel with her.
-Did valve clearances. Some were in spec, some were not. Everything looked pretty good and bathed in oil though, good sign.
-Took her to my trusted mechanic to take out the brake bleeding screws, they were all in various states of "bad" and I could not for the life of me get the 2 front ones out. Got 3 new original Honda ones. All good, new DOT4 fluid as well. Mechanic did let me know that he was hearing quite a bit of timing chain noise, which after hearing another 450 he had on the shop with the same exhaust as mine, I definitely agreed.
-Did the tensioner, noise was reduced a bit, but was still present.
-Felt my right leg hurting after a few hours of riding and realised that the "rider" portion of the seat is kind of worn out, while the passenger part doesn't seem like it was ever used lol. I'll either replace the foam or buy a new seat (which might be cheaper, believe it or not), I don't think my current one is original anyway.
-Removed the grill around the cylinder and head - This particular year doesn't have it, and they weigh quite a bit, they also go for quite a lot of money, so I'm storing it in case I ever need more money to fix her. On some pics I still have them on so you can compare how they look (I'm not too proud of my polishing on the head fins, I'll work on that when it's running)
-Got a CBX200 Strada float for the tank which works half of the time, but hey, better than showing I have no gas all the time - Had a small leak on it, cleaned it all up, checked all cables, shouldn't be any damage. Only noticed the leak when I filled the tank up though, so I had to run like 300m home from the gas station running the risk of becoming The Ghostrider if a spark flew out. Thankfully, nothing happened. I did a small scratch on the tank though which annoyed me a lot, I waited for a month for the tank to get painted... But luckily, it's hidden by the seat.
And then, she decided to break down on me.
One day after the gas leaked and after cleaning everything, I rode her for about 1km going to a supermarket, did my stuff in less than 15 mins, got on the bike again, ran for less than a kilometer, engine got rough and weird all of a sudden, she struggled to keep on, throttle kept her alive but BARELY, then she died. Luckily at a redlight.
I noted some weird noises when I tried to start it immediately, but no "valve hitting piston" sounds though. To my untrained ears, felt like the ignition was kinda bad and all over the place. Pushed her to the side, I was less than 100m from my mechanic but... It was a sunday. It just had to be. Plus, I also had a 4 pack of toilet paper on the bike as my gf asked me to buy for her and I was going to a BBQ at her place (weird thing to bring to a BBQ but I don't make the rules). Was also wearing a shirt that had "old bike lifestyle" written on the back which felt very appropriate.
Pushed her to the side, took the seat out, checked connections, tried to start her, no deal. Was running fine just before it, even doing some decelerating pops around 3000rpm as she always did.
Pushed her home for about 1.5km, then a guy stopped to help me and strapped a rope. Got her home. Tried to start her at home, she made a pop at the exhaust (which only happened before when I tried to start her forgetting to turn the ignition on and then turned it on). Was very careful to note if the engine didn't spin freely or if it made any different sounds, it sounded 100% normal, just didn't want to start. Did show some promise a time or another but nada, my uncle also cranked it quite a lot thinking it was choked while I disagreed but what do I know. At least that proved the starter and battery are in very good shape.
So, I started checking stuff:
-Checked for spark on both plugs and on both cables. Left spark plug was wet (probable reason is explained on "carbs" down below), but both plugs sparked. To me, it looked like a very healthy spark but I've also worked with a friend on a Beetle that had a faulty ignition coil that would spark pretty good outside but the engine would simply not run.
-Compression seemed fine from both the exhausts and plugging my finger on the spark plug hole (rudimentary tools, I admit, but I had done that test when I bought her as well and it felt at the very least close)
-Gas was good, I'm running premium gas (Podium as it's called around here, still has about 25% ethanol [2% less than the 27% that's on normal gas], but has a higher octane value and some additives, most people around here who run carbureted stuff only run their engines on it so I feel pretty safe. I also took a liter of gas out of the tank and put it in my 2 stroke 66cc (along with oil, of course) and it ran fine, much more sensitive engine imo.
And then I accepted this was going to be another month without the bike. So I might as well check everything I could.
Ignition Coil
My ignition coil and CDI are still original, which meant I could get a multimeter and check their values against those of the service manual, so I bought a multimeter (for the 5th time in my life, I think). Ignition coil was the first thing that was coming to my mind so I checked it:
-Primary circuit was a little bit out of spec, but this could be due to my multimeter not being the best.
-Secondary circuit should be 8k ohms to 8.8k ohms... Tested and... 15~16k ohms. Damn it. So that needs to be replaced.
Bought a new one from a known good brand, already installed it on the bike, the carbs were already off the bike so I haven't tested it yet. My mechanic did let me know he has a good one on the shop but it was cheap so I bought one anyway.
Carbs.
Took out the carbs. I knew they weren't "quite perfect" but they ran fine, and didn't really leak more than a few drops if I left the petcock on for long periods not riding.
Well. Busted. It was a bit dirty but only from what appeared to be old gas residue, easily cleaned with brush and WD-40 (truly does everything).
The left carb had the float completely down, no spring action whatsoever, even if the spring needle had it.
The right carb had the float at almost the right height, but it had clearly been serviced before and a new seat for the float needle had been inserted... Which cracked its walls.
They also had clearly different parts, a float had a brand, the other one didn't, the pins were made from completely different materials, a mess all around.
Luckily, on both carbs the jets and everything else were not clogged or anything, they certainly didn't look new, but they were all good and 100%. Still sprayed compressed air and a bit of WD-40 through them to be sure.
When I took out the carbs, I also realized that she was missing the right side engine mount.... Had to go across city to find a destroyed CB400 to take it out of her. Felt bad for the other bike, but one must die so another can live. Still absolutely mad at the previous owner for BS like this (but then again, he knows absolutely nothing about bikes it seems, I feel bad for his CB750K4) - I still haven't put the engine mount in place as not having it there helps quite a lot with removing and placing the carbs (especially with the cables). Will do it before I get the bike running and take it to the mechanic though.
I could try to just rebuild it with a rebuild kit (there's a known good brand) but I decided to just go full-on restoration and took them to a carburetor shop. It cost 1/10 of what I paid for the entire bike, but the 450 my mechanic had at the shop had its carburetor go through their full restoration and it looked brand-new. I figured that would be the best starting point for me so I did it. Took them to the shop yesterday. Will probably get them next week (have a wisdom teeth surgery this week as well so it wouldn't work anyway)
I'll post a couple of pics from the restored carb on the pics as well.
Cam/Timing chain.
I didn't inspect the chain when I did the valve clearances adjustment, which was a dumb mistake, so I took the head cap off to inspect it. Well... Definitely needs a replacement. not really lot of vertical movement, but it can jiggle quite a bit to the sides on the sprocket. Sent the video to the mechanic, he agreed that it needs a replacement.
Called my mechanic, we settled on a value to open the whole thing and change it. Seriously thought about investing the money on tools and do it myself, all I'd really need is a torquimeter (for everything) + angle torquimeter (for the big screws) but since I have a few things coming up on the next few months, plus girlfriend things, I decided against it. And if I had to pull the engine from the frame, which I guess I would have to, that'd be a nightmare.
Bought a DiD chain (made in Brazil though, the japanese ones costs almost twice), new tensioner and guide as well. But all of this will have to wait for the carburetor.
Well, since it's going to be opened anyway, oil + filter change, I also want to do/learn to do the tensioner for the balancer chain on the right side of the engine.
So... What's left to do, besides waiting?
Need to check the CDI but really don't feel like it right now. I did find original new Honda CDIs but not many still left to be sold, and it's not cheap... So I might try to check my CDI before I go to surgery. Let me know if you guys have any tips or if this has any big chance of being CDI-related.
Also, found new original Honda cams... Same price as the CDI... Thinking about it.
I also learned that Isopropyl Alcohol absolutely destroys the chrome polishing on the radiator side covers... I have no f@#&^n idea why.
All in all, I can still appreciate her at my garage at least, much better than when the gas tank was being painted and it did not look like a bike. If I ever have an issue with it again, I'm buying a plastic gas tank and putting it on it (there's a few being sold, same size and looks of the original, just... plastic, at least it doesn't rust)
Now, for the pics. Enjoy!
Forgot to post the oil change pic:
It's a project. And a Japanese 360 twin of a project. Could've not picked a more specific one if I wanted to (there was a Yamaha TDM 850 for the same price though.......)
Pictures will be at the end of the post, check them out!
After my first post (check it out for the whole story, and all the plans that fell through lol):
Click here (It's just another thread on the forum)
Here's a couple of things that happened:
-Finally learned to centerstand. It's so freaking easy once you know how to. I just put it down and keep my shoe on it, lean the bike to the right side till it touches the center-stand, and pull it up.
-Tested battery voltages while bike was running, pretty healthy, 13~13.6v.
-Had to tighten some of the turn signals, they would just randomly stop working, probably due to grounding to the frame. Tightened the nuts, no issues since.
-Ended up liking the original bars, quite a lot shoutout to @LongDistanceRider for suggesting I keep them and try them out.
-Put 2 brand new NGK spark plugs on it. DP9EA-9. (older bikes use D8EA gapped to .6~.7mm)
-Rode almost 300kms with her, mostly late evenings and dawn rides to and from my girlfriend, all chilling and with no one in the streets. Stretched her 3rd gear towards 100km/h once on a empty street that was being built in the back of my home, no issues. Haven't got my full license yet, so I'm pretty proud of what I rode so far and how comfortable I feel with her.
-Did valve clearances. Some were in spec, some were not. Everything looked pretty good and bathed in oil though, good sign.
-Took her to my trusted mechanic to take out the brake bleeding screws, they were all in various states of "bad" and I could not for the life of me get the 2 front ones out. Got 3 new original Honda ones. All good, new DOT4 fluid as well. Mechanic did let me know that he was hearing quite a bit of timing chain noise, which after hearing another 450 he had on the shop with the same exhaust as mine, I definitely agreed.
-Did the tensioner, noise was reduced a bit, but was still present.
-Felt my right leg hurting after a few hours of riding and realised that the "rider" portion of the seat is kind of worn out, while the passenger part doesn't seem like it was ever used lol. I'll either replace the foam or buy a new seat (which might be cheaper, believe it or not), I don't think my current one is original anyway.
-Removed the grill around the cylinder and head - This particular year doesn't have it, and they weigh quite a bit, they also go for quite a lot of money, so I'm storing it in case I ever need more money to fix her. On some pics I still have them on so you can compare how they look (I'm not too proud of my polishing on the head fins, I'll work on that when it's running)
-Got a CBX200 Strada float for the tank which works half of the time, but hey, better than showing I have no gas all the time - Had a small leak on it, cleaned it all up, checked all cables, shouldn't be any damage. Only noticed the leak when I filled the tank up though, so I had to run like 300m home from the gas station running the risk of becoming The Ghostrider if a spark flew out. Thankfully, nothing happened. I did a small scratch on the tank though which annoyed me a lot, I waited for a month for the tank to get painted... But luckily, it's hidden by the seat.
And then, she decided to break down on me.
One day after the gas leaked and after cleaning everything, I rode her for about 1km going to a supermarket, did my stuff in less than 15 mins, got on the bike again, ran for less than a kilometer, engine got rough and weird all of a sudden, she struggled to keep on, throttle kept her alive but BARELY, then she died. Luckily at a redlight.
I noted some weird noises when I tried to start it immediately, but no "valve hitting piston" sounds though. To my untrained ears, felt like the ignition was kinda bad and all over the place. Pushed her to the side, I was less than 100m from my mechanic but... It was a sunday. It just had to be. Plus, I also had a 4 pack of toilet paper on the bike as my gf asked me to buy for her and I was going to a BBQ at her place (weird thing to bring to a BBQ but I don't make the rules). Was also wearing a shirt that had "old bike lifestyle" written on the back which felt very appropriate.
Pushed her to the side, took the seat out, checked connections, tried to start her, no deal. Was running fine just before it, even doing some decelerating pops around 3000rpm as she always did.
Pushed her home for about 1.5km, then a guy stopped to help me and strapped a rope. Got her home. Tried to start her at home, she made a pop at the exhaust (which only happened before when I tried to start her forgetting to turn the ignition on and then turned it on). Was very careful to note if the engine didn't spin freely or if it made any different sounds, it sounded 100% normal, just didn't want to start. Did show some promise a time or another but nada, my uncle also cranked it quite a lot thinking it was choked while I disagreed but what do I know. At least that proved the starter and battery are in very good shape.
So, I started checking stuff:
-Checked for spark on both plugs and on both cables. Left spark plug was wet (probable reason is explained on "carbs" down below), but both plugs sparked. To me, it looked like a very healthy spark but I've also worked with a friend on a Beetle that had a faulty ignition coil that would spark pretty good outside but the engine would simply not run.
-Compression seemed fine from both the exhausts and plugging my finger on the spark plug hole (rudimentary tools, I admit, but I had done that test when I bought her as well and it felt at the very least close)
-Gas was good, I'm running premium gas (Podium as it's called around here, still has about 25% ethanol [2% less than the 27% that's on normal gas], but has a higher octane value and some additives, most people around here who run carbureted stuff only run their engines on it so I feel pretty safe. I also took a liter of gas out of the tank and put it in my 2 stroke 66cc (along with oil, of course) and it ran fine, much more sensitive engine imo.
And then I accepted this was going to be another month without the bike. So I might as well check everything I could.
Ignition Coil
My ignition coil and CDI are still original, which meant I could get a multimeter and check their values against those of the service manual, so I bought a multimeter (for the 5th time in my life, I think). Ignition coil was the first thing that was coming to my mind so I checked it:
-Primary circuit was a little bit out of spec, but this could be due to my multimeter not being the best.
-Secondary circuit should be 8k ohms to 8.8k ohms... Tested and... 15~16k ohms. Damn it. So that needs to be replaced.
Bought a new one from a known good brand, already installed it on the bike, the carbs were already off the bike so I haven't tested it yet. My mechanic did let me know he has a good one on the shop but it was cheap so I bought one anyway.
Carbs.
Took out the carbs. I knew they weren't "quite perfect" but they ran fine, and didn't really leak more than a few drops if I left the petcock on for long periods not riding.
Well. Busted. It was a bit dirty but only from what appeared to be old gas residue, easily cleaned with brush and WD-40 (truly does everything).
The left carb had the float completely down, no spring action whatsoever, even if the spring needle had it.
The right carb had the float at almost the right height, but it had clearly been serviced before and a new seat for the float needle had been inserted... Which cracked its walls.
They also had clearly different parts, a float had a brand, the other one didn't, the pins were made from completely different materials, a mess all around.
Luckily, on both carbs the jets and everything else were not clogged or anything, they certainly didn't look new, but they were all good and 100%. Still sprayed compressed air and a bit of WD-40 through them to be sure.
When I took out the carbs, I also realized that she was missing the right side engine mount.... Had to go across city to find a destroyed CB400 to take it out of her. Felt bad for the other bike, but one must die so another can live. Still absolutely mad at the previous owner for BS like this (but then again, he knows absolutely nothing about bikes it seems, I feel bad for his CB750K4) - I still haven't put the engine mount in place as not having it there helps quite a lot with removing and placing the carbs (especially with the cables). Will do it before I get the bike running and take it to the mechanic though.
I could try to just rebuild it with a rebuild kit (there's a known good brand) but I decided to just go full-on restoration and took them to a carburetor shop. It cost 1/10 of what I paid for the entire bike, but the 450 my mechanic had at the shop had its carburetor go through their full restoration and it looked brand-new. I figured that would be the best starting point for me so I did it. Took them to the shop yesterday. Will probably get them next week (have a wisdom teeth surgery this week as well so it wouldn't work anyway)
I'll post a couple of pics from the restored carb on the pics as well.
Cam/Timing chain.
I didn't inspect the chain when I did the valve clearances adjustment, which was a dumb mistake, so I took the head cap off to inspect it. Well... Definitely needs a replacement. not really lot of vertical movement, but it can jiggle quite a bit to the sides on the sprocket. Sent the video to the mechanic, he agreed that it needs a replacement.
Called my mechanic, we settled on a value to open the whole thing and change it. Seriously thought about investing the money on tools and do it myself, all I'd really need is a torquimeter (for everything) + angle torquimeter (for the big screws) but since I have a few things coming up on the next few months, plus girlfriend things, I decided against it. And if I had to pull the engine from the frame, which I guess I would have to, that'd be a nightmare.
Bought a DiD chain (made in Brazil though, the japanese ones costs almost twice), new tensioner and guide as well. But all of this will have to wait for the carburetor.
Well, since it's going to be opened anyway, oil + filter change, I also want to do/learn to do the tensioner for the balancer chain on the right side of the engine.
So... What's left to do, besides waiting?
Need to check the CDI but really don't feel like it right now. I did find original new Honda CDIs but not many still left to be sold, and it's not cheap... So I might try to check my CDI before I go to surgery. Let me know if you guys have any tips or if this has any big chance of being CDI-related.
Also, found new original Honda cams... Same price as the CDI... Thinking about it.
I also learned that Isopropyl Alcohol absolutely destroys the chrome polishing on the radiator side covers... I have no f@#&^n idea why.
All in all, I can still appreciate her at my garage at least, much better than when the gas tank was being painted and it did not look like a bike. If I ever have an issue with it again, I'm buying a plastic gas tank and putting it on it (there's a few being sold, same size and looks of the original, just... plastic, at least it doesn't rust)
Now, for the pics. Enjoy!
Forgot to post the oil change pic:
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