Tuesday, December 8, 2009

S&W Shocks for a CB550

I had been trolling E-bay for sometime, looking for a good pair of shocks to replace the stockers. There are several nice sets, available and brand new. I'm not crazy about spending several hundred bucks on a set of shocks.

Awhile ago I got lucky. Instead of looking for CB550 shocks I looked for CB650 shocks. CB650's were around for a few years, never as popular and the CB500 and CB550.

A company had an old pair of S&W's for a CB650, starting bid $15. I emailed the seller and asked for the length eye-to-eye. The seller did not reply. I checked some websites and CB650 shocks were approximately the same length as CB550's - 13 inches.

So I went ahead and bid on the shocks. I had the only bid and won, $15 plus $15 for shipping, $30 total. Okay, they were kind of ugly but they weren't leaking oil.

They cleaned up pretty nicely! I took them apart with my bare hands, no spring compressor required. Repainted the shock bodies black and found a Rustoleum paint - Marigold! - that matches that gold color that was a trademark of S&W shocks back in the 70's and 80's.

Here are the before and after photos:S&W shocks on a Honda CB550

You'll see them on the bike later. I still have to take the cases apart, paint them and put it all back together.

The holiday season is here. I've now owned the Honda for over two years and ridden it less than 1,000 miles. Once the oil started leaking on the engine it became less fun to ride. When the bike is back together with the oil leak fixed, a rebore and new pistons, new shocks and a rebuilt front brake I think it's going to be a fun ride!

Monday, November 23, 2009

Searching for Acorn Nuts




Acorn nuts have those round caps and are (or should I say "were") commonly used as fasteners on twin shock motorcyles. These day there aren't a lot of twin shock motorcycles!

In the photo above you can see one of the old acorn nuts on the left. It was time to replace them. I figured no problem, head to the cycle shop and pick up a pair. I started at South Seas Honda on Nimitz Highway. They checked their parts fiche and came up with nothing. I mentioned to the parts guy, they used these nuts on nearly all Japanese bikes in the 70's and into the 80's. I found it hard to believe they didn't have any acorn nuts in stock. He went and looked in the parts room and came back with an acorn nut for a Yamaha. Cost: $4.99. Okay, that will work. Please make it a set. Oh, he only had one! The Yamaha nut was a different style with a flange. Forget it.

Next I headed toward Waipahu (I was working) and decided to check the Kawasaki shop. Same situation. They only have acorn nuts for Harleys, which are not metric.

I couldn't believe it. No acorn nuts. City Mill carries acorn nuts, however the thread for Hondas is 1.25 pitch, which is not common. Home Depot doesn't carry metric acorn nuts.

Next stop - Ebay. It still took some searching, eventually I found Johnny's Vintage Motorcycle - an Ebay Store. He carried the correct size, 10mm x 1.25 pitch. I ordered three nuts - two replacements and a spare. The cost, with shipping was $7 bucks.

The acorn nuts came in today. As you can see in the photo, the new nuts are a great improvement over the old rusted ones.

Continuing with the rebuild....

Sunday, October 18, 2009

KBS Coatings

I am painting the frame with primer and topcoat made by KBS Coatings. I learned about these products from craigslist ads placed by a guy named Jason who works at Mr. Sandman in Honolulu. KBS coatings stop rust and are very durable. The coatings are flexible, like a thin coat of plastic which should be durable. Jason's number is (808) 636-8995.

I am pretty happy with the KBS coatings results. Take a look at their website and the results look really nice. My first mistake was that I bought the primer and topcoat about six months ago and only this week I got around to using them. Opening the cans for the first time was very difficult. I pried the lids with a screwdriver and then used vice grips to pull the lids all the way off. The topcoat splashed onto the tool bench, the floor and on me. This stuff does not come off easy either.

Okay, with the front half of the frame sanded down I went to work with a brush applying the primer. The following day I put another coat and noticed the coats were not coming out smooth. Get out the sandpaper, smooth it down and apply the topcoat. It looked pretty nice but not super smooth. More sanding and applying topcoat and the results were... good enough! I figure most of the frame will not be visible with the bike back together. So I mainly want the downtubes, tubes on the sides and the swingarm looking good.

Then I noticed the primer and topcoat were getting hard in their cans. I called Jason and asked if I could add thinner to the paint. He said no, come down and get some new paint. He actually gave me a can of the topcoat. He said the primer should have been okay and I should not paint from the can. Yeah it says it on the can but I did it anyways.

So I went and got my free replacement can of topcoat and bought another can of primer for about $15. With the front part of the frame pretty much done, I removed the rear fender, wiring harness etc. and got to work on the back side. I noticed that the fresh can of primer still did not go on super smooth, it was better though. Then I sanded it down and applied the new topcoat. The fresh topcoat went on better than the original can. I think the first can of topcoat had aged and thickened, making it hard to paint the frame nicely and have the topcoat "level" - smooth out.

Tomorrow I'll do a little more finish sanding and put another layer of topcoat on the back of the bike. Next - put the front forks back on, then remove the rear wheel and get to work painting the swingarm.

I tried this paint on some other parts such as the top triple crown. It just doesn't come out smooth enough so I'm sanding it down and then I'll spray paint it with regular paint.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

The Rebuild Has Begun

It's been close to a year since my last post and I finally found the time to start working on the CB550. The oil leak (probably from O-rings in the head) had worsened to the point where the fins were saturated with lubricant.

The wiring harness has lots of connectors which I carefully unplugged and checked to make sure they all matched up color-wise.

So far I've removed the top end of the motor and painted it with KG (formerly Kal-Kard) silver coating. The coating is darker than stock, I think it looks good though as long as the color is consistent. After the coating dried I noticed there are still thin spots that need another coating or two. I might run out of the coating and do not want to order another bottle from KG (it's expensive!). If it looks like I won't have enough of the KG coating, maybe I'll switch to VHT silver engine paint.



The valves removed and lapped, then new valve seals were installed by Al at Cycle Tech in Moiliili. While he was at it, Al decarbonized the combustion chambers and valves.

Yesterday I removed the pistons, then removed the rings and cleaned them up. Pistons 1 and 4 were pretty clean. Pistons 2 and 3 had some carbon on the rings as well as in the ring grooves. I scraped the carbon off the rings and used a scotchbrite pad to clean out the ring grooves.

Piston ring gaps were also measured and found within spec. Okay, I admit that I only measured the top rings for each piston.

Next step - removing of the crankcase from the frame!