From: SC_Tom on

"Wudsracer" <dirtbike52RemovE(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:e77fa21ti6v5p00t0m8iqeva6tbmufp3ti(a)4ax.com...
> >On Sat, 1 Jul 2006 12:52:47 -0700, "SC_Tom" <tomkimatoco.net> wrote:
>
> >Come on now, the forks on a 81 CB750 are just the same as the ones on a
81
> >CB650 Custom. I took my apart in about 15 minutes and had them back
together
> >in another 1/2 hour.
> >
> >Remove the forks from the bike, remove the top cap and tilt upside down
to
> >remove the old oil and the spring will fall right out. Place a broom
handle
> >inside the tube and using an Allen wrench remove the bottom piston screw.
> >Remove the dust seal and clip. Grab hold of both the top and bottom tubes
> >and sharply pull them apart. It may take a few tries, but they will come
> >apart along with the seals and bushings. Clean everything up with solvent
> >and re-assemble. For installing the new seals, go to the local hardware
> >store and purchase a 3 foot piece of plastic drain pipe of the right size
> >(OD to match the seal and ID to match the top tube). Before you install
the
> >seals, install the bushings and flat washer first, then the seals and the
> >retaining clip. Fill with the correct amount of ATF or whatever you use,
> >install the spring, and then the cap. Very easy to do.
> >
> >Tom
> >
>
> Hi Tom,
> So you have also used a broom handle to hold a back-up to take the
> allen bolt out of the bottom of an old set of forks. All right! Oil
> field engineering rules!
>
> Jim

Sure enough Jim. When one does not have the *right* tool, one needs to
improvise.

Tom


From: Ted Mittelstaedt on

"FB" <flying_booger(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1151845978.848442.61190(a)m79g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
>
> Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
>
> >
> > I've done plenty of makeshift tools before, all I wanted to know is if
> > someone out there has actually done a makeshift job on these specific
year
> > and model forks, that's all.
>
> Oh, and Ted forgot to tell you his Honda's paint code, and the engine
> and chassis serial numbers! Only collectors with the same color Honda
> and a *lower* serial number should offer information about "quick and
> dirty" repairs.
>
> Ted must maintain the quality of "quick and dirty" repairs to the
> highest standards of hysteria. "Quick and dirty" repairs must only be
> performed with approved and certified home brewed tools.
>
> > Your and anyone else are welcome to review the parts
> > explosions all you want and sit around and armchair guess as to whether
they are
> > similar enough to forks you have worked on and done makeshift jobs on,
but
> > your not going to be sitting on the garage floor at 11 pm cursing
because now
> > you have to drive the van the next day instead of riding.
>
> Yes, Ted is *so-o-o* right. If you have never done a 100 point
> restoration on a 1980
> CB-750K, any information you have to offer about "a quick and dirty"
> method of fork repair is worthless!
>

No, it's not worthless. It's not what I needed or asked for, that's all.
You
assume way too much than what's good for your health.

> You are not in the position of being blacklisted by Sotheby's auction
> house, you know. Ted has his position and credibility in the Classic
> Universal Japanese Motorcycle Cadre" to uphold, and he will not bear
> the scorn of the esteemed membership, should one of his "quick and
> dirty" repairs be detected by one of the
> collectors of Fine Olde Junque.
>

Booger, please go out on a ride and get your blood pressure down
before you pop a vein, I'd surely miss your future ranting here if
you were to keel over.

Ted




From: Ted Mittelstaedt on

"Scott" <nobody(a)xmission.com> wrote in message
news:44a7130a.426649305(a)localhost...
> On Sat, 1 Jul 2006 11:12:09 -0700, "Ted Mittelstaedt"
> <tedm(a)toybox.placo.com> wrote:
>
> >I want to make sure there are no gotchas on this one, basically. That
is, I
> >don't
> >want to get halfway through the job and end up with the forks in a
cardboard
> >box going to a shop because some critical little piece that requires the
> >right
> >tool, not a makeshift one.
>
> IMO, you have been given adequate information to do the job.

Yup, more than adequate, and I appreciate it, whatever people may think.

> I've rebuilt
> forks with less information (and probably less experience) than you have,
> including forks that "required" a press and other special tools. I'm not
> going to review your parts diagram for you -- I did that for my bikes, you
> can do that for yours.
>
> But let's examine your options.
>
> #1, tackle the job and successfully rebuild your forks. Problem solved.
>
> #2, tackle the job and fail, then have a shop clean up your mess. You get
> to drive your van for a few days, then you can ride again.
>
> #3, take the forks in and have a shop rebuild them. You get to drive your
> van for a few days, then you can ride again.
>
> #4, keep second-guessing your ability to complete the repair. Your forks
> will eventually run out of oil and/or ruin your brakes. Now you get to
> drive your van indefinitely, and you still have busted forks.
>

You forgot #5:

#5 Don't bother asking questions or thinking about it, just dive in and do
it,
and if you stumble into something you haven't taken the time to think about
in advance and have to take the works to the shop, then come here and
post about it so everyone can have a good laugh.

I think some of the posters are disappointed that I didn't do #5. ;-)

Ted


From: Scott on
On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 15:42:48 -0700, "Ted Mittelstaedt"
<tedm(a)toybox.placo.com> wrote:

>I think some of the posters are disappointed that I didn't do #5. ;-)

Nobody cares about it that much.

-Scott
--
'73 CB450K
'82 CB900F (x2)
'04 FSC600 (SWMBO)
From: FB on

Scott wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 15:42:48 -0700, "Ted Mittelstaedt"
> <tedm(a)toybox.placo.com> wrote:
>
> >I think some of the posters are disappointed that I didn't do #5. ;-)
>
> Nobody cares about it that much.

Ted cares. He's been having an "Annie Hall" episode for days now.