Got back to this in the last couple weeks with a different perspective. As much as I'd love to replicate the great top-end pull the 4 speed bottom end offers for the 1/4 mile with a much closer ratio between 3rd and 4th, the realization that this bike will spend most of its limited use on the 1/8 mile tracks in my 'general area', combined with the advantage of having a low mileage 5 speed bottom end plus a second 5 speed spare engine to work with has caused me to change course.
After a short exchange with
@1969 CL350 and
@rotorwrinch about the combination of gears used in RJ and Graham's 450 road racer, I found a pair of CB500T transmission shafts and gears on eBay to start the mix and match effort for the closest ratio 5 speed I can assemble to go the approximately 80 mph top speed in the 1/8 mile.
Of the two engines, the $75 nearly complete engine was the nicest in many ways but clearly I'm just the lucky recipient of its early demise. Despite the quite shiny condition of the left crankcase cover, the fact that the bottom end had never been apart and the cleanliness of the interior of the bottom end that proved it was low mileage, it led a very hard life. One plug hole ruined, spark plug run in at so much of an angle it only went about halfway and feels like it will break off if turned, a shift fork with a small gouge in it already and a horrible non-factory drain plug cross-threaded into the lower case. So, parts of it are beautiful, yet parts of it are as ugly as it gets.
On the plus side, the low mileage crankshaft is in excellent condition, barely any collection of debris in the sludge traps at all. Rods are the tightest of any used engine I've touched in a while. The upper case will barely need to be cleaned, pictures below are just as it came apart. Aside from the one nicked shift fork the transmission is in above average condition.
Amazingly, the grommet around the alternator wiring is still soft too.
But this, ugh.
Then there's the other engine, a $50 lump that came down from Wisconsin with my local riding buddy Ray who saw it in his travels a few summers ago while spending time there to escape the Florida heat. Both cylinders rusted and stuck, nasty inside overall but the lower case in good usable condition. The shift shaft, one of those things getting harder to find these days (I have two 4 speed shift shafts but they are different), was bent from a crash badly enough that the big flat washer behind the still-seated circlip was slightly concave from the impact. Had to clamp the lower case in the vise at the front motor mount and use a cheater pipe on the shaft to get it just straight enough to slide out of the case. And of course, the splines are fairly worn on it too.
But, at least this