amper27
Member
A little background: I just purchased this bike a couple of weeks ago. I bought it from a guy that had acquired it the year before. He had done some work on it, touched up some paint, cleaned up the carbs, put some new gaskets on it and had tried to fix up the rusty gas tank. It was pretty gnarly and he got frustrated trying to fix the tank up and saw how much it would be to buy a recondisioned one, gave up on getting the bike going (he didn’t even try to start it because he didn’t want to foul the carbs) and he put it up for sale. The transmission would click through the gears and the engine would turn over, it seemed like a safe bet. The electric start spins but doesn’t engage, but the kick start was solid and all of the parts were there. It did look like it went down on the left side, some scratches in the muffler covers, the left grip cut through to the bar, the shift pedal a bit bent; but it is a fifty year old bike with not too many (11,000) miles on it.
We got the bike home and my son and I cleaned up the tank pretty well. After this season we will run it through the process again just in case there were spots we missed that we couldn’t see with the borescope. It was mostly elbow grease and time to clean it up. Once we had the tank on we adjusted the carbs, timed it, adjusted valves and it fired right up. It idles right at 1100 and is easy to start. So I took it down the road and back (maybe 4 miles) and everything worked fine. I rode it another couple miles and it ran well again. The next day I rode my bike and my son took the CL down to the end of the road. He said everything was fine except it was hard to get it to downshift. We took it out again and at the end of the road, two miles down, it got stuck in first gear and we couldn’t get it to neutral. I rode home to get the trailer but by the time I started heading down the road my son had gotten the bike in neutral, started it and headed home in first gear.
The bike was shifting fine and now it will only go into first and I can find neutral most of the time but not always. When I try to shift up the clutch pedal stops like it hits a wall. I thought maybe it is the clutch cable so I pulled off the clutch plate (as a side note the neutral indicator wasn’t working, I wanted to fix that and it’s under there also) and a bunch of eaten seeds and mouse excrement fell out. The plates on it were from 2012 so it has sat for at least a decade and I knew there were mice problems because they had gone through the holes in the seat pan and cleaned out a nice hole in the seat foam for nest. I cleaned the clutch cover, checked for the ball bearing, everything worked and looked well lubed. When I was fixing/cleaning the neutral indicator the roller cam would click through the gears. I put it all back together and adjusted the clutch following “some guy named Steve’s instructions” and tried to shift. I also made sure that the shift pedal and linkage are as close to parallel as I could get them. No change in shifting, but the clutch seems fine….
I had read in more than one place that some bikes need to be ridden a bit after sitting for a long time to get the grease/oil flowing. On that advice I took the bike out and rode down the road and back to get it nice and warm. When I got within sight of my driveway I tried to shift and there was no difference; I can shift to first and neutral but that is it.
My thoughts and hopes: Since the bike shifted well at first, both while riding and on the center stand, maybe some gunk went where it wasn’t supposed to go, or something worked loose after sitting for so long? Or a mouse got in somewhere and packed it full of seeds? So it should be an easy fix! Right? I can’t believe anything catastrophic happened on those very short rides.
I am out of ideas short of pulling off the right case cover. Any suggestions? And if I do need to pull off the cover, what special tools do I need to get in there (I have an impact JIS driver). I think you need a special tool to take off the oil filter? Anything else? What should I look for in there? (I have watched videos on the transmission and clutch basket to see how they work) but I don’t know if I can diagnose a part that isn’t working correctly. If I pull the cover do I drain all of the oil first or will most stay in?
Thanks in advance for any help!
We got the bike home and my son and I cleaned up the tank pretty well. After this season we will run it through the process again just in case there were spots we missed that we couldn’t see with the borescope. It was mostly elbow grease and time to clean it up. Once we had the tank on we adjusted the carbs, timed it, adjusted valves and it fired right up. It idles right at 1100 and is easy to start. So I took it down the road and back (maybe 4 miles) and everything worked fine. I rode it another couple miles and it ran well again. The next day I rode my bike and my son took the CL down to the end of the road. He said everything was fine except it was hard to get it to downshift. We took it out again and at the end of the road, two miles down, it got stuck in first gear and we couldn’t get it to neutral. I rode home to get the trailer but by the time I started heading down the road my son had gotten the bike in neutral, started it and headed home in first gear.
The bike was shifting fine and now it will only go into first and I can find neutral most of the time but not always. When I try to shift up the clutch pedal stops like it hits a wall. I thought maybe it is the clutch cable so I pulled off the clutch plate (as a side note the neutral indicator wasn’t working, I wanted to fix that and it’s under there also) and a bunch of eaten seeds and mouse excrement fell out. The plates on it were from 2012 so it has sat for at least a decade and I knew there were mice problems because they had gone through the holes in the seat pan and cleaned out a nice hole in the seat foam for nest. I cleaned the clutch cover, checked for the ball bearing, everything worked and looked well lubed. When I was fixing/cleaning the neutral indicator the roller cam would click through the gears. I put it all back together and adjusted the clutch following “some guy named Steve’s instructions” and tried to shift. I also made sure that the shift pedal and linkage are as close to parallel as I could get them. No change in shifting, but the clutch seems fine….
I had read in more than one place that some bikes need to be ridden a bit after sitting for a long time to get the grease/oil flowing. On that advice I took the bike out and rode down the road and back to get it nice and warm. When I got within sight of my driveway I tried to shift and there was no difference; I can shift to first and neutral but that is it.
My thoughts and hopes: Since the bike shifted well at first, both while riding and on the center stand, maybe some gunk went where it wasn’t supposed to go, or something worked loose after sitting for so long? Or a mouse got in somewhere and packed it full of seeds? So it should be an easy fix! Right? I can’t believe anything catastrophic happened on those very short rides.
I am out of ideas short of pulling off the right case cover. Any suggestions? And if I do need to pull off the cover, what special tools do I need to get in there (I have an impact JIS driver). I think you need a special tool to take off the oil filter? Anything else? What should I look for in there? (I have watched videos on the transmission and clutch basket to see how they work) but I don’t know if I can diagnose a part that isn’t working correctly. If I pull the cover do I drain all of the oil first or will most stay in?
Thanks in advance for any help!















