wentwest
Veteran Member
I'm late starting this thread, because I stumbled on a 67 CB450 in CL last year at the end of September, when the COVID stuff was still sort of new and no one knew what was happening. I knew that I needed a project and that, after years of picking up neglected bikes that needed some attention, fixing them up and then selling them it was time to take on a real project. Long story short, I bought this Bomber pretty much complete, not running, filthy from years in a dry, hot barn in inland California. No rust, but a world of spiders, grease and dirt.

It has a K4 engine but a true Bomber frame. It came with boxes of spares, 8 extra carbs, 2 Mikuni slide carbs, and 2 partial Bomber engines. Neither partial engine had a head or a cam chain, but one was pretty complete otherwise and has a 3 mm overbore and oversize pistons, but only 1 set of rings. That engine has a starter, clutch, stator and alternator, etc. The photo is the bike before and after a lot of cleaning. With some work I got it to crank and eventually it started and ran well on the right cylinder but very poorly on the left, chuffing back through the carb. The compression is equal at about 175, the valves were not too far out of adjustment. I put in new plugs and swapped out the left coil for another one I had. No change. I swapped out the carb for another one that I rebuilt - no change. I changed the condensers, I cleaned and reset the points many times, I rebuilt the advancer mechanism. No change. At that point I decided to stop and take the engine out of the frame so I could examine it fully and so I could strip all the flat black paint on the frame and fenders and generally get it together.

It has a K4 engine but a true Bomber frame. It came with boxes of spares, 8 extra carbs, 2 Mikuni slide carbs, and 2 partial Bomber engines. Neither partial engine had a head or a cam chain, but one was pretty complete otherwise and has a 3 mm overbore and oversize pistons, but only 1 set of rings. That engine has a starter, clutch, stator and alternator, etc. The photo is the bike before and after a lot of cleaning. With some work I got it to crank and eventually it started and ran well on the right cylinder but very poorly on the left, chuffing back through the carb. The compression is equal at about 175, the valves were not too far out of adjustment. I put in new plugs and swapped out the left coil for another one I had. No change. I swapped out the carb for another one that I rebuilt - no change. I changed the condensers, I cleaned and reset the points many times, I rebuilt the advancer mechanism. No change. At that point I decided to stop and take the engine out of the frame so I could examine it fully and so I could strip all the flat black paint on the frame and fenders and generally get it together.














