RobMan
Veteran Member
Try heating the outer leg about the area where it is sticking (after getting all the gas and fumes out of course) with a heat gun and see if that helps.
I don't smoke, and I'm not planning to work with open flames.Don't light a cigarette whist it's full of gasoline![]()
yes, but after ALL gasoline fumes are gone (flushing with cheap oil after flushing with gasoline). I have a grease gun ready for pushing the fork out if necessary.Try heating the outer leg about the area where it is sticking (after getting all the gas and fumes out of course) with a heat gun and see if that helps.





You have so many Honda spares, you should open a shopSince I'm stuck at the blue CB72'62 front forks, it was time to collect all my early front forks to find another useable one. There are two types of early front forks (both called type 1), one for the '61/'62, and one for the '63/'64 bikes, both have steel bottoms. The ones after 1964 have the later type (type II) with the aluminium bottoms. I needed a left fork for my '62, and luckily I had a few spares.
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All the chrome bushes are hand-tight now, the result with perseverance, penetrating oil and a little luck now and then (and a little swearing). While I was at it, I also found a bunch of CB450 K0 front forks, so I decided to take them apart too, to see what parts are useable and what not.
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Some are in really bad shape, even cut chrome bushes and broken alumnium threads.
Now, there are front forks, springs, shrouds and other front fork parts everywhere, time to register and label them for adding to my inventory list.
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I also cleaned the carburetors of my CB450 K0, and will put them back on the bike tomorrow. The weather is getting better, so time to assemble the bomber as well (I take off a few parts from the bomber during the winter like the mufflers, odo, carburetors air filters etc).



It's always a question worth pondering, but also one we will never know the full answer to. Some of the damage we encounter is fairly easily explained (not justified of course, but explained because of all that we see here with others' bikes also neglected or damaged by POs), but there will always be mysteries because no matter how much anyone of us has seen previously, there will always be something more unusual and bizarre waiting out there to be discovered. And as many have said before, if only these bikes could talk.And as usual, against my better judgment, I ask myself WHY ? and HOW ?
Not sure yet, but since I have plenty, it's not a today's problem. I regret throwing away damaged parts 30 years ago, and since technologies evolve and make it sometimes easy to repair that wasn't possible or very expensive. So, I will keep it, clean it, and blast it and add it to my parts inventory list under CB450 K0 / used / damaged, with a short description of the damage. At the moment this list is getting longer because I'm ready with labeling and organizing NOS parts, and busy with the used parts. For example, there are already over 100 CB450 rockers, dozens of intake and exhaust cams and many cam chain guides present.Are you planning to repair these forks, I would imagine welding the drain hole will be tricky as you don't want any excess inside the fork.




Send it to Cuba, those geniuses can and do fix anything, because they have to.Beyond repair should be re-defined, as beyond repair now, You never know what is possible, technically and/or financially tomorrow.


No, it's the 5-wire headlight switch, standard on the CB72/77 in Europe. the US has the 4 wire switch (difference is the parking light).The cylindrical component with the white, green, black/white, brown/white wires is a relay?
It looks like you are repurposing an existing hole in the shell for that component? Am I seeing that correctly in the parts fiche?









