jensen
Veteran Member
The next best things you could do is to bore out the oil gallery plugs, clean the gallery's and plug them with a copper or aluminium plug.
The next best things you could do is to bore out the oil gallery plugs, clean the gallery's and plug them with a copper or aluminium plug.
Had a nice visit with VHT member and 450 oil pump design genius Jays100 yesterday. He happened to be in Florida for his job and was able to take some time to drive over. He took my wife and I out for a very nice lunch and we enjoyed a couple cold ones in the garage afterward. Of course we talked about everything Honda and the 450 in particular, and he shared a few thoughts and ideas with me about cleaning up my 4 speed crankshaft oil passages.
With respect to that last subject, I had made some progress scraping loose the modest amount of buildup in the curved and circular channel in the inner crank throws where the feed holes are for the big end rod bearings. After finding something I could use to get in there to scrape the (essentially) centrifuged micro-debris stuck in each side, there was a small scattering of it on the bench. It looked like just gray crud, but I wanted to see if any of it was metal that could be picked up with a magnet. To my surprise, virtually all of it was.
The debris stuck to the magnet tip is illluminated with LED light from a flashlight, it isn't really bright color as it looks in the picture.
So now more fun will be had. Most, if not all, of the accumulated debris is out of one side but of course some of it ended up falling into the main bearing on that side as it came loose because you have to retract the outer main bearing race to get to the curved groove machined into the the inner side of the crank throw.
This is a basic look at where it accumulates, behind the main bearing outer race is the half-circle groove machined into the inner crank throw. I couldn't find an image online, and I'm pretty sure my phone camera wouldn't focus properly on it with all the other parts of the crankshaft in varying degrees of closer to the lens.
make sure you don't damage those O-rings (preferably viton, shore 80-90) by using the right bolts (you're showing the wrong bolts anyway).
Tach mount turned out great!
Thanks, it was challenging to get things straight and reasonably symmetrical using the most basic tools. I have a nice little air nibbler that my father bought for me years ago, doesn't get used much and I thought I'd be able to use it this time but the sign aluminum was too thick to fit the tip of it. So it had to be done the old-fashioned way, hard work. Lots of grinding and hand filing along with the hacksaw cuts since it's (or at least I'm) more accurate with that than with a cutting wheel. Now hopefully it's stout enough so the tach doesn't vibrate too much. My father made the one on my drag bike in the '70s, I came home from work one day and he had cut it out along with the base for the seat he made for me out of yet another (absconded at the time) road sign.
Yeah, well done. I love this kind of stuff. When I did a lot of commercial steel doors, I got pretty good with those hand held jig saws (sabre saw) and the fine hack saw blades.
Very nice work on the bracket, Tom. It's nice to see progress on this build.
Very nice to see you find time for your own projects in between helping so many of us out with ours.
It is nice work....from both the design and styling to excution of the build!
Are you going to keep the thin chainguard on the sprocket? If you ditch it, it would look more dangerous and thus cooler. It is, after all rotating weight.
That's only a few ounces. I should be far more concerned with the excess dead weight in my middle that I'll be adding to it as cargo...
The new LiFePO4 battery arrived a couple days ago, fits like a glove. The factory Yamaha battery strap fits over it like it was designed for it too.
I neglected to think about checking for enough clearance for the drive chain to run below the battery when I chose the mounting spots and the resulting height it placed the battery and box. Looks like it will be enough for a hardtail where the slack can be minimal and the height of the top run never changes during use.
More used parts gathering within my stash of accumulated stuff, found this intake valve cover I'd gotten in a group of covers and baffle plates I bought some time ago. Never paid much attention to it, but while cleaning it up yesterday I noticed this cover must have been NOS and the seller didn't realize it - looks to have never had bolts tightened up on the cover outside, nor a gasket stuck to the inside (or an old gasket ever scraped off it)
It's amazing all the little parts you can forget are involved when you're trying to assemble a complete engine from bits acquired at different times. Still finding the need for certain screws, bolts, washers and various other hardware, more trips to Ace on the horizon. And I checked all the well-known outlets for a replacement bolt for the long, double-ended threaded stud that is the lower motor mount where the footpegs also attach. Needs to be a 12x285mm and no one sells anything longer than about 200mm. Just wanted to avoid using a couple extra washers on the original bolt to take up the space from the missing thickness of the footpeg brackets, but oh well.
Wow, a forty year old virgin cover. What a nice tidy job you're doing on all the details. I'm in the nitty gritty of all the minutia of reassembly on mine and enjoying all the long processes of pondering each fastener and washer too. It's worth it because we enjoy it and, these days we need a meditation away from the madness of the wider world.
It's amazing all the little parts you can forget are involved when you're trying to assemble a complete engine from bits acquired at different times. Still finding the need for certain screws, bolts, washers and various other hardware, more trips to Ace on the horizon. And I checked all the well-known outlets for a replacement bolt for the long, double-ended threaded stud that is the lower motor mount where the footpegs also attach. Needs to be a 12x285mm and no one sells anything longer than about 200mm. Just wanted to avoid using a couple extra washers on the original bolt to take up the space from the missing thickness of the footpeg brackets, but oh well.
I may have a solution for this bolt idea…
It's amazing all the little parts you can forget are involved when you're trying to assemble a complete engine from bits acquired at different times. Still finding the need for certain screws, bolts, washers and various other hardware, more trips to Ace on the horizon. And I checked all the well-known outlets for a replacement bolt for the long, double-ended threaded stud that is the lower motor mount where the footpegs also attach. Needs to be a 12x285mm and no one sells anything longer than about 200mm. Just wanted to avoid using a couple extra washers on the original bolt to take up the space from the missing thickness of the footpeg brackets, but oh well.
Glad I'm not the only one who uses silhouettes for garage wall art but all mine are half size, I only use the fulls at the 200yd range.
I looked in the garage in a drawer of stuff like this bolt, and I have a hex head, 12mm diameter bolt that's 283 mm long over all, including the head. The head takes a 17 mm wrench and it has an 8 cast into it. There are threads only on the last 20 mm. PM me if you think this is what you're looking for and I can measure what else you might want to know or send a photo.
Thanks for the offer Bob, I might take you up on it. I'm wondering how you'd end up with what has to be a 450 motor mount bolt of that length that you didn't use unless you just bought a parts/hardware lot. The other lower mount bolt on the 5 speed (only threaded on one end as you've described) is the shorter of the two lower bolts and IIRC when I tried it in the mount area where the double-threaded bolt goes it looked like it was just a bit short for a flat and lock washer under the nut. The parts fiche shows that bolt to be 275mm in length so what you have is surprising to me, makes me wonder which model it came from. I'll check again today and let you know.
The bolt with the 17 mm head is actually just about 275 mm from the beginning of the shaft below the head to the end. I do have a longer, threaded both ends, bolt as well. When I bought the Bomber it came with a box of parts and a plastic set of drawers with all sorts of stuff, mostly for later 450's. That's where the odd bolts and other stuff were.
Thanks for the idea, but it's as much about the unnecessary length as it is about the threads. Either way the "bolt" would still be the same length, just without the washers if I added a few more threads. It's just me being factory bolt-picky. I'm just going to let it go, after all it's a "budget" project anyway...![]()