Back in 1987 when my service and college buddy and I were young and reckless living in the Las Vegas valley we were sport bike nuts. This past April I traveled down to San Antonio to rent Harley's with him and ride the hill country for a couple of days.
Heavy bikes these Street Glides.
Not really my style, but I'm glad I gave it a try. Nice and smooth when cruising, ungainly at low speeds or stopped. Finding neutral is a chore too.
While I was there we did a full fluids change on his '08 Kawsaki Concours. Nice bike, but it's been languishing and needed some attention. The number of pieces and parts on this bike is staggering, just removing the outer skin requires a lot of time and effort, packaging is extremely tight.
Under a sheet in the corner of his garage sat the Suzuki he bought new in 1987 and hadn't started since 2001. I noticed it was really started to crumble.
It looks better in the pic than it does in person. So feeling the need to save this thing I had it shipped up to my location in Michigan and started the process of getting it running again. First step was to assess the condition of the fuel system (tank and carbs). Unfortunately the tank was really bad.
This was only a portion of what I dumped out of the tank. there were two places where it had rusted through as well. I soldered up the holes, treated the tank with some toilet boil cleaner than used the POR-15 tank lining system to try and salvage it. So far so good, it's been holding fuel for 2 months now with no leaks.
The carbs were not so easily dealt with.
These are Mikuni 36 RS carbs, a common upgrade in the day. Unfortunately there were glued together and when I finally found a rebuild kit (in Germany) the parts and labor added up to over $600. But, with a new petcock and fuel lines installed the bike started, idled and revved. Music.
With that phase over and additional work and cost now justified the driveline was next. I have everything but a few front sprocket parts and it can be reassembled. New tires are on too.
I love new tires...
Lately I've been working on the hydraulics and ignition. I installed a new ignition module today and got the front calipers and both master cylinders rebuilt. Then I de-rusted the gas cap. I think it's salvageable, although very pitted.
For fun I've been taking out my 2011 Honda CBR250r to track days at Grattan and Gingerman.
The saying about riding a slow bike fast vs a fast bike slow is so true. Over the winter I'm going to put some clip-ons and rearset brackets on this thing to improve the riding position. Already installed pre-load adjustable fork caps and 15w oil to improve the front suspension. It reminds me of my 1986 VF500F Interceptor.
More when my next box of parts arrives.