Monday, 3 September 2012

A day in the garage

As some of you will know, as of last week I'm now unemployed. Things had been going downhill at work for the last year, and I finally decided that I'd had 'enough'. Hopefully, I'll get something else soon but it gives me some time to get some work done on the bikes.
I'd bought another (white) Traveller 4 or 5 years ago, but had never ridden it. It's a 1998 model like my silver bike, and the odometer reads just over 30,000 miles (or possibly km, will find out which when I ride it). It was in reasonably good condition when I bought it, but more importantly it was cheap! Cheaper that I paid for a used MZ ETZ 250 23 years ago! Or to put it another way – so cheap that I didn't hesitate to buy it even though I didn't really need it.
As I wasn't using it, I put it in the garage and at least once a fortnight, started the engine and warmed the bike up until the fans cut in, to ensure oil was being circulated round the engine and (hopefully) drive out any water that had got in through condensation.
About a years ago I decided to put it back on the road, so fitted new tyres, painted the rusty swing arm and replaced all the bearings (slight 'clonkiness'). I'd also taken the bodywork off to repair various cracks,  had fitted a pair of Brembo calipers, and welded a rack onto the pannier mounts. Post
Unfortunately, soon after this I became very busy, so the bike was abandoned in the garage after I had squirted oil down the spark plug hole and sprayed everything with WD40 to stop it rusting.
I decided to start the process of getting it back on the road, as I might get a job which requires commuting and I don't really want to use the silver Traveller for this, so tried starting it to no avail. The petrol in the tank had become a bit viscous and didn't smell 'right', so that was drained out. I stripped the carbs to find them full of orangey/brown sludge and all the jets blocked. So it was dig out the ultrasonic cleaner and start to clean it up. I got most of the gunge off, but remember that I'd bought a 'spare' set of carbs some years ago (cheap on Ebay). I dug them out and they were very clean so I fitted them without checking or adjusting them. I just pushed them onto the inlet stubs (without tightening the clips), fitted the cables, and connected them to a remote fuel tank full of 'clean' petrol – I didn't even bother connecting the airfilter.
Connected the battery, choke on, pressed the button, and …....... the bike started at once!! However, the mixture of oil down the sparkplug hole and the WD40 burning off of the exhaust meant that I had to quickly abandon the garage! The bike kept running and soon settled down to a nice steady tickover, and the smoke soon cleared.
It ran very smoothly without any unusual rattles, and would take a bit of throttle and revved cleanly (although a bit noisily from the unfiltered carbs. I ran the bike until it got hot enough for the fans to switch on, then switched it off and allowed it to cool.
Terry came round to see me soon after, so it was back out to the garage to start the bike again. Once again it started immediately, and thankfully this time without any smoke.
After tea I started it a third time, and again it started OK. I'll probably take the carbs off to check the settings, then fit them properly and connected to the airbox that contains one of my DIY airfilters.
I'm really pleased that the bike started so easily, and it moves to project on a lot further. I've basically just got to paint things and reassemble it, but as we all know things don't always go as smoothly as we think!

This is when I started it for the 3rd time. Previously it had been in the middle of the garage, but I'd moved it to the side and put its pannier frames under it. Next time I'll remember to photo the bike before I put it away!

Note remote fuel tank. This is one of the best things I've ever bought because it allows you to adjust carbs with the engine running, and avoids constantly lifting the tank off and on. Available cheaply on Ebay.

It lives! See, look at the rev counter!





Saturday, 1 September 2012

Cool fountain

Haven't had a fountain for a while, so here's a really impressive one - the Burj Dubai Khalifa Fountain in Dubai.


Festival of 1000 Bikes

The Festival of 1000 Bikes is an annual event organised by the VMCC. Held at Mallory Park, it a similar event to the Coupes Moto Legende in that lots of classic bikes turn up and some are taken out on the track. This year's event was held in July and there's a report here.
I also found a gallery of photos, including this one of a much modified Vincent.

Details of next years event here.

Friday, 31 August 2012

Cool album cover


Friday bike

This week's bike is one that I'd forgotten about, but was featured in a lot of magazines in the 70s, and I once saw one in a museum.
The Silk 700S was basically a modernised Scott engine in a Spondon race based frame. Very expensive and rare, only 148 were built and one has come up on British Ebay less that 100 miles from my house (No, I'm not thinking of buying it!)
Some pictures found on the Web:


And this is the bike on Ebay:





As you can see, it in 'mid restoration' but seems to be mostly there. Ebay listing: here, and there's a gallery of photos of the restoration so far.

Some articles on the Silk, here, here, and here.

If anyone reading this buys the one on Ebay, let us know.