S
^^ Nice job restoring
Thanks man I absolutely find no greater joy in life than finding a neglected bike and bringing it back to life.
Here are pics of some neglected bikes I found. Its a shame really seeing all those fine bikes rusted so badly - some TLC can put em back on the road:
schweisshund01/Georgia Gold 01/Gypsy Custom Cycles - Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
Neat.. how many bikes out there in the yard?
They are not mine - approx. 200 or so.
I got my Goldwing from him.
They are not mine - approx. 200 or so total (mostly metric)
I got my Goldwing from him.
Oh cool You work on bikes for someone?
Cool, which Goldwing? GL1000, GL1100, GL1200, GL1500, or GL1800?
I am now currently restoring a 1980 Vespa Piaggio for someone yes.
I do this as a hobby and I gotta admit - the Vespa Piaggio is by far the toughest project I have ever had. For a itsy bitsy 125 cc scooter you need itsy bitsy tiny hands which i do not have.
awesome post more pictures when you can
1981 GL 1100
Its my first Goldwing and Honda makes them well. I had to take the heads off and knock the pistons with a 2x4 and hammer after soaking entire crankcase in ATF and Marvel Mystery oil (it was seized).
I finally got the pistons to move freely, used a drill with soft steel wool bit to clean up rust from cylinder walls.
Now I have to get new head gaskets, timing belts, crankshaft bolt etc. etc. etc. etc. and then some.
Gonna ride it nekkid for a while after I find a light bar I like. Maybe, possibly turn it into a bobber or cafe racer - not sure yet.
Nice, I got 84 and 86 GL1200, the 84 is spare one and I used it to replace whatever the parts I need on my 86 gl1200.
These Goldwing is known to outlast any make and model of motorcycles. I have seen with over 400K miles.
I absolutely believe that - especially if you use Lucas Oil mixture in your crankcase - clean carbs with deep creep seafoam.
I now know how to split the crankcase on this engine and replace piston rings, rod bearings etc.
Honda designed it very well - almost hassle free to pop the engine out and work on it.
I was impressed with 1976 GL1000 the first one which used three actual briefcases in the back. At first I thought it was nerdy joke but later found out it was for real. Interesting, and how the evolved to GL1800. I think GL1500 is best of all. Wish I can afford GL1500... oh well.
Here is link http://www.tulsabikers.com/images/GalleryOfBikes/10-26-200176GL1000-side view 1.jpg