wildmaninal
Lieutenant Commander
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2007
- Messages
- 1,897
My father bought this bike back in 1969 or 70 new. I mentioned to my father that I would like to put the old bike back on the road with his permission of coarse. He said it would be alright with him. I have no idea what the insurance would be for this bike. You can tell that the bike has been around, even though it has 11,000 miles or so on it. I painted the gas tank a while back and didn't do a very good job by the way. We had my uncle redo the seat on it. My father had to replace the original mufflers years ago with straight pipes which makes the bike loud
. I bought a starter for it a few years back to replace the original starter that only worked when it wanted to. The bad part is that the starter that I bought off of Ebay didn't work at all and I didn't find out that it was to weak until after I got it on the bike. Back when I was in my early teens me and my cousin yanked this old bike out of the shed and rolled it off after putting fresh gas in it and fired it up, my father couldn't believe it actually started after sitting for the length of time that it did.
My problem is that I have a truck that only gets 20 miles per gallon if not less and this is my only transportation. I asked my father what the bike use to get on gas back in the day and he said it use to get 30 to 35 miles per gallon. I was wondering if the modern fuel would actually make the bike get worse gas mileage? Or maybe it would help it get better gas mileage?
The old bike still runs but needs new tires, carb work, and (eventually) a new starter but it does have a kick start. I have the carbs off of it, I replaced the diaphrams in them a few years back don't know what they look like today. The problem is that the carbs were leaking around the press in fittings where the gas line hooks into them and they were also leaking out of the bowl drain pipe. So I tapped the press in fittings in with a hammer thinking that this may flare them out so that they would seal into the carb body. I figure I need to go ahead and check the diaphams for cuts or holes and adjust the floats or even rebuild the carbs if needed. The worst thing is that these parts can be very expensive. I'm hoping that I'll be able to get away with adjusting the floats and maybe stopping the leak.
It makes me sick that I sold my 1969 Honda cb 350 for $450 a while back. I only paid $400 for it and did a little work on it then decided that with my physical condition that maybe I don't need to be on a motorcycle. With the price of gas going up I may have no choice but to put the 1970 model back on the road to help my money situation.
I hate seeing the old bike set around, but at the same time I hope that it would be worth my time and money getting it back to road worthy condition.
My problem is that I have a truck that only gets 20 miles per gallon if not less and this is my only transportation. I asked my father what the bike use to get on gas back in the day and he said it use to get 30 to 35 miles per gallon. I was wondering if the modern fuel would actually make the bike get worse gas mileage? Or maybe it would help it get better gas mileage?
The old bike still runs but needs new tires, carb work, and (eventually) a new starter but it does have a kick start. I have the carbs off of it, I replaced the diaphrams in them a few years back don't know what they look like today. The problem is that the carbs were leaking around the press in fittings where the gas line hooks into them and they were also leaking out of the bowl drain pipe. So I tapped the press in fittings in with a hammer thinking that this may flare them out so that they would seal into the carb body. I figure I need to go ahead and check the diaphams for cuts or holes and adjust the floats or even rebuild the carbs if needed. The worst thing is that these parts can be very expensive. I'm hoping that I'll be able to get away with adjusting the floats and maybe stopping the leak.
It makes me sick that I sold my 1969 Honda cb 350 for $450 a while back. I only paid $400 for it and did a little work on it then decided that with my physical condition that maybe I don't need to be on a motorcycle. With the price of gas going up I may have no choice but to put the 1970 model back on the road to help my money situation.
I hate seeing the old bike set around, but at the same time I hope that it would be worth my time and money getting it back to road worthy condition.