Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod

Lookin’ Good!

Interested to know whether or not your toes and kickstart interfere with each other, especially when hooking the pedal up to change down?
 
Looks GREAT!

I like the little High Rider tank, especially with a Corbin Gunfighter seat (but they're too hard for my bony butt)
 
Nigel - Yeah there isn't much room there for boots to keep the toe clear and the heel off the peashooter. Will have to fiddle with the angles a bit. Would be easier with a 2-1 like Mikes....

Paul - i kinda like the look too and had a one off racing hump I got with the bike I used to use with it before I got an interstate tank and then I cut the nose off of it.

The thing I like about the Highrider is how easy it is to work on stuff when it is still on. Plus, it has a crappy old paint job so there isn't any problem there.
 
So, on thinking today in between paying (hesitate to use the word "real") work, about why I am not getting first gear easily when stopped I think the clutch stack height and adjustment are correct. Maybe I just dont want to take the primary apart again...

I did the clutch rod adjuster till it I could feel it touch on the operating lever and then backed out a full turn. There is about 3/16 of slack at the lever.

I did use 2 new Barnett plates instead of the old ones that were in previously, as I had them on hand, with the three bronze plate that were in. I cleaned all of the bronze and iron plates in petrol. I seem to recall measuring the stack and that it was in tolerance to what should be expected from dynodave's site, but cant find that I wrote it down, so am unsure if that is true or not. Could it be the case that they need to "break in" a bit?

When I adjusted the primary chain tension, I did it to spec - slackening to 3/8" or 9.5mm from DEAD TIGHT. I measured this by depressing and lifting and measuring the distance the roller pins traveled. I had to push it fairly hard in both directions, so my question is how hard should it need to be pushed? I am guessing this is likely the culprit as to why I am not getting first gear easily when stopped - that I dont have enough slack?
 
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Does it stick into first if you allow the clutch to drag a little? That’s what mine is like and conversations on here have shown that so are quite a few other boxes that otherwise perform faultlessly.
 
Does it stick into first if you allow the clutch to drag a little? That’s what mine is like and conversations on here have shown that so are quite a few other boxes that otherwise perform faultlessly.

Not really that I noticed. I tried that a few times and it didn't seem to catch. Most successful was reaching down and giving it a good yank. Even then sometimes it felt like it went in but when I released the clutch, nada.
 
I backed off the tension on the primary and it shifts much better now. Not perfect tho. I used a 10mm open end in the inspection hole with a reasonable instead of hard finger pressure and I thought the play might have been a bit short, more like 9mm than 9.5 so I will give it a bit more slack and see how that goes.

I took it out on some nice sparsely run country roads around my house to bed in the new brakes and I noticed a bunch of things:
* soooo smooth. No vibes. Even my wife remarked the sound was smoother.
* it revs up fast. I need to be careful...
* it wont rev back down quickly after the throttle.has been open a while. Throttle snaps right back, so i don't think it is fouling. Maybe i need to look at the float heights?
* the front end bounces all over the place, so the landsdownes need some dialling in
* my indicators have stopped flashing. The running lights work but they don't flash. They did when I installed them. Grr...
* there is a strange whining noise that I noticed about 50mph or so, which disappears when I pulled in the clutch. Never heard that before the rebuild. Sounds like it's coming from the primary, but it could be the tranny I guess. I am using Type F and Redline lightweight shockproof. Any ideas?
 
Some of you know that I had a bit of an off back in march, about 1250 km south of home and broke my collarbone in 5 pieces.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod



Broke some stuff on the bike too. And since my shoulder subsequently froze up (still only ~80%) and we have been in/out of lockdown in NZ, I have been slow to fix it. I still haven ridden anything since then... sigh.

But, I have been poking at things a bit.
 
I decided to do a bit of an upgrade since my knees havent always been great since I played catcher in school for a long time and hurt them skiing as well. I can feel/hear the right one grate as I go up the stairs every time. So time for an ounce of prevention... or rather, about 5 kgs.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


After reading a bit, and on Matt's advice I decided not to fit a second adjuster for the tranny. I am hoping this pans out well.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


This is really a superb piece of kit, and really straightforward to install. As usual, Matt's instructions are great. Since the pic I have gotten all of the electrics for it hooked up too.
 
One of the crash victims was the primary cover.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


Some 240 grit on the orbital sander, and then 400, 800, 1200 wet/dry and a buffing pad on the drill with autosol, et voila.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod
 
The exhaust also took a whack.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


I cleaned it up and hit it with some matt ceramic bbq paint. The paint is really a great match and it looks better in person than in the pic. You wouldnt notice if you didnt know it was there.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod
 
As you can see from the post of the cradle above, I had my horn and ignition key hanging off the front of the battery tray. With the estart, these had to move.

I have a Stebel horn that I really like the sound of and wanted to put back on. But it is heavy and has broken two mounts and I didnt want to pull the rear end apart to put it in the stock horn location.

So, the meep meep horn I had on the front of the tray had to find a new home.

Luckily, it fit here and I had already had holes drilled there to mount it from my old RITA that was retired in the original rebuild.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod
 
For the ignition, I took the suggestion from @Fast Eddie and decided to fit a mo.lock - a contact free digital ignition lock that uses RFID.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


Grant Tiller made up a wiring diagram for me for +earth for this unit and my bike given the other mods I have made. You can see them at the link below.


 
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I had to find a spot for it, which wasnt super easy given it cant be behind metal, and with adding the CNW kit things were becoming cramped in the middle.

And as I had to replace the speedo cup, I had an idea...

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod



So, I made a bracket out of some thin galvanized strapping I had laying around.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


And sprayed it and mocked it up.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


Et voila.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod


It works really well (on the lift, LOL) and I think it is a reasonable solution. Time will tell.
 
A while ago I picked up a lightly used carb gantry from @joe czech and so I have installed it now, too.

gantry.jpg


Super straight forward, especially from all the previous installs and special thanks to @swooshdave for his thread.

One thing I did notice doing this and from posts from @Time Warp is that I had re-used my 32-30 tapered manifolds from my RH10 head in the rebuild with my ported FA head, which has 32mm inlets. So, I got some 32-32 manifolds and am back on the fuel mix analysis train. Will be interesting to see what the differences are.
 
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My L side NYN rear sets took a hammering. Completely bent my new mouting plate I had made at the start of the year and wallowed out the counter sink at the rear, rashed the foot peg and broke the brake lever.

rearset.png


I have never found a good position with these pegs and the brake lever was anemic, so I guess this was the final straw on this experiment.

So, back to the Don Pender Dunstall repops. These have a great brake lever, but the shifter was always too long for my foot. So, I figured out a jig to add some heat and pull them in about 18mm.

shifter.jpg


We'll see how these go.
 
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Other little stuff has been done too.
  • Straightened the silencer mounts since they were all bent up
  • Had the side cover repaired since it was dented in and the paint was chipped off. Looks flawless even from the inside.
  • A new throttle since my old one was knackered.
  • New clutch lever since that was rashed.
  • Polished the front axle spindle as that was rashed as well.
  • Bought a new front mudguard since it too was rashed and had a crease in it. I tried pounding it out, but it was not looking that good and so it goes on the spares heap.
Hopefully I will get it fired up this week.
 
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Wow, you have been busy !

You’re gonna love the E start!

It’ll be interesting to see is there manifolds give more oomph, they should I think, especially in the higher rev range.

Really clever idea for the keyless go unit mounting!

One question, what primary drive did you have prior ?
 
Wow, you have been busy !

You’re gonna love the E start!

It’ll be interesting to see is there manifolds give more oomph, they should I think, especially in the higher rev range.

Really clever idea for the keyless go unit mounting!

One question, what primary drive did you have prior ?
IWIS chain, mixed stack bronze/Barnett plates.

I also got the 1cm RFID tag which can drop right into the glove finger for.the Midas touch.

Muttster: A long, slow '74 resto-mod
 
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