I picked up Non-Fray Expandable Braided Sleeving from
CableOrganizer. While the caps were new, the cables weren't looking so hot. The other end where the cable screws into the ignition coil was pretty dirty and torn up. It appears to be made out of a very thin and soft aluminum. Overall, it creates a much cleaner and professional image and I'm happy with the results. The braided cable is heat resistant up to 257°F.
I never liked how the ground cable was unshielded. The metal braided was starting to fray in misc. areas and get dirty. I cleaned both contact ends heat-shrinked the entire cable with double reinforcing on each end.
Here are the bike's ignition coils. 47 year old pieces of electrical equipment. They have been stripped of paint, rust removed, sanded, and all contacts cleaned. There was quite a bit of rust on these poor things. I'm thinking I'll just paint these black. Though they might look nice with just a clear coat if I can polish them up nice enough. Here's a photo of what they looked like before:
Original Ignition Coil
A methyl ethyl ketone solution that's been soaking for about 30 hours to try and dissolve the polyurethane Kreem liner in the tank. So far it seems to be doing a pretty good job. I'm eager to move onto removing the rust left in the tank. It looks as though the rust was never previously addressed. Just poorly covered with Kreem liner. I was able to carve a piece of cork to fit the hole where the petcock connects. It is completely resistant to the chemicals corrosion. The tank is covered in plastics in my attempt to save the paint through this whole process. We'll see how it fairs when I'm done.
I also placed an order for the e-ignition ($325 for CA). Figured I'd do it right the first time even though I paid to have someone just set up the ignition/timing.