You might look into cb160 or better yet cb50r for a alloy front fender option.
Tim
Dick Eastman wrote:Do you set the cylinder head on an angle, or tilt the head of the machine?Tim Miller wrote:Dick,
I do a fair amount of head work on the mill using www.new3acut.com cutting system, which is similar to Neway but with all 3 angles in one shot. By using the bounce spring under the cutting head it illuminates chatter when letting off the seat. Once you get the cutters setup it produces a perfect .050" wide seat everytime. It takes a little to indicate it all in but the results and concentricity are excellent! You might be able to sneak by with hand held T handle but deflection is more than likely. Of course when you pull a vacuum it will tell you that.
Myself being a machinist/welder I can really appreciate all the dedication and time that you put into your build. Thumbs up to you!
What's next?
Tim
T-handle deflection must be considered - for my finishing cuts, I would ink the seats with a Sharpie, and go a little more gingerly; having good valve guides are very important, as the guides bell out somewhat with use, and can affect how straight the cutter pilot is.
I agree, getting that .050" seat width with the New Way can involve reworking the 60 and 30 degree angles.
What's next? perhaps fitting a stock CB fender to the CX forks - don't like the gap I presently have, as the CX used a 3.25 x 19, and my front wheel/tire is the stock 2.75 x 18. The entire front end is CX 500, the steering stem, both clamps, tubes and lower forks. The steering stem/clamps fit the CB neck well, with only a slight spacer made to take up a slightly longer CX stem.