Basket CaseBasket CaseI inherited a basket case bike from an uncle recently. I'm glad I found this forum, looks like a wealth of knowledge here. I'm at the point of deciding if I want to try and restore, sell, or part out this bike. I threw as much of the bike back together as I could to try to get an inventory of parts needed. I'm still trying to figure out what exactly I have here. Best I could tell it's a 64 Dream 305
Frame Number: CA78-108172 Engine Number: CA77E-108167 Does this mean it has had the engine replaced, or is this normal?
Re: Basket CaseWelcome to the honda305 Forum!
Most of the bikes in this family - CA, CB, CL - will NOT have matching frame and motor numbers. Looks like your numbers are very close and I would call it an original set, with great confidence. Enter your bike into the honda305.com Registry https://www.honda305.com/registry/ and I'll cross reference your frame to a Model Year. -- Michael Stoic
Re: Basket CaseThanks for the registry entry!
Your CA77 Dream is indeed a 1964 model year ...and with its original 1964 motor. -- Michael Stoic Re: Basket CaseThanks so much for verifying my bike info.
I started investigating, and unfortunately my pistons are frozen solid to the cylinders. I guess I will be splitting the case next. https://flic.kr/ps/42WMeK Any advice, or things to look out for before I split the case?
Re: Basket CaseBefore you split the case, try filling / soaking the cylinders with 50/50 ATF & acetone. Give it a few days or more. More is better. You may get some movement, but do not force it. Soak, try and repeat.
Do some data mining on this site for a lot of additional documentation on this from some very highly qualified people in this field. Post your progress reports... -- Michael Re: Basket CaseI let it soak for a week in Marvel Mystery Oil, but I know the ATF and acetone was shown to work best by popular mechanics back in the day. Thanks for the suggestion. I will give that a shot. The pistons appear to be at the top of the stroke. If the ATF/acetone doesn't work, I might make a press tool to try and get them to move. I saw on here somewhere where someone else had done that. I will post my progress.
Re: Basket CaseTry the ATF/acetone after the MMO, who knows...
One other approach is to use a grease gun. If you can come up with an appropriate grease-gun-to-spark-plug hole interface (fabricate an adapter) - this is one more method to try before a mechanical interface or a teardown (save for next, save for last). Grease guns produce an enormous amount of pressure and are a go to for unsticking old brake calipers and motor pistons.
|