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11-23-2012, 09:59 AM
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#46 | |
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Neo-Luddite
Joined: Oct 2007
Location: Western MD
Oddometer: 465
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Quote:
http://thisoldtractor.com/gtbender/m...on_bracket.pdf I've made them out of 1/8" thick aluminum, although the original was zinc-plated steel. It goes on the back side of the brake lever perch pinch bolt. Mark Etheridge @ Moto Guzzi Classics in California likely has everything you seek - speedo, button and bracket. He's not so good with email, but try anyway: Moto Guzzi Classics 1831 Redondo Avenue Signal Hill, CA 90755 Tele 562. 986. 0070 Fax 562. 986. 0058 Email: info@motoguzziclassics.com or guzzirenew@aol.com Hours : Tuesday through Saturday 9 to 5
__________________
Charlie http://www.AntietamClassicCycle.com '69 Moto Guzzi 750 Ambassador '77 Yamaha XT500 '91 ATK 604 & '97? CCM 350 projects |
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11-24-2012, 10:12 AM
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#47 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Feb 2007
Location: Berkshire, England. Just off the Beaten Track!
Oddometer: 2,566
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All day in the fettling shed today, with the bike on the bench. First job was to clean up the oily mess from last weekend, so everything was washed down with brake cleaner, and then wiped dry.
Next I removed the carbs and gave them a clean up, before setting to with the oil leak. This it seems was all coming from the breather assembly, the short fat hose was perished and split, the thin hose was just an old bit of plastic fuel line, that was a loose fit on the solid pipes, and I feel this is where the oil came from. So with the whole lot removed, I made some new hoses, and installed new clamps, before throwing the whole assembly back together. Then it was time to sort out the mess that is the Guzzi four way fuel splitter, diabolical, what were they thinking? again all the rubber hoses had perished and were splitting, so all was replaced, I shall be removing all this in the near future, and replacing with the neater BMW system using three way splitters and a cross pipe. ![]() Next on the list it was time to set the valve clearences, simplicity itself, far better than the BMW airhead. so with that lot back together, I looked at the ignition system, the points were in great shape, so I just cleaned them up, and oiled the throw out weights, the distributer cap had signs of arcing off one of the contact plates? but I cleaned it up and the rotor arm, before checking the plug wires. Thse were way too loose in the cap, so I adjusted the ends for a tighter fit, but I will order a new Cap, rotor arm, and plug wires this week. ![]() With all this back together she fired right up, and sounded great, and there was no sign of an oil leak anywhere, so once real warm, I changed out the oil, I think the previous owner had over filled it too wich may have had something to do with the leak? Next on the list is a carb rebuild and balance, they seem out to me, and the tickover was way too fast, so far so good, should be sunny tomorrow, so may go for a ride. |
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11-24-2012, 11:53 AM
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#48 |
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Who Cares
Joined: Aug 2009
Location: Southern Illinois
Oddometer: 512
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Nice work Kev....yes over filling is a common problem...also, did you check the breather box to make sure the flapper valve was still intact and working correctly? Both things will cause oil to escape at higher rpms...
__________________
1974 EldoVert http://tinyurl.com/3uhqp42 1941 Indian HumV http://tinyurl.com/aueukc9 Bikes Most Gone http://tinyurl.com/3jzxa8x |
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11-24-2012, 12:40 PM
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#49 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Feb 2007
Location: Berkshire, England. Just off the Beaten Track!
Oddometer: 2,566
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Yes the flapper valve was in place.
Now I am curious about a couple of things, there are two gaskets fitted to each carb to head manifold joint, I see in the spares list it mantions four gaskets also, so I am guessing this is correct, but why does it need two? also is tyhere an easy way to balance the carbs, the write up in the manual seems ever so complicated... pull this plug lead, pull that plug lead etc etc |
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11-24-2012, 02:52 PM
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#50 | |
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Neo-Luddite
Joined: Oct 2007
Location: Western MD
Oddometer: 465
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Quote:
I prefer to drill and tap holes in the manifolds and use "carb sticks" to balance the carbs, but lacking those you can use drill bits to measure and compare the opening height of the slides. More information here: http://thisoldtractor.com/gtbender/m...cuum_balancing http://thisoldtractor.com/gtbender/m...ut_carb_sticks
__________________
Charlie http://www.AntietamClassicCycle.com '69 Moto Guzzi 750 Ambassador '77 Yamaha XT500 '91 ATK 604 & '97? CCM 350 projects |
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11-24-2012, 07:10 PM
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#51 | |
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mostly paved
Joined: Mar 2012
Oddometer: 203
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Quote:
You may be able to find a pair of later intake manifolds with cast bosses and threaded ports. I think they started in 1974.
__________________
Life's too short. |
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11-28-2012, 11:41 AM
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#52 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Feb 2007
Location: Berkshire, England. Just off the Beaten Track!
Oddometer: 2,566
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Ok, let's talk batteries.....
My Ambo has a battery that could start a 757, I have never seen a bike with such a large battery, but do they need one that size? What are you guys running in your bikes? I see the Ritmo racer has a much smaller Yuasa sealed battery, is this the way forward? |
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11-28-2012, 02:53 PM
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#53 | |
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Neo-Luddite
Joined: Oct 2007
Location: Western MD
Oddometer: 465
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Quote:
What battery you need depends on a few things, the most important is likely what starter you have. Both the Bosch and Marelli units like big batteries/cranking amps, while a Valeo can make do with something smaller. My favorites for Marelli and Bosch equipped bikes are the Odyssey PC925 (if the customer can afford one - $166 here), the YIX30L/ETX30L originally used in Harley FLH models (approx. $95 here) and the battery originally meant for the Mazda Miata (about the same $$). Some folks don't like the automotive style posts of the Miata battery, but I do as I feel they make better contact and deliver more punch that the others. The Miata battery also fits well into the original holddown frame if you still have that. The one currently (no pun intended) in my '69 Ambassador is an AC Delco 55-6, meant for a Ford Maverick and a few other US crapmobiles. That size is no longer made, which is a shame, because it only cost me $55 back in '04 (yes, it's now 8 yrs. old). Never had a battery tender on it, never needed a charge. Big and heavy, but then so is the bike. Going to great lengths to save 10 lbs. of battery weight is a bit silly IMO. Some especially "frugal" folks use the U1 sized garden tractor battery. If you go that route, please buy one that is sealed (doesn't vent out the top). Acid damage is never pretty...
__________________
Charlie http://www.AntietamClassicCycle.com '69 Moto Guzzi 750 Ambassador '77 Yamaha XT500 '91 ATK 604 & '97? CCM 350 projects |
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11-28-2012, 03:06 PM
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#54 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Feb 2007
Location: Berkshire, England. Just off the Beaten Track!
Oddometer: 2,566
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Thanks, I have an auto style battery in there that fills the frame, I also have acid damage on the r/h side, you can see it in the pictures
but if it is auto size they like, then auto size can stay.
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11-28-2012, 03:15 PM
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#55 |
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honestly
Joined: Sep 2007
Location: Upstate Ny
Oddometer: 2,256
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I had a generic giant tractor battery.
Worked damn great. Just find something that fits!
__________________
the carrot seed - honest country. Bulletproof VS. Bloodweiser - yamaha world super GP TT 5000 BW - 455 : BP - 100 |
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11-28-2012, 04:39 PM
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#56 |
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Horizontally Opposed
Joined: May 2008
Location: U-puku-ipi-sing
Oddometer: 5,293
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I'm using these
in everything...
Sealed AGM with 340 CCA. It's about 1/2 the size of the behemoth that screwed with the battery tray, and frame and fender. No splash. I've had one in the R100 for 2 years. Works great. I've got another good to go for the Guzzi... I get 'em for 70$ at AutoZone, our local national outlet... It's the biggest kid's powertoy/garden tractor sealed battery in my neighborhood...
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11-29-2012, 04:48 AM
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#57 | |
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STROMINATOR
Joined: Oct 2009
Location: Courtice, Ontario, Canada
Oddometer: 955
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Quote:
__________________
If you get far enough away, you'll be on your way home. Piss off, I'm in my Happy place. |
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12-01-2012, 10:36 AM
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#58 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Feb 2007
Location: Berkshire, England. Just off the Beaten Track!
Oddometer: 2,566
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So sang the Mama's and papa's, all those years ago, and with a frost on the ground today, and a blue sky laid on thick and high, California Dreaming was calling my name.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dN3GbF9Bx6E Now as it so happens I had a look over the new Guzzi California on Friday, I had called Corsa Italiana to buy a dizzy cap and rotor arm for my Ambo, and parked up outside was the new bike. ![]() It still has the style of the old original Cali, but being aimed at the older owner with spare cash, it is now more easy chair than easy rider, it has lost some of the edge of the original, which is a shame. ![]() But today, Saturday, was all about playing with the Ambo, I had an electrical fault I needed to fix on the lighting side, I also wanted to stick a strobe on and check the timing, so after taking it out for a warm up, and a coffee for me, I dropped by my local gargage, where the owner let me pull it inside in the warm to do the work... ![]() So first things first, I fitted the new distributer cap and rotor arm, then we connected up the strobe, and all was bang on where it needed to be, next job was finding out why I had no rear light, this turned out to be a rats nest of bad wiring and loose connectors. Well no sooner had we found the cause, Mark the garage owner, chopped the lot out and rewired the whole front end back into the headlight, and fuse box, all new wires, correctly soldered, and finished with heat shrink. And he never charged me for the work. It just goes to show, ther are still great people out there who care what they do. ![]() So another Saturday goes past, and the bike gets a little better, the next two jobs will be the front fork oil, and the dynamo cover. ![]() ![]()
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12-01-2012, 03:19 PM
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#59 | |
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Neo-Luddite
Joined: Oct 2007
Location: Western MD
Oddometer: 465
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Quote:
Which dynamo cover(s) do you have - metal two-piece or plastic one-piece? No matter what I've done so far, the metal ones rattle around and irritate the heck out of me. I never have them on long before I take them off again. The plastic one requires that you remove all sorts of bits to install it. So, I follow Mark Etheridge's (of Moto Guzzi Classics) advice - I slice it down the center. I actually remove a strip about 1"/26mm wide from the center. Then each half can be easily installed without removing anything significant. Fender washers under the fixing bolts will help prevent cracking.
__________________
Charlie http://www.AntietamClassicCycle.com '69 Moto Guzzi 750 Ambassador '77 Yamaha XT500 '91 ATK 604 & '97? CCM 350 projects |
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12-02-2012, 01:14 AM
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#60 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Feb 2007
Location: Berkshire, England. Just off the Beaten Track!
Oddometer: 2,566
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I have a plastic cover, I wonder does it serve a usefull purpose, or is it just a vanity cover to hide the generator? is it worth fitting full stop?
Thanks for the tip on the fork oil, I will go for a heavier weight when I do them, it won't be today though, as it is -6 here this morning, with a heavy frost, s it is a morning for hot coffee, and a little computer motorcycling ![]() Are there any tips on setting up the clutch side of things, as I find it hard to select first gear, and all gear changes are at best very clunky I hope I don't have to pull the back end apart just yet.
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