With the carbs sorted I'm chasing down anything else that could have caused the fuel leak into the engine on the Fireblade. Yesterday I had the petcock out of the gas tank again and tested it over a catch basin. Fuel flows fine when it's on, but it continues to drip when it's supposed to be closed, so a new petcock is in order. Fortunately they seem to be a regularly replaced maintenance item because you can buy them on Amazon for not much money.
The neutral light wasn't working, so I got some LED replacements - they're super bright. The wiring to the neutral sensor was stripped down by the drive sprocket, so I cleaned it up, reattached it and taped it up. Voila, working neutral light again.
There were also a set of wires coming out of the drive sprocket housing that look like they go to a speed sensor which were resting on the exhaust pipe and had melted. These too got sorted and re-wrapped. I'm also going to fasten that loom so that it can't touch the exhaust again.
There are still lots of little details to sort, but the Honda is coming together nicely. I'll aim to have it safetied in the spring and then run it for a few months and see if having a second bike in the garage is worth hanging on to, or it might just be sold on to fund the next project. In the meantime, I'm looking forward to running my first true sport bike.
Showing posts with label motorbike maintenance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motorbike maintenance. Show all posts
Sunday, 24 November 2019
Saturday, 13 December 2014
Connie's Ready For Some Miles
It hasn't been easy, but then that was kind of the point. The leaking engine on the field-found '94 Kawasaki Concours seemed like it would never stop dripping, but it finally has. I've learned a lot in the process and become familiar with the layout of the bike.
The previous owner rode around with the fairing off. The abuse to the bottom end of the engine from road debris cost me an oil cooler. I tried to get it repaired through the metal shop at our school, but it turned out not to be an easy fix. I eventually gave ebay a try purchasing a replacement oil cooler through Pinwall Cycle Parts. I'd highly recommend them. The cooler I got off a '97 was in fantastic shape, got to me very quickly and cost 1/8th what a new one does.
With the bottom end sorted out it's time to look to the fairings. The bike has been dropped on one side, and the fairings need some TLC. With the fairings sorted the bike should be ready to go come the end of the snows.
The previous owner rode around with the fairing off. The abuse to the bottom end of the engine from road debris cost me an oil cooler. I tried to get it repaired through the metal shop at our school, but it turned out not to be an easy fix. I eventually gave ebay a try purchasing a replacement oil cooler through Pinwall Cycle Parts. I'd highly recommend them. The cooler I got off a '97 was in fantastic shape, got to me very quickly and cost 1/8th what a new one does.
With the bottom end sorted out it's time to look to the fairings. The bike has been dropped on one side, and the fairings need some TLC. With the fairings sorted the bike should be ready to go come the end of the snows.
That's a new-to-me oil cooler that works like a charm |
The rest of the bottom end has been cleaned up... no drips now. |
Friday, 11 July 2014
How to Break/Resize/Install a Master Link on a Motorcycle Chain
A 2007 Ninja 650R with its pants down (chain and front sprocket cover removed) |
On top of sprockets, you also have a pile of chain choices. O-ring chains are the cheaper, lower efficiency alternative, while X-ring chains offer more efficiency and less maintenance at a higher cost. They also come in a rainbow of colours and a variety of sizes from little dirt bikes all the way up to thousand plus cc super-bikes.
Chain sizes and dimensions |
From little dirt bikes to bike motors. |
Here's a primer on how to break a chain. Some people say cutting a chain but you aren't cutting it, you're breaking it by popping the rivet out and dismantling the chain links.
How to Break a Chain:
- If you're removing your old bike chain, find the master link (it should be the one that's different from all the rest)
- Put a chain breaking tool on the chain and push the rivets out - do a bit on each side at a time until the chain 'breaks' open. I did this with a bicycle chain breaker (see bottom) and it worked fine.
- Once you've 'broken' apart the master link the chain will come apart and you can pull it through and free of the bike.
To reduce chain size on a motorcycle:
- if you have a 520 or smaller chain and a good motorcycle specific chain link breaking tool you can simply push the rivet through (see the video at the bottom)
- if you don't have specific tools, grind or file down the rivet and then tap it out with a hammer and punch pin. If you grind down the rivet you can also use a bicycle weight chain breaker (see a pic at the bottom) to push out the worn down rivet.
- triple check which link you want to pull and use something like Gearing Commander to make sure you've got the right number of links in your chain. (This is what I'm kicking myself for not doing).
- Using the bicycle chain puller on filed down pins, I pushed on side and then the other and then repeated the process and the rivet popped loose along with the outer chain links. Since you're only filing down the outer link (which you'll chuck after) it doesn't matter if you file into it a bit.
- With the chain dismantled you should now have two inner links ready for a new master link.
Installing a New Master Link:
- Install the little rubber washers on the master link rivets and slide it onto the chain - do this on the sprockets as it's easier to do with some tension on the chain.
- put the last two rubber washers on and the end plate and then use the chain tool or some other kind of clamp to press the side plate on.
- if you've got a rivet type master link you need a light hand and some patience to press in the rivet ends. If you're too heavy handed you'll bind the chain and swear a lot.
- The more traditional type of master link is the kind I was familiar with from bicycles. It comes with a slid on clip.
Don't freak out if you've got the rivet type master link, just make sure you have the right tool handy. The rivet type link is very strong and performs pretty much like all the other links if installed properly, which is why you'll find it exclusively on high performance chains. Check out the youtube video at the bottom for a good primer on how to do this.
If you take your time and work through it slowly, you'll have a new chain on in no time. If you want to get into sprockets the rears are remarkably easy to do. When you remove the rear wheel bolt the wheel drops down and the floating rear caliper on the Ninja 650r simply disengaged and I hung it on the frame. You can then remove the wheel. The rear sprocket is held on with your typical nuts and was easy to swap out.
This front sprocket is a f&#*er. |
The front sprocket was in good shape, so I gave up on it. Others online have said that they are pretty straightforward if you have an air gun, but even with a breaker bar I couldn't budge the damn thing and I can pick up a car by the fender. You remove the front sprocket by bending back the holding washer, putting the bike in gear, stepping on the rear break to hold everything still and removing the nut (it's a good fit on a big 27mm bit). If there's a trick to this (other than getting a compressor, air tank and air tools), I'd love to hear it.
Follow up with Chain And No Agony for how easily the new chain went on with the right tools.
Follow up with Chain And No Agony for how easily the new chain went on with the right tools.
SOME CHAIN & SPROCKET LINKS THAT MIGHT BE HANDY:
If you've only got a bicycle chain breaker, file or grind down the rivets first before you push them out. |
VIDEOS
A video on how to break a motorcycle chain (skip to 35sec when the mechanic comes in) in order to re-size it using a motorbike specific tool
A good primer on how to install a master link (and how the pressed, rivet type master links work)
How to measure a motorcycle chain
Hillbilly mechanics: how to do a master link without special tools.
LINKS
Gearing Commander - a handy webpage that lets you compare different sprocket and chain combinations
http://www.gearingcommander.com/
DID company chain guide:
http://www.didchain.com/chainSpecs.html
Motorcycle Chain primer on about.com
http://motorcycles.about.com/od/motorcyclemaintenanc1/ss/Chain_Maint.htm
Wikipedia's history and technically detailed chain description
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roller_chain
Layout of a roller chain: 1. Outer plate, 2. Inner plate, 3. Pin, 4. Bushing, 5. Roller |
ttp://chain-guide.com/applications/1-5-2-motorcycle-chain.html
How Motorcycles Work's awesome chain diagram:
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