Jump to content

duaneage

Free
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  1. duaneage replied to duaneage's post in a topic in Classics
    My bike looked exactly like that with the spoke wheels but I couldn't take the poor brake performance. I won't be going back to them. I need to clean mine up a bit, it was a little wet that day and I didn't have a chance to detail it. I like the bars just fine but then I am 6'3" tall so YMMV. I'm in Wilmington Delaware, where are you located?
  2. duaneage posted a post in a topic in Classics
    Here are some photos of my 1981 Yamaha XS400 Special I finished restoring. This was a 75 dollar barn find which barely ran and needed a lot of work. It originally had spoke wheels, leaky MAC pipes, and a terrible plastic fairing and side boxes from JC Whitney. It was almost parted out and was so bad I didn't take any pictures. The bike was stripped to the frame and rebuilt over a 3 month period. The headlight was not working, traced it to the diode in the headlight relay circuit. Overall it was rusty but never crashed. With 15000 miles on the engine a rebuild was not needed, but new gaskets and a chain/sprocket set were done. The wire wheels were re-spoked but the drum brakes did not have enough stopping power for me. I replace the drums and spokes with a front disk and mag wheels. This also eliminated the tubes. I replaced the seat with a better one, it will get redone next year because I need a little more height to stand over it. I replace the orange rear lights with red because I thought they were cooler. The pipes came from a low mileage Arizona bike. I bet they are among the last rust free XS400 pipes left on earth. The finishing touch is the fantastic paint job done by JB Moto Co of Wrightsville Pa. Jeff and Brian did a phenomenal job of refinishing the tank and clear coating over the reproduction decals. Their work easily exceeded my expectations for a reasonable price. Jeff and Brian are Yamaha fanatics and build cafe racers as well. Their site is www.JBMotoco.com The bike is stored again in a barn only better prepared for the sleep. It can be found cruising upstate New York in the Watkins Glen area, which is where it was originally sold at Lane's Yamaha 30 years ago.
  3. You have an intake leak somewhere between the carbs and the head. This must be addressed before damage occurs. Spray wd-40 around the boots when it's running and see if the idle speed changes. Chances are, the boots are bad and for around 40 dollars you can replce thm from ebay. Make sure teh clamps for the carbs in the boots are very tight, and that the airbox and related filter boxes are also tight. The filters might be very degraded, to the point of having no elements. They are pricey but I replaced the foam on mine with lawnmower filter foams. Last, check the valve clearances since they are probably way off.
  4. I have a complete set of front and rear with forks, brake parts, cables, levers and everything else to put spoked drums on the XS400. Contact me with a Private Message
  5. Was there a reason they would not replace it for you? Brakes are a critical safety element and I would think a shop would care enough about their customers to make sure they had good brakes. It's not a technically challenging task for a decent shop, unless they never saw disk brakes before. A list of ten hydraulic brake tips (suitable for framing) 1. Flush out the caliper. I would remove it and clean it out with the piston removed. 2. If the brake bleeder is rusty replace it. They are cheap enough. 3. Buy a new can of brake fluid, DOT 4 ( or 5 if your new cylinder calls for it) and keep it capped until ready to deploy. Don't mix fluids so if you are changing from 3 to 4 or 5 then you must remove all the old fluid. 4. Use new copper washers. Torque them to book specs. Don't reuse any copper washers even if they are only torqued once. 5.Use Denatured alcohol to clean up with. Do not use isopropyl alcohol as it has water mixed in. 6. Put the new cylinder on and use a banjo bolt with several old washers to cork off the output. Without a line on, get the cylinder primed and pumped up. You should have a rock hard lever that doesn't move much if at all. 7. add the caliper and line to the system and start sending fluid through. Keep the reservoir full and pump slow. Watch out for fountain splash from the bypass hole in the master when you let the lever go so protect the paint and other things with rags. 8. If you have trouble getting the air out, loosen the banjo on the master cylinder a little and bleed it out there first. 9. Once you have it bled out and it feels good, do several test stops in a row from 30 mph to heat up the fluid and check for leaks. 10. You might want to do an overnight test. This consists of wrapping a bungee cord around the brake lever to hold it down tight overnight. It should be in the same position in the morning with no leaks or changes.
  6. duaneage replied to akamor's post in a topic in Classics
    I replaced the foam with foam from a lawnmower filter. I glued it at both ends with 3m 77 spray glue. It;s been 2 years and still works. A lot cheaper than 80 dollars for new ones. Yamaha parts are real expensive for consumables.
  7. duaneage replied to drewpy's post in a topic in Classics
    I love how the exhaust was "dechromed" and painted white. Oh, and you have to install the exhaust and figure out why the battery is flat but hey it ran great before we put it in storage. If it sells mine is going on ebay the next day. I'll need to paint the exhaust and add numbers to teh tank.
  8. duaneage replied to Noah's post in a topic in Classics
    I've heard questionable things about the rebuilds wiredgeorge did, and the setup he suggested.
  9. Lean the bike against a wall about 15 degrees and the oil will not run out. That's about the same angle as a kickstand but it's the other way. The stator wires exit at the bottom of the cover and wind around the sprocket area. Needless to say, there are lots of places that can pinch the wires, soak them in oil, and short out against the engine. Like mine did. I replaced the wires, wrapped them in tape followed by heatshrink tubing, and used a heat gun to form them around the sharp bends and twists. The heatshrink goes all the way along the wires, keeping the oil and grease from the chain out. The stator cover gasket is a pain in the ass. I had to use sealant on both sides to get a seal and a month later it still seeped a bit. The rubber grommet at the bottom was a BAD design, they should have exited at the top like Suzuki did.
  10. duaneage replied to jdmjimi's post in a topic in Classics
    I've respoked both my wheels, I've also built bicycle wheels for years. You do need to be careful about a few things. 1. tighten the spokes evenly and only a little at a time. Start at the air hole and only go 1/8 of a turn on each spoke until you end up where you started. Otherwise the wheel will develop a hop. 2. Lubricate each nipple with a SMALL drop of oil to aid truing. 3. You need to get the wheel tight without overtightening. This is best done with a spoke tensionometer ( I have one of those) but plucking a spoke will do. All spoke should have a nice ring to them and sound the same. 4. Some spokes cross over each other. The point where they meet should be free and not rusted together. 5. When tightening a spoke, do not look at the end since spokes can break. You will lose an eye if not careful. 6. Hold the spoke while tightening and take note of any twisting that happens. When you put a load on the spokes will spring back with a ting sound. Minimize twisting for a true wheel. 7. True the wheel up and down first, then side to side. Start with equal tension and then adjust for true. 8. If you tighten on one side it tightens spokes directly across the wheel as well. Go in small increments. 9. Bent rims never true up. If it's kicked out, replace it. 10. Failure to properly tighten or true a wheel can be dangerous. If you are unsure of the wheel or don't like the look of the spokes I would recommend replacing it.
  11. duaneage replied to FathomYourFears's post in a topic in Classics
    I replaced the little o ring on the valve inside mine and it stopped leaking. Bought a bag for a dollar at Lowes. that was a year ago and it still doesn't leak.
  12. duaneage replied to 01ps's post in a topic in Classics
    Go to www.cycleorings.com and get a set of 4 o ring kits for the carbs. you'll only need 2 of the kits but for 15 dollars it can't be beat. Another suggestion: customize something else besides a well preserved low mileage XS400. There are plenty of bikes out there that are more suitable than an all original garaged kept bike. But as usual it's yours to do what you wish. It would be worth quite a bit in original form running well. Bobbed, chopped and customized it's not/
  13. duaneage replied to Reyji's post in a topic in Classics
    Before kick starting turn the petcock to PRI to fill the carbs completely and pull the choke out. Mine starts on the first kick if I do that.
  14. duaneage replied to flutterball's post in a topic in Classics
    Go to www.cycleorings.com and get a set for the carbs. there will be 4 sets so you'll have a spare pair. This will replace all the old o rings in the carbs. Cook the rest in carb dip available from an auto parts store for about 20 bucks. The o rings are 14. That's a 34 dollar rebuild job. Worked for me. The mikunis are the same as used on Suzuki and kawasaki bikes
  15. duaneage replied to Jryan88's post in a topic in Classics
    Get a new gasket for it, don;t go cheap and try to reuse the old one. Inspect the stator wires coming out of the bottom for damage. If they are frayed use heatshrink or tape to insulate them.