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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 07 Jul 2013 22:35 #595462

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So finally I'm getting to the rebuild in the phrase "engine rebuild". Everything before was teardown, dismantle, take apart and unscrew. The first two are quick shots of the bare lower crankcase and a gear shaft. The first step was to just look at all the case parts and get reacquainted with them. They sat in baggies so long I forgot what was what. After a few days of looking at the parts diagrams and laying it all out on my workbench, I felt confident enough to start actually placing parts back into the crankcase.

The 3rd pic is the first part to actually be reassembled! The shift drum I believe. With this I learned a valuable lesson. Follow those parts diagrams with extreme precision. I noticed right away that a circlip was missing. But not until a few days later did I realize almost by chance that another part was missing from the shift drum assembly- a little 4mm x 6mm dowel pin. Yikes. How many more little parts like that can I miss? Anyhow, those are now on order.

The shop manual is a mess, in my opinion. The reassembly steps are spread out all over. There is not a separate section devoted it. Instead, its tacked on at the end of each part's dismantling instructions. It creates constant flipping back and forth with no clear start or end point.

The last pic is a complete gasket set from Vesrah orded off ebay. I've read these are better quality than Athena.


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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 22 Jul 2013 12:28 #597695

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A few pics went missing from the last post. Here they are.



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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 22 Jul 2013 12:28 #597696

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So previously I mentioned a missing dowel pin. Here's a picture of a new one I ordered (hand model courtesy of ebay seller). No wonder it went missing.



And that pin goes underneath the star shape part below to keep it from freely spinning. The manual calls the star shape "Operating Plate" but the parts catalog calls it "Cam-Change Drum". Below this cam-change drum is a positioning pin that, with the help of a spring, locks the cam-change drum into place as it rotates with the rest of the shift drum assembly. So basically when you shift, the pin helps the shift drum assembly "snap" into 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th gears. If you look close, you can see the track marks running along center from the pin. That's my theory anyway.



The snap ring (or circlip) next to the cam-change drum was put in place with the Harbor Freight snap ring pliers below. I didn't have this tool during disassembly and bent a bunch of rings. I had to order several new ones. Yes, I should of had this tool from the beginning.



Here's some worn out balancer chain slippers (or guides). The kz750 twin has counter weights in the crankcase that counteract the piston and crankshaft vibration. The balancer chain rotates two weights. I'm replacing these chain slippers.





Way back I had serious problems with a piston pin. It wouldn't come out without heat and a lot of force (which ended up chipping the piston). Here you can see scratching and scoring on the stuck pin and in the connecting rod. I wonder what caused this to happen?





This is the other rod. Much better but still some scoring on the edge. Needless to say, the pins and rods are being replaced.

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 22 Jul 2013 12:29 #597697

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Here are my "new" replacement rods from Mr. C's Motorcycles in Appleton, WI! Mr. C has tons of metric parts so check out their ebay store. I had no clue they were so close (just 30 miles away) until I noticed their address on ebay while selecting the shipping options. I picked them up right from their warehouse. Notice the difference? These rods are in much better shape- nice smooth bores.





These are the "new" balancer chain slippers ordered off ebay which also are in better shape.



I forgot to post some before and after engine cleaning pictures before I took the long break from this project so here you go! It was a combination of old fashion elbow grease and glass bead blasting. My homemade blasting cabinet was a little too small so I did some of it in my back yard. After glass beading, I went nuts with a pressure washer to clean out the beads. You don't want that stuff inside your engine. When pressure washing, some small parts like washers and o-rings started flying out from who knows where. Luckily, I retrieved them all and have now figured out where they came from. She cleaned up pretty good, no?













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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 22 Jul 2013 13:49 #597709

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How'd the soda blasting go? The homemade media cabinet looked great. Wondering how that turned out.
Permanent and perpetual noob.

1979 KZ750 Twin
2009 Kawasaki Versys

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 09 Sep 2013 13:23 #605696

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Blasting went OK. In my set up, soda didn't remove enough off the surface. Glass bead did much better.

My blast cabinet was a little too small for larger parts. I did those in the open air. But it works well for smaller parts.

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 09 Sep 2013 13:24 #605697

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This is my frame!



www.voodoovintage.com/frames.html

www.chopcult.com/forum/showthread.php?p=...&posted=1#post538952

Still plugging away at it. Updates to come when I have time!

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 09 Sep 2013 14:11 #605709

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I had a blast reading your thread. I give you a lot of props for just tearing into her. Its how most of us started. Just having the guts to just jump into something and educate ourselves along the way. Nice choice for the frame. Look forward to see how she turns out.
Ride it, Like you stole it
~Wild Bill~
1983 Kawasaki GPz750
1975 Kawasaki S3A 400
Certified Harley Davidson technician who came to the dark side

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 11 Sep 2013 00:40 #605957

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pbmax wrote: This is my frame!



www.voodoovintage.com/frames.html

www.chopcult.com/forum/showthread.php?p=...&posted=1#post538952

Still plugging away at it. Updates to come when I have time!


Wow the 750 frame significantly different from the 1000!
- 82 GPz1100injection
- 77 Kz1075 Supercharged
- 81 Yamaha TR-1
- 81 Yamaha xv920
Calgary

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 11 Sep 2013 10:27 #605992

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voodoo did a very nice job hard tailing your frame.
i can't wait to see how it turns out.

keep us posted,

leon
skiatook,oklahoma 1980 z1r,1978 kz 1000 z1r x 3,
1976 kz 900 x 3
i make what i can,and save the rest!

billybiltit.blogspot.com/

www.kzrider.com/forum/5-chassis/325862-triple-tree-custom-work

kzrider.com/forum/5-chassis/294594-frame-bracing?limitstart=0

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 12 Sep 2013 00:28 #606126

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531blackbanshee wrote: voodoo did a very nice job hard tailing your frame.
i can't wait to see how it turns out.

keep us posted,

leon


:blush: :silly: I didnt read the title.. It was before the morning caffine..
- 82 GPz1100injection
- 77 Kz1075 Supercharged
- 81 Yamaha TR-1
- 81 Yamaha xv920
Calgary

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I Know Zip About Motorcycles! (aka KZ750B4 bobber) 12 Sep 2013 09:56 #606167

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Hollywoodmx wrote:

531blackbanshee wrote: voodoo did a very nice job hard tailing your frame.
i can't wait to see how it turns out.

keep us posted,

leon


:blush: :silly: I didnt read the title.. It was before the morning caffine..




leon
skiatook,oklahoma 1980 z1r,1978 kz 1000 z1r x 3,
1976 kz 900 x 3
i make what i can,and save the rest!

billybiltit.blogspot.com/

www.kzrider.com/forum/5-chassis/325862-triple-tree-custom-work

kzrider.com/forum/5-chassis/294594-frame-bracing?limitstart=0
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