If my shit stays together I will be starting a build I've been wanting to do since the early 80's
This
with any luck, will become this
I figure I have a few months being tied to the house and picked up the old bike running but rough for a c note. Might as well do something.
Wish me luck
Promise yourself not to let Don ride it!! Have fun Bust.
Montani Semper Liberi
"There are two spiritual dangers in not owning a farm. One is the danger of supposing that breakfast comes from the grocery, and the other that heat comes from the furnace.” --A. Leopold,1949,A Sand County Almanac, The Good Oak
That could turn out cool. Take lots of pictures and hurry up about it. When you paint it yellow, use the yellow from the 'Vette. THAT is a great color!!
El Toro Joe wrote:Looking forward to seeing the finished product
Looking forward to seeing the process even more. Good luck with the build, Barry. I wish I had the patience for that kind of thing. I'm always in too much of a rush to git 'er dun.
silverback wrote:Buddy uses an XS400 in flat track. It'd be better on the street! Lol! They are rather ubiquitous and lots of parts though. Bullet proof too.
That's the hard part here, everybody is still doing that.. A local guy still builds 'em for just that.
He told me that mine would be in his garage before it was a cafe racer replica..I told him he'd be eating a ball samitch before that happens..
I used to have an earlier member of the family. This is the very rare (but not so valuable) '77 XS400, built for only 6 months, sandwiched in between the old and newer models. Dunno why Yamaha bothered.
Hopefully you retain the old school skill of gapping points. The kick starter isn't heart healthy though. Get everything right and it will start on the first kick. get it wrong and I would kick the little bustard for a half hour. What this bike really had going for it was being on a car dealer's lot and he had it priced $tupidly low.