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Author Topic: Ross’ 1975 CB750  (Read 48187 times)
Steve G.
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« Reply #180 on: January 13, 2024, 08:35:46 PM »

https://www.charlies-place.com/product-tag/cb750/
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Garage Residents:
'74 Honda CT70
'74 Norton 850 Interstate
'81 Laverda Jota Mk11 180
'89 Honda RC30
'91 BMW R100GS
'08 Honda XR650L
'08 BMW R1200GS

Previous Garage Residents
 1966 Keystone Tas 50
 1981 Can-Am 250 MX6
 1966 BSA 250 Starfire
 1972 Triumph 650 hardtail chopper
 1976 Honda 400-4 Supersport
 1982 Can-Am 500 Sonic
 1982 Suzuki SP500
 1984 Kawasaki KZ 750 L4
 1979 Honda CBX
 1988 Ducati 750 Paso 750 Euro
 1972 Suzuki 750 GT ‘Kettle’
 1972 Kawasaki 750 H2
 1993 BMW R100GSPD
 1984 Honda CR500
 1979 Honda CBX sandcast
 1975 Honda 400-4 SS
 2001 Moto Guzzi V11 Sport
 2006 Yamaha FJR 1300
1972 Norton Combat Roadster 810
 1972 BMW R75/2 SWB
 1980 Honda CBX
 1970 Honda Trail 50 K1
Galactica
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« Reply #181 on: January 22, 2024, 06:17:52 PM »

It’s been a few weeks since I really even looked at the CB750. 

The last couple of times I had a pretty hard time getting it started.  Seemed ok once warm.  Haven’t had a chance yet to take it on the street.  Couple things I was lazy with when I did my initial checks.  The previous owner assured me it had been running when parked.  Ok, I guess. 

I had checked compression, acceptable.  I had checked the valve clearances, pretty much spot on.  I had looked at the points, they looked ok so I left it at that.  Today I thought I’d actually check the timing and points gaps.  Using a test light to check static timing, the timing on both sets of points was a couple degrees advanced so I put them spot on.  The points gaps were a bit tight, .010” vs .014” (.012”-.016” spec)so I adjusted them as well.  In order to make it easier to turn the motor with a wrench while making those adjustments, I had removed the spark plugs.  They were all black and sooty, so I cleaned them up before reinstalling them.  So she’s definitely running rich.

After our conversation at club coffee on Sunday I reckoned I’d do the Wired George coil mod to ensure 12v at the coils as power goes through the kill switch to get to the coils.  But I checked voltage at the coils first.  Whoa, 12.3 volts there, so no need to mess about with a modification. 

Gonna hold off on anything else until we get some riding weather, see if I can get the rich condition sorted. Well… maybe if I get bored I might attack the front brake again with braided lines.  We’ll see.
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Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
Steve G.
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« Reply #182 on: January 22, 2024, 07:29:10 PM »



  An original 45+ year old coil I would automatically have skepticism.

  Regarding the desired color of choice, how many times have you flipped your lucky coin??
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Garage Residents:
'74 Honda CT70
'74 Norton 850 Interstate
'81 Laverda Jota Mk11 180
'89 Honda RC30
'91 BMW R100GS
'08 Honda XR650L
'08 BMW R1200GS

Previous Garage Residents
 1966 Keystone Tas 50
 1981 Can-Am 250 MX6
 1966 BSA 250 Starfire
 1972 Triumph 650 hardtail chopper
 1976 Honda 400-4 Supersport
 1982 Can-Am 500 Sonic
 1982 Suzuki SP500
 1984 Kawasaki KZ 750 L4
 1979 Honda CBX
 1988 Ducati 750 Paso 750 Euro
 1972 Suzuki 750 GT ‘Kettle’
 1972 Kawasaki 750 H2
 1993 BMW R100GSPD
 1984 Honda CR500
 1979 Honda CBX sandcast
 1975 Honda 400-4 SS
 2001 Moto Guzzi V11 Sport
 2006 Yamaha FJR 1300
1972 Norton Combat Roadster 810
 1972 BMW R75/2 SWB
 1980 Honda CBX
 1970 Honda Trail 50 K1
hardrockminer
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« Reply #183 on: January 22, 2024, 08:13:32 PM »

The coil is easy to check.  Measure ohms on the primary and secondary sides.  I don't know Hondas but for Kawasaki the numbers should be around 4 ohm primary and 15,000 ohm secondary. 

For the carbs, I would check choke plungers if the engine is running rich and float valves are correct.
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Past rides include a 1973 Suzuki GT380 & a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B

I currently ride a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B - Classic Plated
I also ride a 1980 Kawasaki KZ 1000 LTD - Classic Plated, and a 2006 Honda Goldwing with a Daytona 2+2 sidecar

My Sweetums rides a 2019 Suzuki DR650
Galactica
1000 Class
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« Reply #184 on: January 22, 2024, 08:59:00 PM »

Ya, not at all concerned about the coils.  Have good spark.  I was just bored not having done anything on the bike for a while.  I’d done the Wired George thing on all of my Kawasakis just because.  Never really noticed a difference. 
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Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
Galactica
1000 Class
******
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Posts: 4644



« Reply #185 on: January 22, 2024, 09:42:00 PM »

And the carb choke is actually a choke not a fuel enrichment.
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Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
hardrockminer
BCCMC Star (5K)
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« Reply #186 on: January 23, 2024, 05:25:10 AM »

Yeah, the WG coil voltage improvement isn't something you will immediately notice.  I've done it on my KZ1000, but not my Z1B.  Both bikes run just fine.  I converted the KZ1000 over to 4 ohm Dyna coils with a Dyna pickup.  The Z1B is the same but coils are original.
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Past rides include a 1973 Suzuki GT380 & a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B

I currently ride a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B - Classic Plated
I also ride a 1980 Kawasaki KZ 1000 LTD - Classic Plated, and a 2006 Honda Goldwing with a Daytona 2+2 sidecar

My Sweetums rides a 2019 Suzuki DR650
Galactica
1000 Class
******
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Posts: 4644



« Reply #187 on: January 23, 2024, 10:02:15 AM »



  An original 45+ year old coil I would automatically have skepticism.

  Regarding the desired color of choice, how many times have you flipped your lucky coin??

I suppose time can degrade the coils, but I have really strong spark.  There’s not even 23k miles on this bike. 

Colour choice?  Flipped a dozen times.  I was really stoked when I got this bike for sentimental reasons I guess.  As I said, I had one in Planet Blue when I met my wife in 1977.  I thought (hoped) she’d be enthused as well…not so much.  I asked her opinion about colour choose if/when I have it painted.  Planet Blue or Apricot Sparkle Red?  Well…she couldn’t give a sh*t. 

Gotta get her running well first.  The bike that is.  My wife works just fine.  I’m still leaning towards blue paint.  For the bike that is.  My wife’s colour is just fine.
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Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
Galactica
1000 Class
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Posts: 4644



« Reply #188 on: January 23, 2024, 10:24:39 AM »

As to the rich burning condition, I wonder if the float levels are a bit high.  I set them using the dry setting method as per Honda.  I wish I’d kept the clear tube tool for my Kawasakis.  I reckon it would fit the Honda  bowl drains as well. 
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Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
Twisted_Twin
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« Reply #189 on: January 23, 2024, 11:52:00 AM »

The coil mod may help more just on startup than anything.

The starter will pull a lot of power out of the whole system and if you've got any way to reduce the voltage drop to the coils while the starter is engaged it will probably make a difference.
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It's important to feel comfortable in your own skin because it's illegal to wear someone else's.
Bucko
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« Reply #190 on: January 23, 2024, 12:47:53 PM »

After our conversation at club coffee on Sunday I reckoned I’d do the Wired George coil mod to ensure 12v at the coils as power goes through the kill switch to get to the coils.  But I checked voltage at the coils first.  Whoa, 12.3 volts there, so no need to mess about with a modification.  

That mod is very popular with the 750/900/1100F crowd.  I'm not a big fan as it just adds more points of failure and if there is a voltage/current problem, just cleaning the various contact points in the circuits fixes it.  Having said that, measuring more than 12V at the coil is a very good sign, but the current in the coils can still be reduced by dirty contacts which may not show up in a static voltage test.  As a test, you could just run a temporary jumper directly from the battery to the coil and see if the starting behaviour improves (if you wanted to get technical, you could measure the current at the coil with and without the jumper and if they're roughly the same, you're good, and if not, cleaning the various contacts will fix it).
« Last Edit: January 24, 2024, 01:58:21 PM by Bucko » Logged
Galactica
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« Reply #191 on: January 23, 2024, 01:43:59 PM »

I’m pretty confident the starting issue is carburetors.  With clean plugs it starts with like half a crank.  I might just pull the carbs off again and lower the floats a couple of mm.

I agree really with everything you’ve said about the coil power mod.  I was thinking about doing it just because.  But when I saw 12.3v at the coils, what’s the point?
« Last Edit: January 23, 2024, 01:47:28 PM by Galactica » Logged

Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
hardrockminer
BCCMC Star (5K)
*******
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Posts: 5645


« Reply #192 on: January 23, 2024, 07:36:12 PM »

As to the rich burning condition, I wonder if the float levels are a bit high.  I set them using the dry setting method as per Honda.  I wish I’d kept the clear tube tool for my Kawasakis.  I reckon it would fit the Honda  bowl drains as well. 

I don't use the clear tube method any longer.  I just pull the carbs off the bike, drop the bowls and set the carbs on four glasses with the floats moving freely.  Then turn the fuel on and let the glasses fill until the float valve closes.  Then measure the distance from the bottom of the miniscus to the top of the glass.  I actually do it with two carbs at a time but you can do all four that way as well.
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Past rides include a 1973 Suzuki GT380 & a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B

I currently ride a 1975 Kawasaki Z1B - Classic Plated
I also ride a 1980 Kawasaki KZ 1000 LTD - Classic Plated, and a 2006 Honda Goldwing with a Daytona 2+2 sidecar

My Sweetums rides a 2019 Suzuki DR650
Galactica
1000 Class
******
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Posts: 4644



« Reply #193 on: January 23, 2024, 09:12:59 PM »

What the heck is a miniscus when it’s at home?
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Past rides:
75 Honda CB750K5
80 Suzuki TS250
 ? Yamaha Maxim 550
73 Z1 900
76 Kz900 A1
77 Kz1000 A1
78 Kz1000 B2 Ltd
79 Kz1000 B3 Ltd
80 Kz1000 C
99 Triumph Tiger 900
84 Honda VF750 Interceptor
77 Honda CB750


Current ride:
2019 Yamaha Tracer900

Current project:
1975 Honda CB750K5
Runningdog
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In Dog Beers I've only had one.


« Reply #194 on: January 24, 2024, 07:48:20 AM »

Meniscus is the curve in the upper surface of a liquid close to the surface of a container.   Most liquids have this tendancy, including water, and gasoline.
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Past:  '82 Suzuki GS400E; '82 Suzuki GS750E; '81 Yamaha Virago 750; '82 Suzuki GS650GL; '77 Yamaha DT250; '80 GS 850; '86 Kawasaki ZG1000; '78 XS400; 1971 Motobecane Mobylette; 1980 Yamaha SR250; various parts/project bikes, 2004 ZRX 1200; 1977 CB750K; '73 Triumph TR5T (Vintage Plate) .
Present: ; '75 Honda XL250 (Collector Plate);  '04 Wee-Strom;  1973 Honda CB350 6-million Dollar Project;   1979 GS750E
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