I had little time tonight and didn’t feeling like tearing down on the other sandcast or cleaning the cases so I decided to tackle something easy like removing the rotor from the crank.
I’ve been soaking it in Safest Rust Remover since last week. This is the stuff. It works great. Check it out:
http://safestrustremover.com/I only had a gallon so I put the crank, rotor side down, in a bucket, since last week. Crappy picture but you get the idea.
Remember that here’s what it looked like before.
So I had the torch ready but decided to put the wrench on the rotor bolt and give it a test twist. It came right off!
Then I put my special rotor removal tool (20mm hex head bolt) into the rotor and it came right off!!
Here’s what the rotor looks like after the soaking. It’s not perfectly clean but that was with no brushing, no agitation, no nothing. All I did was dry it off a little with a rag.
Some more good news, it’s the correct (for this VIN) 10mm bolt.
Here’s the 10mm hole. The later sandcasts have a 12mm bolt. Seems like that’s a pretty large increase.
So that went way too easy so I says to myself…(I won’t say it) why don’t I try to remove the spark advancer shaft. I’ve been soaking it for weeks now. I double nutted the threads and gave it try. No go. Out came the torch. I heated on it for about 5 minutes. She was smokin’. Gave it another try and it came out!! I’ve always had trouble with these probably because you’re trying to turn a 8mm thread with a 6mm shaft.
So it was a good night. Start to finish about ½ hour. Now I’m really scared. I’ve had kind of a good, bad, good, bad cycle. I can’t wait to see what happens next.
« Last Edit: December 29, 2010, 02:33:28 pm by markb »
Mark B1969 CB750 sandcast #97 restored - Sold
Restoration thread link1969 CB750 sandcaxt #576 - Sold
1969 CB750 sandcast #1553 - Sold
1969 CB750 sandcast #1990 - Sold
1969 CB750 sandcast #5383 restored - Sold
Restoration thread link1970 CB750 K0 restored - Sold
2010 H-D Tri Glide Ultra Classic (Huh?)