The bike is in great shape save for some slow speed/tip over damage to the right-side travel case. A US bike with 6,400 miles, last registered in New York state in 1989 – the motor is thought to not have spun for 32 years. The mileage is legit from my observations – still has the OEM chain and sprockets, original seat that is perfect, no noticeable wear on grips or foot pegs, the clutch basket looks like new. Why it has been sitting for so long and how it got here is an interesting tail that I’ll share when I corroborate the story.
Other observations:
- Tank was drained, petcock clean – some deliberate attention here prior to the long sleep.
- Not so for the carbs, they’re a mess. The left bank looks like it wasn’t drained, the floats stuck and the slide needles frozen in the jets. Curiously, they’re also VB60AA’s with the Pro-Link vacuum shut off valve feeding both banks of carbs.
- The alternator clutch faces are deeply grooved but should be able to salvage.
- Engine turned easily with wrench on the crankshaft, sufficient oil for a compression test.
- Electrical systems all functioning, starter spun engine smartly, after replacing plug caps each cylinder showed strong spark across a new plug.
- Valve clearances all within spec. Compression test shows all cylinders between 120 & 130 psi.
- All the polished covers that had a clear coat are corroded badly (valve, alternator, ignitor). Likely the bike was stored in a more humid environment for part of its long sleep than the arid, high altitude air out this way.
- The engine looks like the valve cover may have leaked when it was running years ago. The oil film combined with 30+ years of garage grime has left nasty, tough film that is not easily removed on the engine.
- The pipes are the OEM, from the collector back they're in great shape. In front of that they are severely blued/corroded, the heat having damaged the chrome surface and left to corrode. No amount of Blue Job improves (I tried).
Given all that, I’m debating how deep to go inside the engine or if it’s even necessary. Concern is the condition of the cylinder walls given the corrosion on the outside and if some fuel had wiped the oil film of the walls leaving them unprotected. The engine is more easily scrubbed and painted when disassembled but could be managed intact. The engine doesn't have many hours on it but the rubber bits like shaft seals, valve seals may have stiffened and prone to leak(?).
I'm leaning to a full tear down but would welcome your opinions!