• There were many reasons for the change of the site software, the biggest was security. The age of the old software also meant no server updates for certain programs. There are many benefits to the new software, one of the biggest is the mobile functionality. Ill fix up some stuff in the coming days, we'll also try to get some of the old addons back or the data imported back into the site like the garage. To create a thread or to reply with a post is basically the same as it was in the prior software. The default style of the site is light colored, but i temporarily added a darker colored style, to change you can find a link at the bottom of the site.

Not a Spyder Ryde, and not my ride either, but check out some of Australia's Great Ocean Road on a 1972 Honda CB750!

Peter Aawen

Moderator
Staff member
Another one of those 'not my ride' vids, but like the Gorge Road, I also do this one fairly often and I've done it on a Honda CB750 (with a few mods - of course! ;)) back in the days when there was no speed limit on it, except thru the towns! (Dammit, that makes me feel Old! 😖) Anyhoo, there's some more good vids on youtube from this same Lady, Doodle on a Motorcycle, but this is one of just a couple she's done in Oz. Check it out: (y)


This road is not in quite as much of a dire condition as she makes out, or at risk of disappearing quite as soon as it sounds, but the recent floods she mentions (following within days of massively destructive bushfires inland just a tad) did do a lot of damage. I you want to see some more info on the Great Ocean Road, how it was built by Returned Soldiers after WW1 and is now widely recognised as the World's Largest War Memorial, then check out wikipedia here:

 
I had a 71. Great bike! I wonder if she knew about the petcock reserve lever when she ran out of fuel. Probably another 20-30 miles there.

View attachment 254392

Looking at this vid and one of the others she did on the CB750, I don't think she actually ran out of fuel, she just got caught out by leaning it too far for too long!! Apparently, once she pulled over to the side of the road and stood the bike upright again, it started up and ran for long enough to get her to the next gas station. And No, she didn't mention the petcock 'switch to reserve' at all in any of the vids I've seen, but Phil did show her that petcock when she picked the bike up! 😁

You're right about them being great bikes!! Back in the day, I had a 1974 CB750 K2 for a couple of years, and then later on, a 1978 CB750 K7 with a big bore kit and a few other mods to better handle the loooong distances that I regularly travelled here in Oz between towns & cities. I sold that after doing almost 80,000 miles on it when I was sent to the States on an exchange posting... and much to my later regret, I didn't get another one on my return, what with all the family commitments that got in the way then. But a couple of years later I found a 'still mint' 1977 CB550 K3 that I snapped up and used as a commuter bike whenever I was home - I only ever rode it across the country once, then trailered it back home and swore never to be stupid enough do that on a little bike again... and then a few years later, I rode a Honda XR150 around the whole bloody country and then back across the road/trackless guts just for good measure!! :oops: That ride was for a good cause tho, so maybe that one doesn't count?! :unsure:

I must admit that now, I reckon I'd really enjoy owning/riding a K7/K8 again, as a solo alternative to the Spyder, of course! The Child Bride always needed 3 days off after riding 2 days on a 2 wheeler, but we can just keep going on the RT! (y) And I might even admit to a mild but gradually increasing hankering to own/ride a smaller Road/Trail bike for local back road and fire trail pottering, but there's no freakin' way I'm ever riding anything much smaller than a litre bike outside of the bottom third of this State... Well, maybe not except to ride one home from wherever I buy it from, or if it's a ride for a good enough cause - and not for more than about 3000 miles or so total, regardless of all else! ;)

What fool said you get smarter &/or wiser as you get older?? :rolleyes:
 
That has to be such an awesome experience! My first bike was a 1985 CB900 custom, and I loved that bike. Perfect for a tall rider, and pretty easy to perform maintenance on.
 
I put 55k on my beloved '71' CB750. It was mint condition. I kept it in tip top shape. I made memorable trips from my home in San-Diego to Kansas City and several other long distance rides.

This is the bike on which I rebuilt the shift tumbler assembly coming back from Eugene, Oregon, on the side of the road about 1/2 mile north of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, early on a beautiful Sunday morning. With nothing more than the OEM took kit and my mechanical impact driver. I've been pretty proud of myself for that operation all these years! Alas, there was no one there to witness my genius.;)Isn't that always the way it goes? I later pulled the engine and split the cases to repair damage to the transmission gear cluster caused when the shift tumbler failed on that trip.

I'd purchased a Kawasaki 500 Mach III, so I sold my Honda to a young man who was very excited about doing his own maintenance. I thought it odd at the time. I've always been excited about riding the machine, not servicing it. I told him I had just gone completely through it. Valve adjustment, balanced the 4 carbs, new points adjusted perfectly. Oil change, brake adjustment, you name it. I said, 'Just take it home and ride it. Don't mess with anything.' But I had a weird feeling that my advice was falling on deaf ears.

A few days later, I got a call from the buyer. 'It's not running very well' he said. 'I dont' know what's wrong. Can you come take a look at it?

I thought, 'What in the world? Nothing runs sweeter than a 750 when it's tuned.' He didn't live far away so I headed over to his duplex.

There it was, in all of its glory, sitting in the garage. I couldn't see anything waving a red flag, so I asked him to start it up. It fired reluctantly, which was unusual, and immediately made the most horrendous clattering noise. I yelled, 'Shut it off! Shut it off! I then asked 'What did you do to it?’.

'I didn't do anything.'

'So, it just started making this noise then? When did that happen?'

'Last weekend', he replied. 'When I started it up'.

'So, you shut it down and it was fine. Then, when you started it up again, it made this noise right away?'

'Almost right away, Yes.'

The noise sounded like it was coming from the top end. So, I started there. That's when I spotted it. The CB-750 has a dual overhead cam engine.
One of the first in a production motorcycle, I believe. It used threaded, nut locked valve adjusters. The valve cover had 8 threaded cast aluminum access ports. 4 in front (Exhaust), 4 in back (Intake).

Honda 750 valve covera.png Honda 750 valve cover 1.jpg

My valve cover was in much better condition than these. But you get the idea. Still, as nice as it was, the aluminum had gained a patina of sorts. That is when I noticed one of the access covers was brand new. I pointed at it and asked the obvious, 'What is this?'

'Well,' he said sheepishly. I had to get a new one.'

'What happened to the original', I asked, not sure I really wanted to know the answer.

'I was adjusting the valves and that one broke when I put it back on.'

Thinking of how many times I had adjusted the valves myself, and how much force would have been required to break one, I said, 'These are O-Ring sealed. They are just pot metal and not designed to take much force, because it is not needed.' Bringing me back to our original conversation where I implored him not to mess with anything.

Following the now glowing trail, I asked, 'What happened to the one that broke?'

'It shattered', he said.

'And what happened to the pieces?'

'Well', he stammered. 'I got all of them I could. But maybe I didn't get them all.'

'So, some of the pieces fell into the engine then...' I said rhetorically.

At that point, my dreaded suspicions became crystal clear. I stood up and said, 'Put it on a trailer and take it to the dealership. Do not start it up again. You're just making it worse.'

'So, you can't fix it?' He asked horrified.

'I could, but it's going to be a big job. You have to pull the engine to remove the valve cover. And that is going to be the necessary 1st step if this is ever going to run again.'

And that may well have been the demise of my well-loved CB-750. I don't know. I never heard from the guy again. I am, at least, grateful for that.

I know it was just a machine. But I still feel a twinge of guilt for selling my faithful friend to that guy.
 
I know it was just a machine. But I still feel a twinge of guilt for selling my faithful friend to that guy.
A CB-750 was the first of my many big road machines. It was a CHP bike bought at auction. I got it from an officer who bought several of them and then resold them. I own an IT-400 monoshocker, the first of the big CC monoshocker dirt bikes. Speaking of old friends, my IT-400 and I have burned up many, many tanks of fuel together, and today she's resting in my garage, sitting up on a milk crate. My son asked me, Dad, why do you still have that old bike? I told him, son, someday you'll understand.
 
A CB-750 was the first of my many big road machines. It was a CHP bike bought at auction. I got it from an officer who bought several of them and then resold them. I own an IT-400 monoshocker, the first of the big CC monoshocker dirt bikes. Speaking of old friends, my IT-400 and I have burned up many, many tanks of fuel together, and today she's resting in my garage, sitting up on a milk crate. My son asked me, Dad, why do you still have that old bike? I told him, son, someday you'll understand.
Exactly! There is a bond when a machine serves well.
 
Back
Top