We learn more from our mistakes. No one is perfect. You are awesome in my book. Keep up the Great work. Don't let the haters get to you. They don't pay your bills.
You know what people will always pick fault with something. Personally I think you’re doing a great job of tricky restorations and filming and editing as well as hosting! I’m currently enjoying your back catalogue so thank you sir.
Hello there, just watching you here from the U.K. This CBX was my dream bike around 1978ish. I would have been 16 yrs of age then. I recall my girlfriend saying one day she would buy me the CBX in silver, wow, I am still waiting! I at the time was flashing around on a CB125S 1973, quite a special and good looking bike at the time. Actually I still have it. I restored it in 2010. It had gone bang in 1979 but I had no luck fixing it. In 2010 I managed to purchase the parts I needed to get it running from America coincidently. She is a beautiful lady now in white and red candy. Just watching you with this CBX has fired my interest, you must let us see how things are progressing. Thanks for the video great! Best wishes Kevin. PS. The girlfriend is now the wife! I do on occasion remind her she still owes me a CBX!
In my 67 years I have worked with hundreds of Techs and you young man have bone deep talent and expertise. Any negative comments from the .."I know better'n yewz" should be treated as toilet paper. Look at it this way... you won't have to buy it ever again.
Man, you should have your own tv show, we have too many Auto restorations shows. I have a passion for motorcycles, especially the old Jap machines, and wish we had something like this on tv.
Thanks Gary! I've turned down multiple offers already as they want me to pay to do it and then take all of the freedom away. Not something im interested in
@@BrickHouseBuilds Really, I think that they should be paying you, for showing us how these monster engines can be fixed at minimal cost. Keep up the good work!
You look like you know what you’re doing to me! I’d certainly trust you with my bike! The channel is great, I would love to spend my days fixing and restoring bikes. One day maybe....
@@BrickHouseBuilds I followed your video on unseizing the Benelli when unseizing my Nissan Navara diesel Ute, used the same process (ATF and acetone) and it worked. I watched your cylinder weld repair video as I need to repair/replace a couple of fins on an FMF Honda CR125 M1 cylinder head. Good advice, many thanks.
Awesome! A quick note, new subscriber. I am the original owner of a 1982 CBX-C, one of the "black" engines. Well, my CBX is "garage art" through a twist of fate. I no longer have my custom cylinder head, an absolute work of art. five angle valve seat profile, nitrided custom valves, shim under bucket, titanium retainers. Gone. But, I have a complete engine missing the head and carburetors. Micropolished crank, nitrided. The motorcycle is complete except these items. Yes, Pearl white and blue. Sorry, the Sankei original exhaust was also lost. A quick note, life is a series of curveballs. I am leaving California, and I have two Aprilias and the CBX. I would love the CBX to find a good home. Everything but the above mentioned items is perfect. Want some drool? Okay. 34000 miles. It has a custom seat made in the original profile, beautiful. This is no joke, folks. Sad part? Okay. I used to blueprint carburetors for a living. Those beautiful Keihins? Shit. Rebuilt, polished, and nestled in a custom box. Velvet lining. Oak. Brass hardware. Preserved with oil, absolutely no fuel, all new tubes. Gone. For the collectors out there, its serial number 1970. Yeah, I really miss riding this machine, I had an 81 and an an 82. Hell, I'm on a roll. The jackshaft. The CBX had a solution to the width, a HyVo chain that drove the clutch and accessories. That alternator was brilliant. The alternator was custom built, new brushes, commutator. I had a friend that built it. The CBX alternator was driven by a friction clutch. The engine could rev so FAST, it could break the alternator shaft! Irimajiri's solution was to install a clutch that allowed the engine to rev, and allow the alternator to catch up. Problem was that the commutator is radial, not axial. So, brush wear was an issue. My alternator has 110 miles on it.
It's impressive enough just to be a good mechanic. To be able to document it, and edit the videos to make them appealing is a job in of itself. But it's a whole other type of person who can be pelted with commentary about their career and just take it in stride. Your emotional fortitude is impressive.
You are a total gear head. Great work, great music, and clearly you are gifted and funny. It would be great if there was a conclusion at the end where you are riding off on the CBX into the sunset. What we have now is, meeting the girl, dating the girl, breaking up getting back together, and no climax and ride at the end? I’ll just have to keep watching!
Great video. It's good to see someone who is NOT Allen Millyard doing this kind of work. 'Perfect' is nice, but very few can aspire to his level. It's better to achieve an acceptable level of finish than throw your hands in the air when faced with tricky problems and negative comments. The fact that you are saving an important [ and bloody complicated ] motorcycle deserves all the good vibes that are out there. Keep up the good work.
Thank you much Jon! Life goals put me somewhere between Allen and Shiro of 46works if you aren't familiar. Both masters of what they do! Even though I'm doing this bike justice people will still remove any potential credit I may have the second I forget the ratchet is on loosen when I meant to tighten and have to flip the little lever. Nothing I can do about it except keep doing what I'm doing.
@@BrickHouseBuilds Yes I also follow Shiro's builds; His current project (OK last years') is one of the best - looks like you could use a new shop too! Just kidding, but it is interesting to see the way things are done in Japan. On the criticism point, it is useful to contemplate whether these 'experts' have ever done anything,...at all...ever..., to put themselves in a valid position to comment on another's work. As we used to say "nil illigitimes carborundum" . [Don't let the bastards wear you down.]
The CBX is Honda Motorcycle royalty. Seeing one get what it deserves by someone who is both skilled as well as passionate makes it even better. Subscribed and liked. Well done, sir.
@@BrickHouseBuilds I think a date code correct 100% resto is impractical from a cost perspective. Feel free to make some hidden improvements and maybe some day 2 period modifications.
Amazing Work going forward! You are a brave man to tackle a complex project like this. The end result is so worth it. I miss my Honda CBs and your channel brings back the memories.
Hey buddy - quality job on the fins - not over perfect like you say - "sympathetic" to how the bike would and should look! Thanks as always for sharing (sorry not commented much recently - thought I'd give some of your many new subscribers a chance to get a word in!)
Hi. I really enjoy your videos and your work. Always looking forward to the next one. Don´t be bothered by people who put on negative words.. I also think it´s to bad you need to apologies for making calls on the moment itself.. love your work man! You have been inspiring me! 😉
As always, beautiful work! Judging by the number of subscribers, likes and views you have nothing to worry about in regards to criticisms. Your content and production continue to get better - keep up the good work.
Just make sure that service manual is revised edition. An old timer in my shop told me stories of his CBX bending valves twice because the service manual was wrong and had to be updated.
Really enjoying your videos! Appreciate that you explain so well what you do and why - as I am an aspiring wrencher! Looking forward to seeing the final results of this bike!😁
A brave man admits his mistakes...a fool ignores wise advise..I'm subscribing now coz you are a fine representative of your family..don't forget to fit new chains..ALL OF THEM..
Great 2nd video of the CBX rebuild and you have a new subscriber. I never owned a CBX, but have been a pillion a mates bikes and was in awe of the technology when Honda launched it.
Those CBX goobers ranting about how to do this work are so cute. 🙂 Nice job with the weld repairs, TIG is so sweet. Once I was decent at that and machining I felt like I could repair or even make just about anything and it just came down to what the cost of the replacement part was. It is refreshing to see real moto competence on YT. Thanks again.
@@BrickHouseBuilds 'CBX bros' more than likely have to hire out all the work you are doing. I know it might seem impossible but ignore the fools if you can. Lots of YT experts, few YT folks doing it right such as yourself. If someone is critical and actually does the work, then sidebar them for some tips! Real experts are helpful, finger pointers are fools.
Reason the channel has gone mental for the CBX is coz its an icon mate and you look like you are gonna do it justice if your CX build is anything to go by. A dream bike. I fell in love with a moto martin framed one in the UK back in the day. Stuff of dreams for me. Keep up the good work.
Enjoying the videos👍. Glad to see you’re doing a total restoration on it but would like to see an upgrade on the brakes....only thing better than a fast bike is.............better brakes!. Can’t wait to see the finished bike and hear it firing up. Also well done on giving this bike the TLC it deserves 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I just found your channel, and I was wondering where you were finding all of these cool bikes. It turns out our search areas overlap. I actually bought a bike in your town. Great work. I would like to make a suggestion, though. When grinding or sanding aluminum, you should wear a mask. Breathing that causes memory loss and is linked to Alzheimer's. I actually started having memory problems years ago when working in a machine shop with aluminum for 12 hours a day. Stay safe, and thanks for sharing.
Hey Jesse glad you found your way here! As far as a mask I wear one a lot. If I'm grinding definitely but using a rotary bit doesn't make dust so much as individual filings that don't stay suspended in the air.
Patina; a surface appearance or something grown beautiful especially with age or use. I looked it up! Haha! Well done on those fins matching them up like that! Good on ya, I’ve never tried a welder like that old miller, I have a squarewave primeweld, works great.
I've repaired fins a few time plus other parts of the aluminum block ! Also had a H-2 750 block, that had the mounting lugs broken off. I welded them back on and drilled the mounting holes! Worked out just fine. If you have larger areas, you should peen every layer of weld, just to strengthen the area.
Luckily I havent had any huge areas needing filled on other bikes either. I have a chopper friend who was just talking about peening on some cylinder heads
The concept that all the cylinders must be the exact same size is untrue. The first time I attended a Honda Motorcycle Class at American Honda (it was still in Gardena at that time) they had a CB750 engine on a crate as a test engine. They'd said they had tried an experiment and oversized the cylinders from 0.25mm to 1.0mm in each cylinder. So one cylinder was 0.25mm, 2nd cylinder was 0.50mm, 3rd cylinder was 0.75mm and the 4th cylinder was at 1.0mm oversize. The engine ran just as smooth as a stock engine after some adjustments to the carbs slow speed screws. This was in 1972. Nice job on the fin fix!!
@@BrickHouseBuilds i am 64 and biker sins i was 16. I ride a BMW 1000 cubic 4 cylinders called flying brick. It was built in1985. And its running like a swiss clock. 😉🍺
@@BrickHouseBuilds tip from me. Allen Millyard Kawasaki has a channel its msome. He is a british bike bilder you never saw bevor. He makes his own engins. Its freaky what he makes.
Best ride I ever had - '79 CBXz. Awesome straight six sharp burble (? can't find the right word) at low revs, awesome wail when properly on song, super smooth with no vibration and awesome presentation in that fiery reddish-orange colour. Mine did not have the black stripe on the tank or on the rear bikini, so the reddish orange was beautifully dominant. When I emigrated from South Africa I had to let it go :-( - although I did consider riding it all the way from South Africa to Europe at the time (1992). Please please don't paint the engine black - that will make it look like a rat-rod, hide it's true beauty and that's not what I think you want. Aluminium (Aluminum) paint, on the bottom end, the sleeve block, and head with either proper chromed or hi-polished aluminium tappet and other covers would look simply awesome. Good luck with the build and I sincerely hope it stays your dream ride. I truly miss mine. No woman has ever come close.
Hey BJ...just some food for thought, as I still don't know if that CBX is yours or customer's. Anyway, one of the best things Kawasaki did on some of their engines was have a small area cast or machined on the crankcase/cylinder/cylinder head mating surfaces for driving in a wedge (like a medium size flat screwdriver tip) to separate the stuck top end components. The KZ1000J has one on each end of the crankcase for separating the crankcase from the cylinder. I went one step further on my KZ-J engines and machined in a similar slot slot on the head so it can likewise be wedged off the cylinder without having to beat on the head fins with a dead blow. Just picked a solid / strong place about 8 mm wide x 10 mm deep with plenty of solid material to take the pressure from the wedge being driven in. Mill out or grind out about 2 mm of the surface so the screwdriver fits in. I also sometimes run a fine thread tap through a few holes to thread the split cases, or cylinder head or block one size bigger than the studs. Then a bolt can be run in to press the pieces apart. The best location for that trick is thread where the alignment dowel pins are. I use that for a lot of crankcases that I know I will have to separate often (race stuff, two strokes, etc.). Works way better than hammering on the parts. I wish I could still weld like you - my eyes went to shit and I'm having a hard time seeing the puddle now. Aluminum is really difficult for me now. Getting old sucks!
Haha respect for admitting errors and apologising. Some certain unmentionable channels would have just deleted the comments . . . . . . . . . . . . . dellbollox garage I'm talking to you.
Very nice videos. The CBX Six was/is always my favorite bike here in the Netherlands. I have driven it a once, and the sound is amazing with after market pipes. In the '80 they ride here with Jama Marshall pipes. It's sounds like a F1 car. Goose bumps! Anyway, you have a new follower! :)
A friend of mine in Yuma Owens a brand new in the Crate Honda CBX 1000 with the bags. He hasn’t opened it to date. He also owns a NIB CBX 1000 replacement engine. I couldn’t believe it.
That turned out really nice! I am no welder and have never found anybody good enough who would bother trying that trick. Several ARE good enough, though!
Loving your videos matey. Such great work. I've had loads of bikes over my 41 years of riding but seeing that CX on the bike lift, wow that's a nice bike.
I really wouldn't worry about the naysayers. Your work is good. My partner does all the welding and fabrication and she thought you did a nice job too. She recommends using those carbide burs that tyre repair guys use before plugging holes to work between fins if that's any help to you in the future. Half her work is repairing fins, alloy and cast iron.
hi iam not going to rant you are doing a great job when you get the bike back together please please put a 6 into 1 yoshi pipe wow the sound is amazing i no because i had one the sound is wicked dont worry about what other people say you are doing it not them good luck
Another note - I pulled cam covers off CBX's dozens of times with and without pulling the tach drive gear out first and never broke any of them. Just had to be careful to pull the cover forward a little and not straight up. I have seen a few broken ones, though. Of course, it is much safer to pull the gear first....
Again an awesome upload. You must like Allen Millyard his work? Thank you for your uploads. They are helping me alot sir. Im down on luck and at rock bottem and your video's really are helping me not losing my mind even more. Thanks again.
Allen just blows my mind. My girlfriend calls him "whisper guy" when I play one of his videos lol. I aspire to be him when I'm a grandpa. I also watch 46works and just sit in awe of how he builds. Soothing videos to watch. Im glad you have been enjoying mine and appreciate you watching them!
Love what you are doing with the cbx don't take any notice of the naysayers and keep away from the 4 cylinder engines the world and his wife seem to be restoring these engines on youtube keep to the unusual
Screw the winers you are a damn highly skilled tech, and fabricator.Nobody is perfect.
🤘🤘
We learn more from our mistakes. No one is perfect. You are awesome in my book. Keep up the Great work. Don't let the haters get to you. They don't pay your bills.
Much appreciated 🙏
You know what people will always pick fault with something. Personally I think you’re doing a great job of tricky restorations and filming and editing as well as hosting! I’m currently enjoying your back catalogue so thank you sir.
Thanks Alex!
Hello there, just watching you here from the U.K. This CBX was my dream bike around 1978ish. I would have been 16 yrs of age then. I recall my girlfriend saying one day she would buy me the CBX in silver, wow, I am still waiting!
I at the time was flashing around on a CB125S 1973, quite a special and good looking bike at the time. Actually I still have it. I restored it in 2010. It had gone bang in 1979 but I had no luck fixing it. In 2010 I managed to purchase the parts I needed to get it running from America coincidently. She is a beautiful lady now in white and red candy.
Just watching you with this CBX has fired my interest, you must let us see how things are progressing.
Thanks for the video great! Best wishes Kevin.
PS. The girlfriend is now the wife! I do on occasion remind her she still owes me a CBX!
In my 67 years I have worked with hundreds of Techs and you young man have bone deep talent and expertise. Any negative comments from the .."I know better'n yewz" should be treated as toilet paper. Look at it this way... you won't have to buy it ever again.
🤘
Man, you should have your own tv show, we have too many Auto restorations shows.
I have a passion for motorcycles, especially the old Jap machines, and wish we had
something like this on tv.
Thanks Gary! I've turned down multiple offers already as they want me to pay to do it and then take all of the freedom away. Not something im interested in
@@BrickHouseBuilds Really, I think that they should be paying you, for showing us
how these monster engines can be fixed at minimal cost. Keep up the good work!
You look like you know what you’re doing to me! I’d certainly trust you with my bike! The channel is great, I would love to spend my days fixing and restoring bikes. One day maybe....
I appreciate that!
Great job rebuilding that CBX! Impressive!
🙏🙏
Good work on the fin repairs. Now the only thing to watch for is hot spots where you welded them. Just be sure they don't get too hot.
Thats why I welded just a bit at a time and moved around
The first time I actually manage to follow the shop manual instructions flawlessly, I’m am going to throw a block party! 😉
Like your confidence when stripping this engine ,it’s very complicated and you have loads of patience.
Thanks Steve!
Really nice, professional job, and nothing better than the satisfaction of being able to do these tasks yourself and save some money.
Thank you! Definitely a cool feeling to be able to tackle such jobs
@@BrickHouseBuilds I followed your video on unseizing the Benelli when unseizing my Nissan Navara diesel Ute, used the same process (ATF and acetone) and it worked. I watched your cylinder weld repair video as I need to repair/replace a couple of fins on an FMF Honda CR125 M1 cylinder head. Good advice, many thanks.
Awesome! A quick note, new subscriber. I am the original owner of a 1982 CBX-C, one of the "black" engines. Well, my CBX is "garage art" through a twist of fate. I no longer have my custom cylinder head, an absolute work of art. five angle valve seat profile, nitrided custom valves, shim under bucket, titanium retainers. Gone. But, I have a complete engine missing the head and carburetors. Micropolished crank, nitrided. The motorcycle is complete except these items.
Yes, Pearl white and blue.
Sorry, the Sankei original exhaust was also lost.
A quick note, life is a series of curveballs. I am leaving California, and I have two Aprilias and the CBX. I would love the CBX to find a good home. Everything but the above mentioned items is perfect.
Want some drool? Okay. 34000 miles. It has a custom seat made in the original profile, beautiful. This is no joke, folks.
Sad part? Okay. I used to blueprint carburetors for a living. Those beautiful Keihins? Shit. Rebuilt, polished, and nestled in a custom box. Velvet lining. Oak. Brass hardware. Preserved with oil, absolutely no fuel, all new tubes. Gone.
For the collectors out there, its serial number 1970. Yeah, I really miss riding this machine, I had an 81 and an an 82.
Hell, I'm on a roll. The jackshaft. The CBX had a solution to the width, a HyVo chain that drove the clutch and accessories. That alternator was brilliant. The alternator was custom built, new brushes, commutator. I had a friend that built it. The CBX alternator was driven by a friction clutch. The engine could rev so FAST, it could break the alternator shaft! Irimajiri's solution was to install a clutch that allowed the engine to rev, and allow the alternator to catch up. Problem was that the commutator is radial, not axial. So, brush wear was an issue. My alternator has 110 miles on it.
👍
It's impressive enough just to be a good mechanic. To be able to document it, and edit the videos to make them appealing is a job in of itself. But it's a whole other type of person who can be pelted with commentary about their career and just take it in stride. Your emotional fortitude is impressive.
So many armchair quarterbacks lol. They wear on me for sure. Glad you have enjoyed the series so far.
You are a total gear head. Great work, great music, and clearly you are gifted and funny. It would be great if there was a conclusion at the end where you are riding off on the CBX into the sunset. What we have now is, meeting the girl, dating the girl, breaking up getting back together, and no climax and ride at the end? I’ll just have to keep watching!
Haha thank ya! More to come for sure with this bike as I get more done on it
A piece of motorcycle history being saved. Thank you for your dedication
🤘🤘
Great video. It's good to see someone who is NOT Allen Millyard doing this kind of work. 'Perfect' is nice, but very few can aspire to his level. It's better to achieve an acceptable level of finish than throw your hands in the air when faced with tricky problems and negative comments. The fact that you are saving an important [ and bloody complicated ] motorcycle deserves all the good vibes that are out there. Keep up the good work.
Thank you much Jon! Life goals put me somewhere between Allen and Shiro of 46works if you aren't familiar. Both masters of what they do! Even though I'm doing this bike justice people will still remove any potential credit I may have the second I forget the ratchet is on loosen when I meant to tighten and have to flip the little lever. Nothing I can do about it except keep doing what I'm doing.
@@BrickHouseBuilds Yes I also follow Shiro's builds; His current project (OK last years') is one of the best - looks like you could use a new shop too! Just kidding, but it is interesting to see the way things are done in Japan. On the criticism point, it is useful to contemplate whether these 'experts' have ever done anything,...at all...ever..., to put themselves in a valid position to comment on another's work. As we used to say "nil illigitimes carborundum" . [Don't let the bastards wear you down.]
Don’t worry about the critics. Remember you’re the one with the diamond in the rough on your workbench! Great job on fin repair.👍🏻
Thanks Kel! I just wish people would watch the entire video before commenting on what I'm doing. This is youtube though
The CBX is Honda Motorcycle royalty. Seeing one get what it deserves by someone who is both skilled as well as passionate makes it even better.
Subscribed and liked.
Well done, sir.
Hey Paul I really appreciate that! I will do the bike justice and give it glory once more.
@@BrickHouseBuilds I think a date code correct 100% resto is impractical from a cost perspective.
Feel free to make some hidden improvements and maybe some day 2 period modifications.
No changes from OE will be made. Purists will burn my house down
@@BrickHouseBuilds now that’s funny right there. Pitchforks and torches for sure. Like a scene from “Young Frankenstein.”
@@pauldulworth2768 one of the greatest movies! Watched it again a month ago
Fantastic job. Really enjoyed watching this and listening to you. Love what you do making these old machines live again.
Thank you much! Glad you enjoyed. Hopefully I get back on this soon
As usual,you are doing a fantastic professional job and great video presentation. I am very impressed and excited about your work. Great job. 📕
Thanks so much Randall!
Amazing Work going forward! You are a brave man to tackle a complex project like this. The end result is so worth it. I miss my Honda CBs and your channel brings back the memories.
Thank you much!
Yeah, well. I miss my mum n she's been in the ground since 97.
Could she be rebuilt?
Franken mum!
Hey buddy - quality job on the fins - not over perfect like you say - "sympathetic" to how the bike would and should look! Thanks as always for sharing (sorry not commented much recently - thought I'd give some of your many new subscribers a chance to get a word in!)
Thank ya Mike! Yea quite a few newbies here id say!
Hi. I really enjoy your videos and your work. Always looking forward to the next one. Don´t be bothered by people who put on negative words.. I also think it´s to bad you need to apologies for making calls on the moment itself.. love your work man! You have been inspiring me! 😉
Well thank you much!
As always, beautiful work! Judging by the number of subscribers, likes and views you have nothing to worry about in regards to criticisms. Your content and production continue to get better - keep up the good work.
I very much appreciate that Butch 🙏
Just make sure that service manual is revised edition. An old timer in my shop told me stories of his CBX bending valves twice because the service manual was wrong and had to be updated.
Really enjoying your videos! Appreciate that you explain so well what you do and why - as I am an aspiring wrencher! Looking forward to seeing the final results of this bike!😁
Well thank ya! I always seem to be explaining stuff and people seem to appreciate it so match made in heaven!
A brave man admits his mistakes...a fool ignores wise advise..I'm subscribing now coz you are a fine representative of your family..don't forget to fit new chains..ALL OF THEM..
Thanks Graham. Already have all nee chains, bearings, seals, orings, pistons, etc. All of it
Great 2nd video of the CBX rebuild and you have a new subscriber. I never owned a CBX, but have been a pillion a mates bikes and was in awe of the technology when Honda launched it.
Thanks David!
Thank you for sharing these inside tricks & tips. You're doing all the good to an old keeper. Nothing sounds like that bike is going to sound.👍
Thank you and I cant wait!
You did clearly explain why you did things a certain way and the problem that forced that path.
I thought I did but many simply didn't hear he I guess. Thank you
Those CBX goobers ranting about how to do this work are so cute. 🙂 Nice job with the weld repairs, TIG is so sweet. Once I was decent at that and machining I felt like I could repair or even make just about anything and it just came down to what the cost of the replacement part was.
It is refreshing to see real moto competence on YT. Thanks again.
Well I appreciate that James! There are definitely a lot of people doubting me on this bike which gets frustrating.
@@BrickHouseBuilds 'CBX bros' more than likely have to hire out all the work you are doing. I know it might seem impossible but ignore the fools if you can. Lots of YT experts, few YT folks doing it right such as yourself.
If someone is critical and actually does the work, then sidebar them for some tips! Real experts are helpful, finger pointers are fools.
Reason the channel has gone mental for the CBX is coz its an icon mate and you look like you are gonna do it justice if your CX build is anything to go by. A dream bike. I fell in love with a moto martin framed one in the UK back in the day. Stuff of dreams for me. Keep up the good work.
That means a lot Ed thank you!
Nice to see you Reviving my two most favorite bikes of all the cbx and the cb750, I hope you get the kz on your table some day!! I'll be watching...
Definitely a possibility! Time will tell
Enjoying the videos👍. Glad to see you’re doing a total restoration on it but would like to see an upgrade on the brakes....only thing better than a fast bike is.............better brakes!. Can’t wait to see the finished bike and hear it firing up. Also well done on giving this bike the TLC it deserves 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank you! I am keeping the brakes stock though s the one future buyer will likely back out due to it not being 100% original.
Thanks for sharing the knowledge…
Looking forward for seeing the final results…
Thanks Fred.
nice work on the fins. didnt think they would look quite right, and i am now pretty sure that paint or powder coat will make it nice.
Thank ya. Once painted you won't know it was there
Just started watching your videos they are educational and fun
I appreciate that Graham! I have plenty to keep you occupied!
Don't listen to the trolls man. I bet half of them never even picked up a wrench in there life. Great videos, thank you for the content.
I just never thought so many people would be upset at such a small thing lol
I just found your channel, and I was wondering where you were finding all of these cool bikes. It turns out our search areas overlap. I actually bought a bike in your town. Great work. I would like to make a suggestion, though. When grinding or sanding aluminum, you should wear a mask. Breathing that causes memory loss and is linked to Alzheimer's. I actually started having memory problems years ago when working in a machine shop with aluminum for 12 hours a day. Stay safe, and thanks for sharing.
Hey Jesse glad you found your way here! As far as a mask I wear one a lot. If I'm grinding definitely but using a rotary bit doesn't make dust so much as individual filings that don't stay suspended in the air.
It's a beast of an engine, looking forward to your good work to put it right!
Thank you
This is great to watch. Makes me nostalgic for the 82 CBX I once owned. Looking at the prices of them now, I wish I'd kept it!
Thanks Jim! The only one I could afford was this 79 that obviously need a ton of love!
I hit “Like” before watching the video…
Love your builds man, cheers from South Australia.👍
I appreciate it!
A CBX rebuild? Subscribed. Thanks for sharing!
Yes indeed and thank you much!
Can't wait for the next episode
Trying to make time to work on it but shouldn't be too long!
Wish l hade your skill . This is as close as I’ll get watching your videos . Thank you
Well thank you. You absolutely can do anything you see me doing as it just takes a bit trial and error and the desire to do it right.
Patina; a surface appearance or something grown beautiful especially with age or use. I looked it up! Haha! Well done on those fins matching them up like that! Good on ya, I’ve never tried a welder like that old miller, I have a squarewave primeweld, works great.
Thanks John!
Doin a great job bud, rebuilding a CBX 6
Thank you Jim!
I'm new to the channel and yes loving what you do, the only thing wrong is I remember the bikes you do from new 😁👍
Ha thank ya! Nothing wrong with that though
Great job buddy 👍🏻🏴
Thank ya!
Great work and great vid ! Can't wait to hear this big six pack for the first time :p
Thank you much and I'm super excited as well!
Nice welding...looks good!
Thanks Bob!
I've repaired fins a few time plus other parts of the aluminum block ! Also had a H-2 750 block, that had the mounting lugs broken off. I welded them back on and drilled the mounting holes! Worked out just fine. If you have larger areas, you should peen every layer of weld, just to strengthen the area.
Luckily I havent had any huge areas needing filled on other bikes either. I have a chopper friend who was just talking about peening on some cylinder heads
Once broke a piece off pulling the cylinder blok. Used super glue to fix it. Held for decades!
The concept that all the cylinders must be the exact same size is untrue. The first time I attended a Honda Motorcycle Class at American Honda (it was still in Gardena at that time)
they had a CB750 engine on a crate as a test engine. They'd said they had tried an experiment and oversized the cylinders from 0.25mm to 1.0mm in each cylinder.
So one cylinder was 0.25mm, 2nd cylinder was 0.50mm, 3rd cylinder was 0.75mm and the 4th cylinder was at 1.0mm oversize. The engine ran just as smooth as a stock engine
after some adjustments to the carbs slow speed screws. This was in 1972.
Nice job on the fin fix!!
Thanks Ray!
I like to watch your videos. Its intresting to see why and how. Greetings from nuremberg germany. 😉🤟
Glad you enjoy Rolf!
@@BrickHouseBuilds i am 64 and biker sins i was 16. I ride a BMW 1000 cubic 4 cylinders called flying brick. It was built in1985. And its running like a swiss clock. 😉🍺
@@rolfbley1373 K bikes definitely perform well. I've ridden a K75 and may be building a K100 in the not so distant future
@@BrickHouseBuilds thats wright but the k75 is a3 cylindar and the k 1oo is four cylindars. But the joy to ride is the same. I love this bike.
@@BrickHouseBuilds tip from me. Allen Millyard Kawasaki has a channel its msome. He is a british bike bilder you never saw bevor. He makes his own engins. Its freaky what he makes.
That's funny I even look away when you're welding on camera. 😁
🤣🤣 thats a safe habit to have!
Nice work, man!
Thank ya!
Well done mate!
Thanks Jan!
Fantastic work
Thanks Michael!
Best ride I ever had - '79 CBXz. Awesome straight six sharp burble (? can't find the right word) at low revs, awesome wail when properly on song, super smooth with no vibration and awesome presentation in that fiery reddish-orange colour. Mine did not have the black stripe on the tank or on the rear bikini, so the reddish orange was beautifully dominant. When I emigrated from South Africa I had to let it go :-( - although I did consider riding it all the way from South Africa to Europe at the time (1992). Please please don't paint the engine black - that will make it look like a rat-rod, hide it's true beauty and that's not what I think you want. Aluminium (Aluminum) paint, on the bottom end, the sleeve block, and head with either proper chromed or hi-polished aluminium tappet and other covers would look simply awesome. Good luck with the build and I sincerely hope it stays your dream ride. I truly miss mine. No woman has ever come close.
It will be a stock restoration so all factory color combinations will be retained
Hey BJ...just some food for thought, as I still don't know if that CBX is yours or customer's. Anyway, one of the best things Kawasaki did on some of their engines was have a small area cast or machined on the crankcase/cylinder/cylinder head mating surfaces for driving in a wedge (like a medium size flat screwdriver tip) to separate the stuck top end components. The KZ1000J has one on each end of the crankcase for separating the crankcase from the cylinder. I went one step further on my KZ-J engines and machined in a similar slot slot on the head so it can likewise be wedged off the cylinder without having to beat on the head fins with a dead blow. Just picked a solid / strong place about 8 mm wide x 10 mm deep with plenty of solid material to take the pressure from the wedge being driven in. Mill out or grind out about 2 mm of the surface so the screwdriver fits in.
I also sometimes run a fine thread tap through a few holes to thread the split cases, or cylinder head or block one size bigger than the studs. Then a bolt can be run in to press the pieces apart. The best location for that trick is thread where the alignment dowel pins are. I use that for a lot of crankcases that I know I will have to separate often (race stuff, two strokes, etc.). Works way better than hammering on the parts.
I wish I could still weld like you - my eyes went to shit and I'm having a hard time seeing the puddle now. Aluminum is really difficult for me now. Getting old sucks!
Great work B.J. , those fins turned out 👍. I like those old workhorse welders, I mean Pulse is nice but dependability is often underrated.
Thanks Doc! This is my first TIG and bought it from a friend a couple years back now. It was an awesome investment even if older!
Your videos are terrific!
Thanks Richard!
Thanks for the info BJ! I have broken fins on my GS850 and was unsure how to deal with it.
Depending on the severity Ive seem JB weld come into play for minor stuff. Glad the video was helpful!
Great series, keep em coming, nice work 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank ya Pete!
Haha respect for admitting errors and apologising. Some certain unmentionable channels would have just deleted the comments . . . . . . . . . . . . . dellbollox garage I'm talking to you.
I appreciate that 🙏
Looks nice good job vapor blast cabinet would be nice to have.
Thats my next big purchase
Well done you did a great job
Thank ya!
Man you love working on bikes 👍
Its what I do for a living 😎 Livin the passion
Very nice videos. The CBX Six was/is always my favorite bike here in the Netherlands. I have driven it a once, and the sound is amazing with after market pipes. In the '80 they ride here with Jama Marshall pipes. It's sounds like a F1 car. Goose bumps! Anyway, you have a new follower! :)
I appreciate it Michael!
The CBX is such a strange beast.
Id agree there!
A friend of mine in Yuma Owens a brand new in the Crate Honda CBX 1000 with the bags. He hasn’t opened it to date. He also owns a NIB CBX 1000 replacement engine. I couldn’t believe it.
Thats awesome!
Almost anything man made can be repaired. Nice job. Your very patient. I would guess that there are not a lot of parts available for CBXs.
Yay!! I was looking forward to this video. Great work as always
I appreciate it
That turned out really nice! I am no welder and have never found anybody good enough who would bother trying that trick. Several ARE good enough, though!
I appreciate it!
Man, that’s impressive.
I appreciate it!
What a great job. 👍
Thank you
U av a talent sir i would be to worried to take a job on like that watching from england dude
I appreciate that Kevin thank you!
Loving your videos matey. Such great work. I've had loads of bikes over my 41 years of riding but seeing that CX on the bike lift, wow that's a nice bike.
Thank ya Phil! I have put out many videos on that bike so check it out if you want to see more!
I really wouldn't worry about the naysayers. Your work is good. My partner does all the welding and fabrication and she thought you did a nice job too. She recommends using those carbide burs that tyre repair guys use before plugging holes to work between fins if that's any help to you in the future. Half her work is repairing fins, alloy and cast iron.
Thank you! Just took a look at those bits and they look to have a s
harper point which would be handy. Ill have to pick one up! Thanks for the tip
Baller skills
Thank ya
Damn fine job. Far more interested in your unique CX stuff, but following this CBX work nonetheless!
Well I appreciate it on the CX compliment for sure! Working on the Scrambler this week so look for a juicy episode Monday!
hi iam not going to rant you are doing a great job when you get the bike back together please please put a 6 into 1 yoshi pipe wow the sound is amazing i no because i had one the sound is wicked dont worry about what other people say you are doing it not them good luck
Thank ya. I would love a 6 into 1 but for this bike and goals it will get something stock or closer to it.
Good Work👍👍👍
Thank ya Frank!
We like it, because you are a nice guy.
Thanks David
Spot on 👍
Thank ya Sam!
Another note - I pulled cam covers off CBX's dozens of times with and without pulling the tach drive gear out first and never broke any of them. Just had to be careful to pull the cover forward a little and not straight up. I have seen a few broken ones, though. Of course, it is much safer to pull the gear first....
Great job!
🙏🙏
Nice work
I appreciate it Bill!
excellent video
Thank you much!
Great work 👏
Thanks David!
Man whoever worked on that thing before you was a hack
Yes they were. Very rough
Again an awesome upload. You must like Allen Millyard his work? Thank you for your uploads. They are helping me alot sir. Im down on luck and at rock bottem and your video's really are helping me not losing my mind even more. Thanks again.
Allen just blows my mind. My girlfriend calls him "whisper guy" when I play one of his videos lol. I aspire to be him when I'm a grandpa. I also watch 46works and just sit in awe of how he builds. Soothing videos to watch. Im glad you have been enjoying mine and appreciate you watching them!
I would powder coat it rather than paint. It covers better. Nice job on the fins.
Paint is how the factory does it so thats how it will be. If not the purists will burn down my house
Nice job as usual.
I appreciate it...as usual Richie!
Looks like new!
Thank you! Twas the goal!
@@BrickHouseBuilds I think you should vapor hone it and not paint it. The fresh cast aluminum looks so good on air cooled cyl.
@@chrisjet10001 Factory they were painted so thats the route I must follow for a restoration
Love what you are doing with the cbx don't take any notice of the naysayers and keep away from the 4 cylinder engines the world and his wife seem to be restoring these engines on youtube keep to the unusual
Thank you much! I like them all so I have various twin cylinder projects as well as other 4 cylinder projects currently
Very nice!
Thanks Jan