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rc30fan

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Posts posted by rc30fan

  1. Its still for sale. So far 4 serious buyers have pulled out at the last minute. A few people have asked if it would make a good race bike but the answer is a definite no. With no spares available for the NL0B engine, one small issue would turn the bike into a paperweight.

     

    I had to miss the Handbuilt show this year. I broke my leg in two places in January (damn supermotos are fun right up to the point of impact). I'm off the crutches now, but walking around the show would cause serious pain. 

    Did you go? Got pictures?

    • Like 1
  2. Heres an interesting update.
    This bike is still for sale. I've had a few 'firm' offers fail to materialize but I'm not in a hurry to sell. As I said, if I can find someone who can make plain bearing shells to order I wont sell. But thats another issue.

    Anyway, I'm in Sydney visiting family and I heard a rumour about the sister bike to mine. I followed up and look what I found:

    IMG_4061_zpsfj5rn8gs.jpg

    This bike is identical to mine in all but a few ways.

    - polished frame

    - stock brake calipers

    - ohlins steering damper

    - endurance fuel filler

    - welded-on side stand boss (required for homologated superbikes back in 1994)

    - non-running. (Although it needs some serious work its nothing an experienced RC30 mechanic couldn't do)

    Anyone interested can see more pictures here:

    http://s841.photobucket.com/user/rc30rdr/library/Winfield%20RC30/sister%20bike?sort=3&page=1

    • Like 2
  3. The main case bolts are a single use item and are supposed to be replaced every time the cases are split.

    The grooves give a known and controlled stretch in the bolts as they are torqued to a specified tension and then finished with an additional 90 degrees.

    Phil

    Thats what I thought too Phil but it turns out this is not the case. The same style bolts have been used in multiple VFR engines for years but none of the workshop manuals for these bikes include the final additional 90 degree twist. Honda trained mechanics are told to reuse the bolts. Even the race team that built my bike reused these bolts for years, with 3-4 engine rebuilds per season.

    Lets see some pictures of your RC30

    This is the best picture I have of it. It was still in the previous owner's possession at this time. It's wearing track bodywork(obviously) and wheels.

    Looks like it has some nice mods. Whats the history of this one?

    Will you be riding it?

  4. Thanks Guys,

    I'm not sure what I'll replace this bike with yet. I might get another special V4, or I might invest it in a new business.

    CornerCarver, I'm not with Ridesmart any more. I'm now a coach for California Superbike School so I'll be doing events all over the country this year. If you ever decide to do a CSS day let me know.

    Shaun

  5. Well its a sad day but I finally did it. This bike is now for sale.

    I always thought I'd have this bike forever but after seeing how difficult critical engine parts are to get (i.e. impossible, at any price) this just isnt the bike for me anymore. I want a bike I can ride but this one is just too valuable. It needs to be on display somewhere so other enthusiasts can see it.

    Its fully functional and I've ridden it once since the rebuild, in addition to starting it up dozens of times so people can hear it run.

    Anyone who reads raresportbikesforsale.com will see it there shortly. I took a bit of a guess at the price. Its by no means a pristine RC30 but it has a different value. I'll also be contacting the Barber museum to see if they are interested, plus a collector in Sydney who has the polished frame sister of this bike.

    • Like 1
  6. Thanks Baileyrock. Unfortunately now that the bikes rebuilt there's not much more worth posting.

    Phantom, I did have a solid red fairing for this bike - i didn't want to risk the winfield bodywork on the track.

  7. I finally got around to scanning the tintype photo taken at the Handbuilt show, printed on a sheet of steel. According to the photographer this picture will last "hundreds" of years.

    tintype_zps45cce7be.jpg


    Another shot from the show:

    HMS-2_zps2f016b13.jpg


    Recent track day. I didnt take it on track, its too much of a risk.

    SUN_IMG_420782_zps5c07056b.jpg

    I have my new V-4 for that:

    SUN_IMG_365602_zpsca31c144.jpg

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  8. Thanks Matt.

    Nice looking 400. Do you have video of it anywhere? I'd love to hear it running.

    I'm trying to find pictures or video of Gobert and Corser riding my RC30 back in the early 90's but i'm having no luck at all.

    You're right about the cost of rebuilding an RC30. I could have bought a (very) nice track bike for what I spent on this thing.

  9. I just got back from the Handbuilt motorcycle show held in Austin, sponsored by COTA for the MotoGP weekend. I was invited to bring my RC30 and they had a photographer take pictures of all the bikes. They also had an artist come in to draw selected bikes. He asked me what I considered to be the most visually appealing aspect of the bike and I said the rear wheel/exhaust. I look forward to seeing his interpretation in addition to the photos:

    IMG_2350_zpsa7d444ca.jpg

    The show was spectacular. The bikes were amazing, the people even more so. I've never been a fan of custom built bikes that use harley engines and cant go around corners, but these things, and the people who built them, are incredible.

    The closer you get to these works of art the more spectacular they are:

    IMG_2361_zps865d200d.jpg

    IMG_2362_zpsf514a74d.jpg

    • Like 1
  10. Small update on this project.

    This bike was originally fitted with a tach from the HRC catalog (which only goes down to 3,000 rpm and runs to 15,000 with no red line) which is designed to work with 2-strokes. As a result, the 4-stroke CDI is incompatible and requires a small converter box to talk to the tach.

    My converter box was lost in shipping so I was able to borrow one from a fellow enthusiast on the condition that I return it when I've reverse engineered it. To do this I've enlisted the help of an avionics specialist currently working on F-35 systems. He whipped up a circuit and we tested it tonight. With a few more mods the new converter should be complete.

    Here is a video of the testing process:

    http://youtu.be/U3X9FLwV7PQ

    • Like 2
  11. Thanks for the feedback guys.

    Damn Kel, that's about the nicest thing anyone's ever said to me!

    Phantom - we have spoken. I'm a machinist also and boasted about the merits of CNC. Larry wasn't convinced!

    wow you really know your bike? holy cow tore the whole thing down. If you don't mind me asking where did you learn how to do this? i am thinking of taking motorcycle certification classes so i can work on my own bike doing whta you are doing -- Good luck awesome ride..

    I started teaching myself after a series of screw ups every time I took my bikes in for service - at multiple dealerships. Various ham fisted morons scratched a brand new tank to hell, cross threaded a sump plug, reassembled a gear train incorrectly, left spacers out of a front wheel, lost various fairing fasteners (and didn't replace them), and many more. One even forgot they had my bike.

    If it had been only one dealership that would be easy to fix but this all happened at Honda, Suzuki, Ducati and KTM dealerships.

    As a result I started out by doing an oil change myself. Then I learned how to change tires, and worked my way up to 2-stroke rebuilds. Then a 4-stroke dirt bike rebuild, then a 4-stroke single street bike rebuild, then a 4 cylinder rebuild. You get the idea.

    All it takes really is a Haynes manual and a willingness to invest the money in tools that will pay for themselves many times over.
    Check out my YouTube channel for a few different bike rebuilds, http://youtu.be/Jz-MzJ6yKUo

    If I had one piece of advice to offer it would be this - buy a dirt bike that's not running. Then buy a Haynes manual for it and use it to learn. If you screw up, the parts are cheap and there's only one cylinder so its simple. Then when its fixed, either ride the hell out of it or sell it to pay for all the tools you had to buy. Then, when you need to work on something more complex/more important to you, the confidence is there because you know what needs to be done.

    I personally consider the tech schools out there a total waste of time. They are nothing but profit machines designed to take money from people. If they just happen to turn out a good mechanic its by accident not design. There are so many truly horrific techs working in dealerships that it makes no sense to let them work on a bike. Obviously they aren't all incompetent but the ones who do know what they're doing are under pressure to do their work faster than is possible and get paid barely more than minimum wage to do so. They are not allowed to check their work because that takes time away from other jobs so bikes go back to customers with loose wires, missing bolts and cross threaded plugs.

    Damn, I sound cynical but this is all from personal experience, not hearsay.

    Seb,

    that's a breather for oil vapor. The hose goes up to a catch tank in the tail which is then vented into the carbs.

    Switchblade,

    As far as I know the motor mount position is stock. What you're seeing is extra aluminum welded on by the race team to reduce/prevent flexing. I have noticed though that the Moriwaki chassis made for this engine actually uses the motor mount down in front of the sump - much like the RC45. That's some forward thinking engineering right there.

    • Like 3
  12. My mill didnt do a very good job of the foam instrument surround. I'll just have to cut the next one by hand.

    PC030004_zps061653ae.jpg

    Lots of plumbing. I have a new catch bottle on its way from England. Making the oil cooler lines was dead simple.

    PC030005_zps2f9f9693.jpg

    Still need to finish the front brake lines. They're not so simple to make.

    PC030007_zps8169c81a.jpg

    Closeup of the kit CDI, new wiring harness connectors and fairing bracket I made 15 years ago.

    PC030008_zpsdbee43c7.jpg

    I found the original connectors for the kit tach. Shipped all the way from England.

    PC030011_zpse1950baa.jpg

    New cast iron Brembos compared to cast iron HRC discs that are worn out after a lot of fun track time.

    PC030013_zps1b7d5f6c.jpg

    One of the many plastic items I had to make.

    PC030014_zpsad448541.jpg

    Its still a little cold blooded. I havent reconnected the choke yet so it takes some convincing to start up.

    GOPR1388_zps7ff7712a.jpg

    The tank needs to be repainted. I had a friend remake all the winfield graphics based on the existing decals on the fairings.

    I lost the original front fender when I made a mold for the carbon fender in school. I have another one ready for paint and graphics.

    GOPR1392_zpsb662aa44.jpg

    • Like 1
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