what did you do to your motorized bicycle today?

GoldenMotor.com

xseler

Well-Known Member
Apr 14, 2013
2,886
151
63
OKC, OK
Well Rumplestiltskin........idle fingers and a warm keyboard just spells a thinner wallet. Just ordered a matching new front wheel and Continental City Ride tire. The mis-matched set just felt 'wrong'. Oh well, it'll be right in a week or so.
 

DRBS

Member
Jun 22, 2014
269
3
18
Westland MI U.S.A
ive been building these for over 3 years now and would never stop its very rewarding and keeps me moving besides where else can you have so much fun
 

mapbike

Well-Known Member
Mar 14, 2010
5,502
109
63
Central Area of Texas
Added some of those plastic fenders to the green bike, got it up and running good again, new Mag coil did the trick, mounted cdi in new location and got kill switch hooked back up, added some top bar panniers and it has a new cdi, new mag, a couple zip ties and a stubby Philips screwdriver, this bike isnt gonna strand me again because of the mag or cdi.....lol!

Ch3cked to see how far I peddled the other day and my guess was right on the button 8 miles, dirt road, up hill 2/3 of the way with wind in my face...... I was so spent by the time I made it home....lol!


Project #2 today was to put mt Puch head on the Western Flyer which has the Half Breed engine, also put my old faithful home grown exhaust pipe in it along with a new NGK plug, roqd the western flyer 26 miles today and its still running like a champ on the 25:1 mix of 40wt non detergent, hit 43.5 mph today but I was on a downward slope that that doesnt really count.....lol will do 39-41mph on the flat with no head wind, I been putting this thing through its paces and not babying it to see how it holds up, so far so good and I even put one of the better looking chinese upper bearings in this engine, actually running smoother than the GT5 engine now, 107 miles so far and its settled in about as good as its going to I think.
 

DRBS

Member
Jun 22, 2014
269
3
18
Westland MI U.S.A
ordered a few new carbs today a few hub adapters got that piece of aluminum pipe in thanks mapbike for the idea going to cut a few pieces think ill hit it inside and out a whole bunch of times with a chisel to add burs to hold it better hope they dont slip but we will see going to put another schwinn midway together and see how the adapter holds up
 

Intrepid Wheelwoman

New Member
Oct 29, 2011
2,830
62
0
Hauraki District, New Zealand
The Velo Solex parts I was waiting for arrived from France today so tomorrow it will be my Wu-Yang's turn to have some work done on it. Today was spent hunting out Raleigh parts for my latest acquisition as well as finding all the bits for my faux Rudge project so I can get that back together again.
Just like chocolate one motor-bicycle is never enough. :)
 

bluegoatwoods

Active Member
Jul 29, 2012
1,581
6
38
Central Illinois
"Just like chocolate one motor-bicycle is never enough." --Intrepid Wheelwoman.

I know just what you mean. Right now I have a motored bike that I'm happy with plus a pedal bike that I'm happy with. But........there's a bike for motorizing in my basement right now that I'm feeling the urge for. I'd have built it by now if it weren't that there are higher priorities. But it won't be long.

But I did have a breakdown on my current motorized bike yesterday morning on the way to work. It won't be a really difficult fix. But my workweeks are fairly intense. So it'll be Monday before I can do the repairs. (And that puts the new bike back a bit again, of course.)

So in the meantime, it's either the pedal bike or the car for me.

Bummer. But, then, repairs really are just a part of the game, aren't they?
 

DRBS

Member
Jun 22, 2014
269
3
18
Westland MI U.S.A
when I was a kid i had a 1962 solex i had to order a carb rebuild kit and the friction wheel from Germany it took two months to get here boy was I impatient but it was worth it. the motor ran beautiful and had more power but ate through tires even faster than before but was a joy to ride i think the motor is still kicking around somewhere
 

Davezilla

New Member
Mar 15, 2014
2,705
10
0
San Antonio Texas
I know the feeling... just took on a new project to build up but wanted to do some last touch ups to my main ride so 2 weekends ago I had enough time to get the engine out and do some final welds before taking it all the way apart for paint... then I notice there's a crack in the frame... go to weld it shut and I'll be back on track with that I'm gonna do but blow a hole in the frame tube while welding. I cut out that section of frame and see how thin this tubing really is so next thing I'm cutting out the bottom tube, bending a new tube, and all set up and ready to weld it in but I'm out of argon for my tig setup, don't want to use the mig on it, and my sawzall is at home so I cant really get a nice clean cut to splice in the new bottom tube so now that bike is still apart awaiting enough free time for me to finish these repairs and do the painting I originally planned to do.
Being dead in the water on that one I began taking apart the stingray I got a few weeks ago to strip it down to bare metal, beef up the frame in a few places, and get it repainted. Some of the parts were a lot rustyer than I thought so ive been wire brushing all the parts with rust on them... like all the chrome parts, then powder coating these parts as I get them rust free and ready. The frame its self and the fork tubes will just get regular paint since my powder coat oven is way too small. I'm not in a hurry to get this one done since I want it to be setup just the way I planned with the billet mounts, solid layback seat post and cloud9 seat, ape hanger bars, and I may build up a girder type front end for a smoother ride but excellent handling... I want this one to be able to ride safely at 45+ mph as well so I will spend the extra time and effort on the frame before I start thinking about installing the engine, wheels, forks, etc.
I am also really tempted to put my old engine into my son's bike just to get me back up on 2 wheels sooner while I'm doing the repairs to the mountainbike frame since his bike has the same frame and I can just transfer my parts to his frame pretty quickly... of course, if I did that it would be about when he got interested in the bike again and want it back...
 

mapbike

Well-Known Member
Mar 14, 2010
5,502
109
63
Central Area of Texas
The Velo Solex parts I was waiting for arrived from France today so tomorrow it will be my Wu-Yang's turn to have some work done on it. Today was spent hunting out Raleigh parts for my latest acquisition as well as finding all the bits for my faux Rudge project so I can get that back together again.
Just like chocolate one motor-bicycle is never enough. :)
I know exactly what you mean....

I have 6 bikes and a couple more on the back burner, I know at some point Ill have to stop and just pick the ones I want to tinker with and make improvements to over time since none of my bikes are fancy builds and can all use a few upgrades over time.

Best wishes on your projects IWw
 

knightscape

Member
Jul 29, 2013
340
1
16
Maine
"Just like chocolate one motor-bicycle is never enough."

The finest and most fundamental mathematical rule of cycles. Where the ideal number of cycles to own is described as the equation: N+1; where N = the number of cycles you currently own. I have pretty much reached capacity in my garage, and yet I can always seem to find room somewhere for one more project, and I'm perpetually only one bad idea away from my next bike. My bad idea du jour is an HF79cc and I'm already thinking about colour scheme which means bad news for my wallet...
 

mapbike

Well-Known Member
Mar 14, 2010
5,502
109
63
Central Area of Texas
"Just like chocolate one motor-bicycle is never enough."

The finest and most fundamental mathematical rule of cycles. Where the ideal number of cycles to own is described as the equation: N+1; where N = the number of cycles you currently own. I have pretty much reached capacity in my garage, and yet I can always seem to find room somewhere for one more project, and I'm perpetually only one bad idea away from my next bike. My bad idea du jour is an HF79cc and I'm already thinking about colour scheme which means bad news for my wallet...
LOL....... I have two of the HF79cc new in the box that I plan to use for some type of a build in the future, ma6 end up on something I build for the grandkids down the road but Id like to use at least one of them for a bike build Ive had in mind for a good while.
 

Intrepid Wheelwoman

New Member
Oct 29, 2011
2,830
62
0
Hauraki District, New Zealand
"Just like chocolate one motor-bicycle is never enough."

The finest and most fundamental mathematical rule of cycles. Where the ideal number of cycles to own is described as the equation: N+1; where N = the number of cycles you currently own. I have pretty much reached capacity in my garage, and yet I can always seem to find room somewhere for one more project, and I'm perpetually only one bad idea away from my next bike. My bad idea du jour is an HF79cc and I'm already thinking about colour scheme which means bad news for my wallet...
Yes an overactive imagination can be a curse sometimes, but then on the other hand I can think of worse things to be cursed with ;)
 

Davezilla

New Member
Mar 15, 2014
2,705
10
0
San Antonio Texas
Slow day at the shop today... Everyone in San Antonio is at Fiesta Downtown and nobody's getting their cars fixed... I just can't understand why people would rather go to Fiesta instead of getting their cars fixed... anyway, all that free time means I get to tinker with My projects some...

Today I cut out the bad section of frame on my mountain bike and bent a new lower tube for it, the bend isn't too drastic, but should give me at least another inch of badly needed engine clearance... Before, my engine sat in there so tight that I had to pull the engine to remove the carb or even to remove a spark plug... I'm trying to get enough room that I can pull the head or the carb... or both with the engine still mounted in the frame...

Here's the bike with the bottom tube cut out... It's suprisingly strong enough to hold me without flexing like this, but there's no way I'd even pedal ride it like this...



Here's the bad section of frame that motivated me to do this in the first place...


And here's a trial fit of what the new tube will look like, I tried it with the bend closer to the bottom but liked the way it looks with the bend higher up, and this way offers the most room for the engine when I'm ready to put it back in... I'm gonna have LOTS of welding to do first tho...



Oops... almost forgot this one... This is just to show just how thin the wall thickness of these cheap Roadmaster Mountainbike frames really are... No wonder I blew a hole in the metal when trying to weld up the crack... and I had my amps and speed set really low too... I didn't measure the wall thickness, but if my eye calibration is still good enough, I'd say it's about .040" thick at best... I'll measure it tomorrow just to see if my eye calibration is as good as it used to be. The new tube has a .080" wall thickness so if anything breaks again, it won't be the bottom tube...




I've also been doing some of the more quick and easy stuff for the Stingray build like ordering the billet mount setup for the engine as well as the Manic hub & sprocket. I still need to get a seat for it and want to get a set of 14" ape hangers since it's a chopper after all. I'll also reenforce the welds in all the critical areas on this frame too since I have a really strong suspicion that it has the same thin wall tubing the roadmaster has... The lower tube of the Roadmaster is the exact same size and cross section as the Stingray bottom tube as well... More on that one as I go too...
 

fatdaddy

New Member
May 4, 2011
1,516
4
0
San Jose, Ca.
Yer right Davezilla,after building about 10 or 12 of the OCC chopper bikes, I decided the frame is way too thin to build a really safe MB and wont build on them again. NOW, The Jesse James chopper, By Huffy, Has a heavier frame and makes a real nice build. although I've only done one of those.
fatdaddy.usflg
 

Davezilla

New Member
Mar 15, 2014
2,705
10
0
San Antonio Texas
I kinda figured that when I got that tube cut off the mountainbike and saw it was exactly the same as the OCC Stingray's bottom tube... I do see some doublers and gussets in that bike's near future before it's put on the road...
 

DRBS

Member
Jun 22, 2014
269
3
18
Westland MI U.S.A
ok so why are you having a hard time starting your jet engine? could it be because of the ignition system? did you remember to hold down the button on the opposite side of the fuel on line? if there is air in the float bowl you have to push it quite a few times to purge the air out of the float bowl this is the big reason ppl keep coming back to me for no start problems
 

chewyps

New Member
Apr 26, 2015
18
0
0
USA
ok so why are you having a hard time starting your jet engine? could it be because of the ignition system? did you remember to hold down the button on the opposite side of the fuel on line? if there is air in the float bowl you have to push it quite a few times to purge the air out of the float bowl this is the big reason ppl keep coming back to me for no start problems
yes I purge all the air out. doesn't seem to help. I am at the end of my rope and I am thinking about buying a pull start
 

DRBS

Member
Jun 22, 2014
269
3
18
Westland MI U.S.A
ok my problem is I have a guy wanting a 80cc motor on a adult tricycle any ideas on how to do this? i know ill need longer fuel and clutch cables and ill have to put a different tank on it i have a few rear tanks and was thinking of using a hub adapter to hook up the chain to it and also using a pull start on it but do any of you have a better idea? please let me know i want to do this for this guy hes severely disabled and cannot pedal to start and to go anywhere far im doing this as a pay it forward so when I or anyone near to me needs help it will be there for us to do what we need to do thank you and have a blessed day