Pictured below is a bike I've been working on since before leaving Maryland and now that I've been home in Minnesota it is far enough along to be riding. I got this frame in the treasure hunt last summer and it is a 53 Schwinn which had "Hornet" on the chain guard. So Hornet it is. There's some recycling which has gone on here. Last winter I had a rider which was a 51 with the same frame design. It suffered poorly from road salt and I decided to redo the bike, but didn't want to be without a rider for any length of time. So, I prepared the frame and tank ahead of time and at the last moment before leaving for home, stripped the 51 of engine, wheels and seat. The frame got passed along to Tinsmith for a future build if he so chooses.
So this is a new to me bike with a few old parts... namely the rear sprocket which originally came off of a Schwinn exercise bike and has 65 teeth. The engine got repainted and I made a new cover for the air box, which I may yet change over to a leaping tuna air filter which is already made, but not yet tried for comparison. Tinsmith and I made a shroud for the EZ transmission out of electroplate tin, which I like very much. The exhaust on the 51 went behind the seat and under the rear rack... wrapped in asbestos exhaust manifold cloth. It rusted away from the snow and road salt, so I have replaced it in stainless steel flexible gas line with an exhaust manifold fitting made from a copper pipe elbow to redirect the exhaust to the front. I think this is a better exit point for the 79cc Greyhound exhaust.
(cont.)
SB
So this is a new to me bike with a few old parts... namely the rear sprocket which originally came off of a Schwinn exercise bike and has 65 teeth. The engine got repainted and I made a new cover for the air box, which I may yet change over to a leaping tuna air filter which is already made, but not yet tried for comparison. Tinsmith and I made a shroud for the EZ transmission out of electroplate tin, which I like very much. The exhaust on the 51 went behind the seat and under the rear rack... wrapped in asbestos exhaust manifold cloth. It rusted away from the snow and road salt, so I have replaced it in stainless steel flexible gas line with an exhaust manifold fitting made from a copper pipe elbow to redirect the exhaust to the front. I think this is a better exit point for the 79cc Greyhound exhaust.
(cont.)
SB
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