Author Topic: My 1975 CB400F restoration project  (Read 10202 times)

Offline K2-K6

  • Grogu
  • *
  • Posts: 5298
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #45 on: March 01, 2024, 09:36:18 PM »
Very nice work ozzybud.

When contemporary there were so many different bikes around that these didn't look out of the ordinary, but recently working with someone on their 400, having some time up very close to get something fiddly worked out, then it repeatedly shows what a brilliant piece of production engineering they were at that time, even more appreciated now.

Lovely bike to own and ride.

Offline McCabe-Thiele (Ted)

  • Grogu
  • *
  • Posts: 6344
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #46 on: March 01, 2024, 09:40:35 PM »
'Can the Valve cover be removed in frame on the CB400f?'
Yes, it can.

The head & block can also be removed with the engine in the frame - you just have to ensure the camchain does not fall inside.
Honda CB500 K1 (new pit dug out ready)
Honda CB400 four super sport (first money pit)
Link to my full restoration http://www.sohc.co.uk/index.php/topic,23291.0.html

Offline ozzybud

  • SOHC Associate
  • Posts: 87
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #47 on: March 01, 2024, 10:43:39 PM »
Very nice work ozzybud.

When contemporary there were so many different bikes around that these didn't look out of the ordinary, but recently working with someone on their 400, having some time up very close to get something fiddly worked out, then it repeatedly shows what a brilliant piece of production engineering they were at that time, even more appreciated now.

Lovely bike to own and ride.

Thank you! Very well said.

When doing my restorations I am constantly amazed at the great engineering these bikes had. One simple feature that always comes to mind is the Passenger Footpegs. Using The Rubber Pad as the SPRING That keeps them in Place( Up or Down).. There are 100 more examples i am sure.
1976 Z50 YELLOW
1970 CT70 BLUE
1971 CT70H ORANGE
1972 CT70H GREEN
1973 CL200 BLUE
1975 CB360T RED
1975 CB400F BLUE
1975 CB550 ORANGE
1976 CB750F RED

Offline ozzybud

  • SOHC Associate
  • Posts: 87
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #48 on: March 01, 2024, 10:48:14 PM »
 :-*
'Can the Valve cover be removed in frame on the CB400f?'
Yes, it can.

The head & block can also be removed with the engine in the frame - you just have to ensure the camchain does not fall inside.

Thank you Ted! 

The bike pulls strong , doesn't smoke and has good compression. so i wont be messing with the internals.

I Plan on pulling the cover to detail it, while i am at it clean up the carbs and clean up the fins on the head and Jug.
1976 Z50 YELLOW
1970 CT70 BLUE
1971 CT70H ORANGE
1972 CT70H GREEN
1973 CL200 BLUE
1975 CB360T RED
1975 CB400F BLUE
1975 CB550 ORANGE
1976 CB750F RED

Offline taysidedragon

  • SOHC Master
  • Posts: 1350
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #49 on: March 02, 2024, 01:08:51 AM »
:-*
'Can the Valve cover be removed in frame on the CB400f?'
Yes, it can.

The head & block can also be removed with the engine in the frame - you just have to ensure the camchain does not fall inside.

Thank you Ted! 

The bike pulls strong , doesn't smoke and has good compression. so i wont be messing with the internals.

I Plan on pulling the cover to detail it, while i am at it clean up the carbs and clean up the fins on the head and Jug.

Just make sure that you slacken off all the tappets/rockers before you loosen the cover screws.
Gareth

1977 CB400F
1965 T100SS

Offline ozzybud

  • SOHC Associate
  • Posts: 87
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #50 on: March 05, 2024, 01:00:13 AM »
The P.O. of this bike said he put a re-jetting kit in. He said it included instructions to drill extra holes in the exhaust, Throw away the air cleaner cover and new Main Jets and likely messed with the factory needle Position. ( I cringed a lot when he told me of this) Why didn't Honda think of this?

I rode the bike prior to tearing it down just to do some test and tune and make sure the engine was solid.(about 100 miles) It ran great pulled hard and had equal compression in all 4 cylinders.The carbs did not require synchronization. Plugs 1,2,3 were dark tan #4 was light tan.

The only changes i have made to affect engine performance was install the repro exhaust.

Took it for a longer ride yesterday about 10 miles. ran great at first after 5 miles it started missing on some cylinders. when i got home # 1 was coldish.
removed the plugs 1,2,3 were black and sooty  fouled or on there way to fouling.#4 was fine

I removed and cleaned the plugs. All of the idle mixture screws were out 4-5 turns? what? almost ready to fall out... lol  Reset to 1.5 turns out.

Took it out today with similar results ran good a little longer.like 7 miles. removed the plugs and they looked similar.

I am assuming at this point that the P.O. removed the #75 jets for something larger. I ordered 4 OEM Used #75 jets and a gasket o-ring set.
I will Check out everything else when i get the carbs off.

Is there anything else I am missing? I spent a lot of time on my CB360 getting it to stop fouling plugs. It ended up being the Chinese needles were smaller diameter and a little bit shorter than oem.

Any suggestion would be appreciated.
« Last Edit: March 05, 2024, 01:06:51 AM by ozzybud »
1976 Z50 YELLOW
1970 CT70 BLUE
1971 CT70H ORANGE
1972 CT70H GREEN
1973 CL200 BLUE
1975 CB360T RED
1975 CB400F BLUE
1975 CB550 ORANGE
1976 CB750F RED

Offline McCabe-Thiele (Ted)

  • Grogu
  • *
  • Posts: 6344
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #51 on: March 05, 2024, 07:19:36 AM »
Have you checked  the condition of the coil leads?
« Last Edit: March 05, 2024, 09:11:29 AM by McCabe-Thiele (Ted) »
Honda CB500 K1 (new pit dug out ready)
Honda CB400 four super sport (first money pit)
Link to my full restoration http://www.sohc.co.uk/index.php/topic,23291.0.html

Offline davidcumbria

  • Such great knowledge and support on here 👍
  • SOHC Expert
  • Posts: 292
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #52 on: March 05, 2024, 08:12:42 AM »
I suggest you have a read through some of the posts by fogrider. He put a sensor in the exhaust of a 4 into 1 and discovered all kinds of things about the fuelling. Several people have found aftermarket needle jets and seats have been the source of their problems.
500/4 in 79. No bikes for 30 years. 750/4 in 2013, 550/4 in 2023. Also own  R1100GS, RD350LC YPVS , Triumph Street Triple, Yamaha XT250

Offline Johnwebley

  • SOHC Jedi
  • Posts: 3248
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #53 on: March 05, 2024, 08:52:11 AM »
While the carbs are off, worthwhile to check the float heights,



Sent from my SM-A546E using Tapatalk

lifelong motorcycle rider,and fan

Offline McCabe-Thiele (Ted)

  • Grogu
  • *
  • Posts: 6344
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #54 on: March 05, 2024, 09:15:52 AM »
Your photo had me confused (I'm easily confused) - is it a close up of the old silencer end?
Honda CB500 K1 (new pit dug out ready)
Honda CB400 four super sport (first money pit)
Link to my full restoration http://www.sohc.co.uk/index.php/topic,23291.0.html

Offline Laverda Dave

  • SOHC Jedi
  • Posts: 2606
  • Health is wealth
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #55 on: March 05, 2024, 01:19:06 PM »
While the carbs are off, worthwhile to check the float heights,


+1 on that suggestion. I don't know why but these carbs can be a bit of a nightmare especially if they have been messed with in the past. I have used Keyster kits in the past and it was those that caused all my issues together with sticking floats where the float pin had been very slightly bent by p/o's. Stick with the original brassware wherever possible even if you have to give it a good clean. And obviously whilst the carbs are off the bike give them a good going over and bench sync.
Sent from my SM-A546E using Tapatalk
1976 Honda 400/4
1977 Rickman Honda CR750
1999 Honda VFR 800FX
1955 750 Dresda Triton
1978 Moto Morini 350 Sport
1978 Honda CB400/4 'Rat' bike
1982 Laverda 120 Jota

Offline K2-K6

  • Grogu
  • *
  • Posts: 5298
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #56 on: March 05, 2024, 02:47:18 PM »
The P.O. of this bike said he put a re-jetting kit in. He said it included instructions to drill extra holes in the exhaust, Throw away the air cleaner cover and new Main Jets and likely messed with the factory needle Position. ( I cringed a lot when he told me of this) Why didn't Honda think of this?

I rode the bike prior to tearing it down just to do some test and tune and make sure the engine was solid.(about 100 miles) It ran great pulled hard and had equal compression in all 4 cylinders.The carbs did not require synchronization. Plugs 1,2,3 were dark tan #4 was light tan.

The only changes i have made to affect engine performance was install the repro exhaust.

Took it for a longer ride yesterday about 10 miles. ran great at first after 5 miles it started missing on some cylinders. when i got home # 1 was coldish.
removed the plugs 1,2,3 were black and sooty  fouled or on there way to fouling.#4 was fine

I removed and cleaned the plugs. All of the idle mixture screws were out 4-5 turns? what? almost ready to fall out... lol  Reset to 1.5 turns out.

Took it out today with similar results ran good a little longer.like 7 miles. removed the plugs and they looked similar.

I am assuming at this point that the P.O. removed the #75 jets for something larger. I ordered 4 OEM Used #75 jets and a gasket o-ring set.
I will Check out everything else when i get the carbs off.

Is there anything else I am missing? I spent a lot of time on my CB360 getting it to stop fouling plugs. It ended up being the Chinese needles were smaller diameter and a little bit shorter than oem.

Any suggestion would be appreciated.

As already given in other posting, these are extremely sensitive to such small changes, volumes, jetting accuracy of manufactured parts etc.

Not over sensitive, just really accurately specified and built, resulting in very good running when all is in order. Fine tooth comb is the way to go through them to understand just whats in there and getting back on track, not dismissing even the smallest observation.

A thread here http://www.sohc.co.uk/index.php/topic,14609.0.html that looks at what the practical implications of jetting on them may be of interest.

Offline ozzybud

  • SOHC Associate
  • Posts: 87
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #57 on: March 05, 2024, 02:58:00 PM »
Your photo had me confused (I'm easily confused) - is it a close up of the old silencer end?

Yes it is the silencer end
1976 Z50 YELLOW
1970 CT70 BLUE
1971 CT70H ORANGE
1972 CT70H GREEN
1973 CL200 BLUE
1975 CB360T RED
1975 CB400F BLUE
1975 CB550 ORANGE
1976 CB750F RED

Offline Cb750r

  • SOHC Associate
  • Posts: 68
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #58 on: March 05, 2024, 03:04:26 PM »
I chased my tail jetting my 750 for quite some time, what really frustrated me is a lot of carb tuning states to get the main jet sorted first and work your way down…
In my scenario to get it to run right wide open was too lean at idle and to get it to idle the main was super rich, I played with countless needle positions and float heights and in the end a bigger idle jet sorted things out. 

I will second what others have said about non genuine brass, even in sport bikes I’ve jetted I try and avoid non genuine jets/needles.

Just another thought, where are you elevation wise? We have from sea level to fairly high base elevations in the pacific west coast to deal with, and small bikes have less hp to deal with jetting that’s off for your ‘base’ elevation. My snowmobile actually had a dial to lean out jetting as I climbed to keep it running optimally as I climbed. I’ve also had dirt bikes with ‘mild jetting’ changes from stock that are widely used elsewhere but would foul plugs at my elevation. Maybe your bike was ‘ok’ or slightly rich at sea level and you’re too high for it to run well now?

Offline ozzybud

  • SOHC Associate
  • Posts: 87
    • View Profile
Re: My 1975 CB400F restoration project
« Reply #59 on: March 05, 2024, 03:10:43 PM »
I chased my tail jetting my 750 for quite some time, what really frustrated me is a lot of carb tuning states to get the main jet sorted first and work your way down…
In my scenario to get it to run right wide open was too lean at idle and to get it to idle the main was super rich, I played with countless needle positions and float heights and in the end a bigger idle jet sorted things out. 

I will second what others have said about non genuine brass, even in sport bikes I’ve jetted I try and avoid non genuine jets/needles.

Just another thought, where are you elevation wise? We have from sea level to fairly high base elevations in the pacific west coast to deal with, and small bikes have less hp to deal with jetting that’s off for your ‘base’ elevation. My snowmobile actually had a dial to lean out jetting as I climbed to keep it running optimally as I climbed. I’ve also had dirt bikes with ‘mild jetting’ changes from stock that are widely used elsewhere but would foul plugs at my elevation. Maybe your bike was ‘ok’ or slightly rich at sea level and you’re too high for it to run well now?

I am at or near sea level
 Seattle Washington
My plan is to get everything back to stock settings and jet. #s then go from there. I have 4 OEM #75 jets on the way

After what I went through on my CB360 I am leary of using anything other Than OEM especially the needles.
« Last Edit: March 05, 2024, 03:15:03 PM by ozzybud »
1976 Z50 YELLOW
1970 CT70 BLUE
1971 CT70H ORANGE
1972 CT70H GREEN
1973 CL200 BLUE
1975 CB360T RED
1975 CB400F BLUE
1975 CB550 ORANGE
1976 CB750F RED

 

SimplePortal 2.3.5 © 2008-2012, SimplePortal