Honda-SOHC
SOHC.co.uk Forums => CB750 => Topic started by: Pauarc on August 31, 2023, 04:05:50 PM
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Does anyone know what size the vacuum screw on carb on cb750k are like to change them they are a bit damaged
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Does anyone know what size the vacuum screw on carb on cb750k are like to change them they are a bit damaged
M5 with a 5mm thread ;)
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Thanks Trigger
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Thanks Trigger
You can use brass cheesehead screws but, hard to find in a 5mm thread length so you have to cut them down. The sealing alloy washers are 4.9mm which bloody expensive for a sealing washer ;)
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These may be of use to somebody who is not bothered with originality and would like the ability to just push on the vacuum gauge hoses without having to remove the screws and then fit the extensions as they can be left in place?
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/134331731567
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Does anyone know what size the vacuum screw on carb on cb750k are like to change them they are a bit damaged
M5 with a 5mm thread ;)
Not entirely correct that….
Surely if it’s an M5 bolt, it’s telling you it’s 5mm, the pitch of the thread is what your after in that question in which case it’s only one of two options .08 or .09, that’s all it can be. Not in the workshop so can’t check but if you have a tap and Dye set use your thread gauge and find the matching pitch in that particular screw. Simples

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Roo, I think he means 5mm long....
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Does anyone know what size the vacuum screw on carb on cb750k are like to change them they are a bit damaged
M5 with a 5mm thread ;)
Not entirely correct that….
Surely if it’s an M5 bolt, it’s telling you it’s 5mm, the pitch of the thread is what your after in that question in which case it’s only one of two options .08 or .09, that’s all it can be. Not in the workshop so can’t check but if you have a tap and Dye set use your thread gauge and find the matching pitch in that particular screw. Simples

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The Question was: What size the vacuum screw; and the bolt is M5 with a 5mm thread length. He never asked the pitch but, it is JIS standard 0.8 ;)
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If that's the case he should have written it M5x5mm. Thread refers to pitch not length, especially as there are screws and set screws. It's an 0.8 pitch BTW which is vital to know if your not replacing like for like as in using stainless ones instead.
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And there are copper screws which the 750K has. ;)
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Thanks everyone check with gauge they are .8 this may help someone
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Interesting stuff - thanks for posting.
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He never asked the pitch but, it is JIS standard 0.8 ;)
According to that chart from Honda that information would appear to be wrong, ISO is standard at 0.8, JIS standard would be 0.9. ;)
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I have been in the Honda business more than 20 years and must of handled and sold more than a million JIS screws and the M5 standard pitch is 0.8.
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Hard to get a good picture
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Honda have been in business far longer than 20 years AND they are Japanese so I'm sure they know what the standard JIS thread pitch is, please note what Honda said. All screws and bolts fitted to the 750 (which clearly means all bikes after as well) are to ISO standard thread pitches not JIS. So they've clearly made JIS screws and bolts with the head of the JIS standard BUT they threaded them to ISO standards not to the more normal for Japan, JIS standard. As the ISO standard for M5 is 0.8mm that means all M5 bolts and screws are 0.8 and not the JIS standard of 0.9.
So your statement was wrong, whilst correct in saying the screw is 0.8, the part about JIS standard pitch is not.
As you're so keen to point out other peoples mistakes I thought I'd point out one of yours, fairs fair.
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So you are saying that all the M5 threads on all the SOHC's from 1969 have a pitch of 0.9 :o And i have been fitting the wrong pitch JIS bolts and screws all these years and forcing the JIS bolts and screws to damage the threads but, 0.8 screws bolts fit perfectly :o Just tried to get a M5 with a 0.9 screw in to a head light rim for a SOHC and guess what, it doesn't fit.
And the member Pauarc has already stated that he has checked his sync port screws and his are 0.8, though the CB750K sync port screws are not the same as any other SOHC sync port screws but, only members with CB750's will know this.
Some member have experience and some members just believe what they have read ;)
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MASSIVE yawn!
All very boring now, anybody want to talk motorbikes instead of who’s got the smallest Willy?
Like a pair of lasses!
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I've got the smallest willy, problem solved
As for Graham.
Do you really not read what's been posted? or are you being deliberately obtuse?
Whenever it's shown you're wrong you start throwing toys out of the pram and invent stuff to support your failed arguments. You got it wrong, just admit it and move on. I do.
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This JIS pitch conversation is weird, it appears that Paurec says the pitch is 0.8 he has checked with a gauge & posted a chart, Graham has sold millions states the pitch is 0.8, Ken says they are 0.8.
So what was the point of trying to get a M5 0.9 pitch screw in a headlight rim to prove its 0.8 I'm lost in semantics here.
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Loz did say that Ken

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Don’t be Ted, just yawn, tut and roll your eyes like the rest of us!
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Nearly forgot……….

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I know I am not wrong. I went to Honda technical collage in Japan, where I was taught that the JIS bolts and screw thread changed in 1966 to 1967.
The question was about a CB750 and the 750 was not made in !966/67 ;)
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Paul posted a picture of a Honda bulletin which says that motorcycles like the CB750 were fitted with what are essentially a mixture of both ISO and JIS standards Ted. In order to try and avoid stripping threads Honda decided to keep the look of the JIS screw and bolt BUT they threaded them to the ISO standard and not the JIS standard. The JIS standard for an M5 screw or bolt is 0.9mm, whereas the ISO standard is 0.8mm.
Graham in his usual, I know everything manner, incorrectly said the JIS standard is 0.8mm and the Honda bulletin clearly shows he's wrong. Now for some reason he can't read bulletins any longer and when he does he clearly misreads them, or as is more likely, he pretends to misread them and continues to argue a losing point.
So to clarify, all bolts and screws fitted to bikes like the 750 are threaded to ISO standards not JIS standards, the shape of the head is irrelevant, as it's the thread pitch that counts not what it looks like.
Roo, ;)
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Ah but did they still put a dot on the head of the screw as I understand it they do not need it anymore to indicate a JIS head?
To clarify my status I must have bought probably 10 JIS screws in the last two years - does this make me credible though?
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I know I am not wrong. I went to Honda technical collage in Japan, where I was taught that the JIS bolts and screw thread changed in 1966 to 1967.
The question was about a CB750 and the 750 was not made in !966/67 ;)
You seem to ignore the fact that IF that were the case Honda would have had no reason to post a bulletin stating the thread pitch problem.
Oddly on all my Honda courses not a single mention of JIS was made. They just assumed we all knew what it was and what it meant.
And yes Ted, they still made them look like JIS screws and bolts, I suppose that was the point of the bulletin, to point out that they were not JIS thread pitched. The dot was to show the recess was made for a JIS screwdriver for example and not a Phillips screwdriver
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Paul posted a picture of a Honda bulletin which says that motorcycles like the CB750 were fitted with what are essentially a mixture of both ISO and JIS standards Ted. In order to try and avoid stripping threads Honda decided to keep the look of the JIS screw and bolt BUT they threaded them to the ISO standard and not the JIS standard. The JIS standard for an M5 screw or bolt is 0.9mm, whereas the ISO standard is 0.8mm.
Graham in his usual, I know everything manner, incorrectly said the JIS standard is 0.8mm and the Honda bulletin clearly shows he's wrong. Now for some reason he can't read bulletins any longer and when he does he clearly misreads them, or as is more likely, he pretends to misread them and continues to argue a losing point.
So to clarify, all bolts and screws fitted to bikes like the 750 are threaded to ISO standards not JIS standards, the shape of the head is irrelevant, as it's the thread pitch that counts not what it looks like.
Roo, ;)

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Paul posted a picture of a Honda bulletin which says that motorcycles like the CB750 were fitted with what are essentially a mixture of both ISO and JIS standards Ted. In order to try and avoid stripping threads Honda decided to keep the look of the JIS screw and bolt BUT they threaded them to the ISO standard and not the JIS standard. The JIS standard for an M5 screw or bolt is 0.9mm, whereas the ISO standard is 0.8mm.
Graham in his usual, I know everything manner, incorrectly said the JIS standard is 0.8mm and the Honda bulletin clearly shows he's wrong. Now for some reason he can't read bulletins any longer and when he does he clearly misreads them, or as is more likely, he pretends to misread them and continues to argue a losing point.
So to clarify, all bolts and screws fitted to bikes like the 750 are threaded to ISO standards not JIS standards, the shape of the head is irrelevant, as it's the thread pitch that counts not what it looks like.
Roo, ;)
The whole post is about a CB750 and CB750 have JIS post 1967 M5 with a 0.8 pitch thread which are Japanese Industrial Standard after the change over in 1967. It was not about JIS pre 1967 which are M5 with a 0.9 pitch thread.
Both are classed as JIS. It is just pre and post pitch size.
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Does anyone know what size the vacuum screw on carb on cb750k are like to change them they are a bit damaged
M5 with a 5mm thread ;)
Not entirely correct that….
Surely if it’s an M5 bolt, it’s telling you it’s 5mm, the pitch of the thread is what your after in that question in which case it’s only one of two options .08 or .09, that’s all it can be. Not in the workshop so can’t check but if you have a tap and Dye set use your thread gauge and find the matching pitch in that particular screw. Simples

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I would like to remind that only one option for the SOHC bikes which this thread was about and to say that it is one of two options is incorrect ;)
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Ffs!🥱
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Yes Roo. 🏳ï¸🏳ï¸🏳ï¸🥱
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I always use this Service Bulletin as a reference for threads Honda used pre and post 1967, as I have early 60's bikes and post '67 ones too.
[attachimg=1][attachimg=2]
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Does anyone know what size the vacuum screw on carb on cb750k are like to change them they are a bit damaged
M5 with a 5mm thread ;)
Not entirely correct that….
Surely if it’s an M5 bolt, it’s telling you it’s 5mm, the pitch of the thread is what your after in that question in which case it’s only one of two options .08 or .09, that’s all it can be. Not in the workshop so can’t check but if you have a tap and Dye set use your thread gauge and find the matching pitch in that particular screw. Simples

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I would like to remind that only one option for the SOHC bikes which this thread was about and to say that it is one of two options is incorrect ;)
No, that's not what you said.
You clearly stated that the standard JIS thread was 0.8, not the modified standard thread, which is 0.8. There are STILL 2 JIS standards, the old and the new, the fact it's a 750 we are talking about is irrelevant. It's very interesting that Honda did take the trouble to clarify the situation even 2 years after changing.
As for the Honda college, you are really trying to say they were discussing JIS over 10 years after changing the standard? Plus back then you'd have needed to be fluent in Japanese to attend and that's a language notoriously difficult to master never mind talking technical Japanese.
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The Question was about a sync port screw / vacuum screw so how can that be irrelevant. The member asked a question and i answered it.
Roo contradicted my answer with the wrong information about a M5 pitch screw for a 750 and any other SOHC's.
Ken jumped on the band wagon with his little team to confuse the thread and the correct answer.
They spoke very good English in 1992 in Japan as they do today. And yes they teach you a lot about JIS in the engineering collage and do teach you about changes in Honda parts and engineering practices ;)
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No I didn’t read it again ffs, get over yerself Graham

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Come on Ken & Graham stop using this forum like a Gladiator Stadium for supreme Honda knowledge.
We are aware that many members here have vast experience on old Hondas without all this theoretical bickering over a thread pitch.
If I want 500 advice my first port of call in reverse alphabetical order is is Ken or Bryan.
If I had a 750 it would be Graham.
Lots of folks here know about the 400's.
Time for a truce eh lads or just agree to disagree.
Members make their own choices about whose advice to take.
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Well said Ted!
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Yeah well said Ted! The constant bickering is ruining a good forum.
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I would Ted, would love to. However it takes 2 and one of us isn't playing.
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Bored with this.
Any more and I’ll delete the whole thread.
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Fair point Steve.
Personally I'd say delete the thread. No knowledge will be lost and the back and too doesn't make the forum look good. Maybe for the best to put this to bed.
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Get rid, I would!
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I agree.👍
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I always use this Service Bulletin as a reference for threads Honda used pre and post 1967, as I have early 60's bikes and post '67 ones too.
(Attachment Link) (Attachment Link)
Cheers for posting it Ash, i could not find it yesterday mate