Honda-SOHC
SOHC.co.uk Forums => SOHC Singles & Twins => Topic started by: K2-K6 on March 26, 2025, 02:30:53 PM
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I nice interest piece on old Honda racer
https://youtu.be/EXGxYjUWE3o?si=e4Z-BvVWF9uMfk1O
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Not the special in the video but the same engine, a friend of mine had a brand new CB77 305 Honda Super Sport sometime around 1965, it made my bog standard 250 Dream look like it was standing still.
His Mum was widowed quite young as Stephen was only around 18 at the time, he was studying Languages at Uni. Not your standard French or Spanish but Arabic. I lost contact with him when his Mum moved back to the Isle of Man where he was born I think, the family name was Cooil that I believe is an old Manx name. The video of the engine triggered my memory.
# www.ancestry.co.uk/name-origin?surname=cooil&srsltid=AfmBOopHHKu7SMIfBaUid0S1GM5fHMplYwiNduo5Bg0xOcn8ugjtJRTI
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He's quite knowledgeable about it and the design elements in relation to other bikes etc.
Slightly odd knowledge of welding though, as he notes it was brazed not welded (correctly it appears) but then notes "Bronze welding" as not used, which is brazing !
Wondered on initial closeup about that additional plate, the story of which came later ..... but oh dear, that welding is a bit of a shocker :) dripping down the seam like candle wax :) I'd take that off and at least get someone competent to properly braze a decent join down a replacement.
The frame is quite Tony Foale like in concept, also of "Bird cage" Maserati ilk too.
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Nigel, there is a difference between brazing and bronze welding, although they are often referred to as being the same.
The main difference in the processes is the temperature.
Brazing is carried out at a lower temp and the brazing rod flows into the joint through capilliary action.
Bronze welding is done at a higher temp and melts the filler rod and parent metals together.
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The original Mini front wings were Brazed on at the factory IIRC.
If not then when mine were replaced the body shop said they had to be brazed.
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Brazing was frequently used for body repairs before small mig welders came in as the only other way was oxy acetalyne gas welding which was at a lot higher temp and could distortpanels.
VOSA decreed brazing was not a suitablr strength panel repair as brass on steel combined with salt water created a galvanitic reaction causing corrosion away from the joint
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Nigel, there is a difference between brazing and bronze welding, although they are often referred to as being the same.
The main difference in the processes is the temperature.
Brazing is carried out at a lower temp and the brazing rod flows into the joint through capilliary action.
Bronze welding is done at a higher temp and melts the filler rod and parent metals together.
Unsure of where the information comes from? as not in my experience.
My father taught welding, I've oxy acetylene experience from about 12, not that this makes me expert :) but formal training covered much more depth in as much as we carried out various brazing and welding work pieces, to then section them, reface thee cross section to then be polished, finally to acid etch that surface to display internal structure, inclusion, granularity etc in metallurgical lab. It was good insight.
Brazing, on bicycle frame of lug type is like plumbing in sweating the melted braze down via capillary, yes.
Welding is melting the base material together, we had to practice without filler rod to understand it.
Bronze "welding " as I understand that, and it may be turn of phrase difference, is effectively making fillet with the filler rod and classically what you'd see on a bespoke frame made as such. It doesn't involve heat at the level that will melt steel (we're talking about ferrous pipes here) the pipes and brackets tailored in specific joint shape, then with a torch you'd heat the base metal to level locally, introduce the bronze while facing the flame blue tip onto that in getting it to flow, then as you move along the joint you "play" the pool of molten bronze in getting it finished as you want it, giving those classic "fishscale " linked plates as you move along, all the time monitoring how the melt is setting to give smooth integration and flow in it's junction with the steel base. No finishing required.
Most importantly though, if you start with a section of T45 cold drawn solid seamless (in that relm of this frame on here), then bring another piece in at an angle to that "birds mouthed " to fit, brazing preserves the integrity of that principle continuous pipe route as you very specifically don't take the steel past its melt point to leave the latent properties alone. The finished structure, if brazed with something like Sif bronze rod (raised silicone content) matches the spec of the pipe. Under tensile and bending load, the whole assembly is balanced in it's elasticity, not needing stress relief to hold the designed rating of materials.
Welding on the other hand, ultimately changes the base structure by melting it and then back to solid. Its a different consideration in joint design, often needing breaks in weld line to prevent stress failure propagation fully along the weld site to give structural failure under duress.
The two are fundamentally different. One doesn't cross into the other as far as I was taught.
This very interesting frame is obviously marginal as he points out because it fractured, on what looks like straight sections. The brazing appears to be in tact.
The added panel and its welding are particularly gash though. It should at least be stich welded to prevent continuous fracture risk. Better still the panel would have relief pocket along the edge to not weld there, with radius corners that would mitigate stress pull to then crack diagonally across the plate.
Seems a shame to have such poor welding on display of such an innovative frame designer's work.
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Interesting video and history. What a shame he didn’t start it up with those megaphones though!
Laverda utilised the spaceframe concept very successfully on their works triples for endurance racing in the 1970’s.
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Yes it would be interesting to hear it, looks though to be currently not running after being displayed up on the wall, without drive train too.
Reminds me also of Moulton Bicycle as originally designed in similar way, of that era too.
It would probably make more sense if he were to get another made to replace that frame if it was to be run more on track though. Looks to be toward the end of its trust equation to be sitting on it.
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Yes it would be interesting to hear it, looks though to be currently not running after being displayed up on the wall, without drive train too.
Reminds me also of Moulton Bicycle as originally designed in similar way, of that era too.
It would probably make more sense if he were to get another made to replace that frame if it was to be run more on track though. Looks to be toward the end of its trust equation to be sitting on it.
As he says in the video Nigel, if you were to sit on it without the engine being a stressed member the frame would break :o
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There were some lovely innovative frames around which we don't see nowadays, its a shame to see such interesting one like this with that poor repair. I feel sorry for the frame :)
The list of British frames was really good, with variously Degens (as you know Dave) Harris, Foale, Seeley, Rickman amongst them
My favourite, in pure elegant mitigation of stress, beautiful lines and so comprehensive in answering the question is a Rob North with Triple engine installation. Oh what a beautiful motorcycle.
Peckett and McNab have an honorable mention too, while not as pretty as RN thin wall easy curves and stress mitigation with ease, in the same relm.
On the Eton long haired blonde's show yesterday, was a seller who'd trained with DeFazio in hub centre steering framework, with about 3 Laverda examples to be seen in his workshop too.
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Interesting in reading further about this topics with
"Richard’s story started in 1969, when he began racing, having been inspired by the Rob North triples. Having decided to build his own chassis, the former carpenter was a regular visitor to Dresda Autos, where his potential was spotted and a job offered. That’s where he met Peter Mcnab and in 1975 the pair decided to branch out on their own. The following year Richard was using their first frame on track, powered by a Honda CB750 engine. Soon he was winning regularly and demand for their frames took off."
Coming from this site https://www.elkpromotions.co.uk/post/meet-richard-peckett-of-p-m-motorcycles-at-ardingly-show-on-30th-july no wonder it has some dna of RN frames :)
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It's a shame Trident Engineering who make the Rob North frames and complete bikes was burnt down a couple of weeks ago. They lost everything, bikes, lathes, milling machine's, tube benders, in fact everything. And to make it even worse they were not insured either. I know there's a crowd fund going on.
It would be a real shame if we never see a new Rob North frames.
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What a shame Dave, to see someone's business go like that.
A big oversight to not have insurance though ! Hope they can recover to get back in business.