Honda CL77 unloaded and now in workshop.

I managed to get the old girl off the Truck and Now its at My workshop and will be a while before I get into it as I have a few projects I must try and sort out, its getting to be a bit of a cluster as I have a lot of bikes at the moment and will try and get through them when the weather cools off a little . right now its a scorcher but I shall get there.

I shall put the motor in at some point and will add other pieces when I take them out of the boxes that I picked up, no idea what’s there in its entirety but will plug away and see what we have, should look pretty cool though as it has great lines that flow very well for 1967.

Will look out for a few parts like foot peg rubber and wire harness etc but for now I shall put boxes on the shelves and the bike is in the Barn now with many others keeping it company.

Some of you may be interested in this build?  It really is something you wont really see around and is a great conversation piece for the enthusiast out there, but I will plug away when I get some time as it looks like it will be fun.

I will of course post anything that I do as many people ask what I am up to at the workshop and I thank you all for the emails and phone calls etc as well as texts about the parts and the bikes I am working on.

Picked up a 1966 Honda CL77 305 today

Today was a GOOD day, you know, when you find a penny and pick it up?  I had an email from a Client and he said he had an old Honda that had been in the family from new, its been torn apart a few times but was I interested in it?  I said of course, I love trying to keep old Motorcycles from going to the junk yard and drove up to the guys parents to pick it.

I asked who originally owned it with any back story, here is what he replied to me:

 

It was my Uncle. He returned from Vietnam. Bought the motorcycle rode it for 6 months. Put it in his parents garage for storage. His parents died 10 years ago sold their house and offered it to me. It had not been ridden since then until I restored it. Mainly rust removal. Mechanical clean up. I rode it around my block and put it away in my garage for many years. Sold my house transported it to my parents house where I restored it for the second time to the current color. One family owner. After I restored it the first time I offered to give it back to him for his granddaughter when she was old enough. He didn’t want it back.

So, with that I jumped into my F250 and made the trip up to Rancho Cucamonga before it got too hot as it would be well over 100f there after 10am, I arrived in good time and loaded the bike up, there was a tote box of parts and the engine was sat in the corner of the garage.  I loaded the bike up first, it has no shock absorbers so had to get the guys parents to help me push it up onto the bed of the truck, where I have a motorcycle chock and then strapped it down.  I picked the Motor up and loaded that and the box up and wished them all the best and headed home.

I have never owned one of these models, the scramblers were so popular and quite fast for the era and even though the color is not my cup of Tea, it’s great to get the bike and not sure what to do with it at this moment but it will go up in the Barn and wait until I have finished getting the workshop finished as Its hard to move for bikes in there lol.

But, it will be fun later as even though too much of this has been powder coated One color, I think it will look pretty cool once together and a few changes with a bit of Chrome here and there to break up  the Sea-Foam Green embodyment.

These are classic bikes and some how there is a Single seat frame attached as well as the original double seat in the parts pile, but, it reminds me of me and my brothers NSU quickly we had as kids or an old D1 BSA Bantam, so I think I will stick with the single seat set up as it does have a Brit Iron look to it.

The good thing about it being stored in a Garage and of course being Powder coated everywhere, is that it isnt rusty at all, just dust from sitting in one place, a rare thing indeed, and the original License plate with Original Tags from 1966, still has pink and registration in the tube that is affixed to the plate and numbers match frame and motor, so all good, another thing you do not often come across when you pick a machine up.

 

I had no plans on building another bike as I have about 12 other bikes in the Barn but eventually I will get to this machine and every now and again when I get stuck on another build, I can turn to this one, it will be fun, unless somebody out there is interested of course?

I shall be having fun creating something cool with it when I start to wrench on the Green Machine, as I can get parts still for these machines, they were a great motor back in the day.

 

  • Honda CL77.
  • Years produced: 1965-1967.
  • Claimed power: 27.4hp @ 9,000rpm.
  • Top speed: 85mph (est.)
  • Engine type: 305cc air-cooled SOHC parallel twin.
  • Weight (dry): 319lb (145kg)
  • Price then: $707 (1967)
  • 28.5 bhp (21.3 kW) @ 9000 rpm
  • 17.6 lbf·ft (2.44 kg·m) (23.9 N·m) @ 6500 rpm
  • 4 speed
  • Tube steel
  • Front: telescoping fork
  • Rear: swing arm
  • Front: 3.0″ × 19″
  • Rear: 3.5″ × 19″
  • 52.4 in (1,330 mm)
  • Length: 79.1 in (2,010 mm)
  • Width: 32.3 in (820 mm)

The bike features air-cooled, four-stroke 305cc overhead parallel-twin cams. The gas tank holds three gallons. The CL77 redlines at 9,000 RPM, reaching a top speed of 85 miles per hour.

There is quite a following for these bikes.  The first CL77s were imported into the United States in 1965. They were a dual-sport version (then known as scramblers) of the CB77 Super Hawk, a 305cc overhead cam parallel twin. The Super Hawk had been on the American market since 1961, two years after Honda had established its import arm in Los Angeles.

In 1965, Honda finally decided there was an American market for a 305cc scrambler. Cycle World immediately tested the bike and liked it, even through it was not the production racer they had hoped for. Cycle World referred to the CL77 as a “gentleman’s scrambler,” stating, “It is, in fact, the appeal of scrambler-type styling that sells the CL77.” Period testers found the CL to be too heavy for competition and not as fast as the CB, but perfectly adequate for both offroad fun and reliably getting to work.

The four-stroke engine was almost identical to that used in the CB77 Super Hawk, with the same aluminum cases and chain-driven overhead cam. A lower compression ratio to aid low rpm power was allied to long, upswept pipes to assist ground clearance, and reliability was ensured by full-flow oil filtration.

Unlike the Super Hawk, which used the engine as a stressed member of the frame, the CL had a heavy duty single downtube cradle frame, topped by a small silver gas tank and protected underneath by a steel skid plate. The front brake was smaller in diameter than the one on the Super Hawk and the steel wheels were 19 inchers, with deep ribs to resist dents.  Large air filters and a battery were tucked up under the seat. The CB’s electric starter was omitted in the interest of saving weight.

 

So, a long way to go when I get into this machine but a fun one though and even though it does have the original dual seat, I do like the single sprung saddle to give it a more European look.

“In those days, a Honda Scrambler was a very desirable motorcycle, and it is still adequate for the job. You just have to keep in mind that it is only 305cc, and the suspension only has three or four inches of travel, and the brake gives you that Nostalgic feel of, ” the harder you press, the quicker you will stop” feeling.

Well, thanks for looking at this 1966 Honda CL77 that I have taken on, you can always email me questions at: carpy@carpyscaferacers.com or text at 714-598-8392.

Bought Home a 1977 Yamaha YZ250 MotoCross Bike

Well, ya just never know what you mind find around here in Southern California and I came across a 1977 Yellow YZ250 Yamaha at an Auction and ended up bringing her home, this old girl has sat out since the 1980’s and left to just sit and soak up the sun, well- I could not resist and the reason why is:

When me and my brother were teenagers back in the UK, we used to ride old pieces of crap just to get out in the countryside and ride, we lived near the American Airbases and often spoke to many servicemen about the USA and how cool it would be to live there etc.  We knew some American lads not far from us and one of them gave me a Dirt bike magazine, this was about 1975/6 and when we clapped our eyes on all the MotoX stuff, we were hooked.

I remember Bob Hurricane Hannah Grabbing the 250 championship on the Very same model and year as I have right now.  In 1977, Hannah hopped aboard a stock production Yamaha 250 and won the Florida Winter-AMA Series and the AMA Supercross Championship in impressive fashion, taking six of the 10 rounds. By the end of the AMA Nationals season, he was in contention for the 125cc, 250cc and Open Class titles — becoming the first rider to win races in all three classes in just one season.

Hannah would go on to win the AMA Supercross title for three straight years. Known for his tireless training regimen and fierce demeanor on race day, his tell-it-like-it-is, never-say-die attitude toward racing endeared him to hundreds of thousands of fans, and he became the first genuine superstar of Supercross racing.

So for me now to have a 1977 YZ250 is kind of surreal and I hope to be able to do it up, maybe get a top end, rebuild forks etc and maybe a D pipe etc and race the Biltwell 100 someday, maybe even find another YZ250 and get my brother to fly out here so we can race together, just another tick in the box of things we wanted to do in life.

To many, they wont get the sense of excitement over this pee yellow 250 dirt bike, but this is out teenage OMG dream of owning one and sure, I have had CR250 and XR and XL moden dirt bikes but this was the thing to look out for when you saw a race on the tv.

So I loaded the 250 up from the Auction and bought her home with a happy smile on my face, have the pink slip too which is quite rare to find these days, of course I have to see if the bike is even in one piece, I have no history of it but I do know it was parked up in the early 1980’s.

I would like to get this old girl going, I mean, she is now 46 years old, so many parts will not be available, so I shall be looking around for parts and maybe some of you reading this may even have parts in the shed for this bike as you may of owned one or Dad or Grandad did?

Today’s dirt bikes ride like cadillacs compared to the 70’s bikes but these still pulled hard and you knew you had to watch the power band when it came in, that’s the fun I think, check out the old spark plug holder and wrench on the frame.

Classic set up here, throttle Cable through the number plate, so old school its got to stay on this bike, hope I can find NOS parts for this machine.

Just thought I would share as some of you may dig this old dirt bike, I know that I do and so does my brother. Nothing quite like the smell of Castrol R oil or Spectra and will keep you posted on my new ride.

 

Happy 4th Of July Everybody

Time sure does fly by and now it is the 4th July, I wanted to wish everyone that I know in the states a Happy Independence Day, Jenn has made an Apple Pie and the Smoker is full bore cooking some Hamburgers and Hot dogs to celebrate the day. Just some different fun stuff to watch on your day off.  HAPPY 4th Everyone.