I recovered the seat using an eBay special cover, turned out alright. The foam was in okay condition, some spots had rotted out a tad so filled them
with some random foam I had in the shed. These are visible with cover on, as you can see it’s a bit bumpy and rough looking in the area, detracts from
finish of the cover.
I also started having a crack at the fuel tank, trying to make it look less like brown and more white. I started with the normal scrapping method, which just revealed that the stains had come from the inside out, so I started sanding the tank all over to try to smooth the scrap marks. This has been a job that I do
a little bit on then come back to later. At one stage I tried the bleaching method using oxy action and hydrogen peroxide, which I think helped but that
could all be just in my head. The link below is one of the sites I looked at for this method, I also found a retro gaming forum using a similar method
to clean up old computer plastic. w w w . dirtbikeworld.net /forum/showthread.php?t=121948
I found a second-hand side plastic on eBay for cheap but it needed several layers of paint removed to get it back to white, I took the gamble and
used paint stripper on it hoping the plastic would handle it. The plastic did well, but the gloves I was wearing didn’t handle the stripper so well and it
seeped through the gloves leaving me with some rather sore hands. Note to self an old box of disposable nitrile gloves doesn’t cut the mustard when using
paint stripper. I've upgraded to a thick pair of chemical rated gloves now. I gave the plastic a good sanding and now it needs a good polish to finish it off.
In those photos you can see some of my silver parts turning yellow. damn cheap clear! Also, the carb and intake boot that I brought from Budapest
eBay is mounted just to see if it all fits. At this point I still had the black swing arm and black side plastic. I had also mounted the front and back guards, pegs, stand and some fork protectors direct from China. They didn't come with any clamps, so I used some stainless-steel cable ties I had in my collection
and they turned out pretty well. I ended up with a red chain guide as it was an auction item and I picked it up at around half the going price of a black
chain guide. Still need to get myself a chain slide, going to stick with red so those two items at least match.
I used an All Ball head stem bearing kit to reinstall the head stem. I mucked around for hours trying to get the old bearing races out. I got one out rather quickly and the other was being a pain in the dot, I was being stubborn and refused to get the welder out. I walked away and came back the next day,
dragged the mig out and two seconds of welding a run along the inside of the race and it pretty well just fell out. Being stubborn gets me no where
fast.
polished swing arm and white side plastic, still needs polishing. every time I touch it at the moment it leaves a dirty mark. The bike is sitting on
a homemade bike stand, I was too tight to buy one and I had access to all the materials I need to make it. The timber underneath is to make
it a tad higher. I've since cut that timber to size and screwed it to the top of the bike stand.
I brought a front and rear sprocket, primary drive lock nut, locking tab, chain, and a few other odds and ends of wemoto.com.au. It took a fair while for it
to come as I got a few little oem parts, but it was worth that wait as they threw in a sun buff (I love these things for fishing!), key chain, stickers
and something else I can’t remember at the moment. Only worth a few bucks I guess but I thought it was pretty cool of them to do that.
I haven't got many photos from this stage, but installed the engine with no cylinder or piston, I also installed the sprockets and chain. I fabbed
up a bit of a mad max style chain guide one day as I was inspired by some random cafe racer Facebook page stalking. I also polished the engine mounts before they went on as well, probably the shiniest thing on the bike.
I contacted the local bike shop to price up a piston and re-bore to suit. The re-bore was quoted at $150, the piston was going to be like $300+. So, I told
them to leave that to me and got one delivered for around half the price. I dropped the cylinder in and piston and they sorted it out for me, I did ask them to clean it for me, as in hot parts washer or a soda blast and I’d pay the extra but that never happened. So, it got a whole lot of pressure washing and wire
wheel action, a couple of coats of high temp black and into the oven for a bake. The head was also cleaned up at this stage and painted high temp silver and baked as well. The whole lot then was assembled on the engine. I was missing some studs and nuts, so I purchased some from a bolt shop, but the Yamaha "special cylinder nut" was OEM only. I found a picture of some and decided to test out my lath skills, while the finish wasn’t pretty, it did the job perfectly! I forgot to get a picture of the finished product, maybe subconsciously on purpose!
In the above photo I've also got the throttle mounted which is off I think an XR, (brought from the refuse shop), generic perch and levers from the local bike shop, cables that came from a wrecked 125G and I polished up the handle bars that came with the bike
When I was putting the rear wheel back on, I was having all sorts of problems getting the spacers right, I figured I had some wrong parts or was missing
some. I ended up purchasing a "complete" rear axle to suite the G, but it was also missing the spacers. So, after much discussion with YZ250H and photo
swapping I turned up a spacer of my own to suit. I made a few at slightly different lengths just to be sure I would have one that fit.