Case Cleaning 101

Spent an hour or two on some elbow grease this weekend.
I’ve seen worse engines but no matter, they all get nasty.
I hit it with some Engine Brite foam, a screwdriver to scrape off all the crap, a toothbrush, some highly concentrated Simple Green, water, occasional spray of some carb cleaner for those hard to reach places, and i’m still not done! There are parts of this engine that hasn’t seen the light of day in 40 years. At least now i can pick it up without getting my hands dirty.

I’ll do another round of cleaning and then I’m probably going to paint it with some high heat engine enamel… probably. It seemed to work the best out of the past 2 engines I’ve cleaned.

Dirty BMW R75/5 motorcycle engine case

Clean BMW R75/5 motorcycle engine case

Engine out and torn apart

I finally got around to getting the engine out of the frame. It is nasty and dirty. As i started to take the heads off, i started noticing some surprises.
The park plugs are brand new.
I popped off the valve cover and it looked like brand new valves and springs. unfortunately, this bike has been sitting for at least 15 years with no oil and some rust has accumulated on the springs.
At this point, i wanted to seek the expert advice of my engine mechanic. I know all the parts of the engine, but i can’t put one together… nor can i take one completely apart. I want to go entirely through this bike and make it brand new again… and that includes every piece of the engine. And it was a good thing i did.




I should have noticed the pushrod tubes were new but maybe the rust threw me off.

Dirty beast.

Engine out of the frame ready for a tear down.

Off with the heads and cylinders

As it turns out, somebody started to rebuild the engine. But they did it in a half assed way. One side has brand new valve job with new BMW valves. the other side has the original valves, just cleaned up. Clean pistons too but who the hell knows what the spec might be on them. they aren’t new BMW so maybe they were bored out? is it worth the gamble? i’d say not. The Siebenrock piston and cylinder kit is a much safer bet and upgrade. I’d rather run Nicasil cylinders to be compatible with today’s gas vs cylinders meant for the gas of the 70s.

Clean heads! wow!

The question is what to do with the heads. One may be OK, provided it has factory BMW valves and not aftermarket. The other is definitely in need of new valves to match. Do they both get new Black Diamond valves or do we replace just the one side with BMW valves? Either way, they will come completely apart and be reassembled.

Case with no cylinders

Off goes the timing cover

Good thing we went this deep into the engine. the timing sprocket and chain had a TON of slack in it. 2 of the cam followers were pretty beat too. I can’t understand somebody doing a new head job, boring out pistons and then putting it on an engine with such a slacked out timing chain.

Parts for the trash man.

Time to attack the case

Dirty beasy with the cam shaft removed

Oil Pan off.

You should have seen all the sludge caked onto the inside and outside of the oil pan. Again, i can’t believe somebody put the engine back together and was going to run it with all the sludge in there. I literally had to scrape all the old oil out of the oil pan. it was like somebody poured syrup in there and let it solidify a bit. i should have snapped a photo for the ‘wall of shame’ but i went straight to cleaning everything up.

I now have all these parts boxed up. The plan is to clean and polish the exterior parts and spray it with a thermal dispersion clear coat to help dissipate the heat from the engine. I’ll keep the stock cam shaft. I’ll have to do some research on Black Diamond valves vs BMW valves. Since we already have 2 BMW valves, we may go the cheap route and do the other two to match vs a new set of 4. Siebenrock kit will solve any piston and cylinder concerns. That kit works with the (recommends) stainless steel pushrod tubes and later seals.

Carnage. All the guts of a 1972 R75/5 BMW engine.

Lastly is the rockers. I have never seen rockers on a bike earlier then 1977. The engines on my two other bikes are from 77 and 79. It turns out that until 1973, the /5 rockers were the brass bushing type. In 1974, they switched to a needle bearing. I’ll probably want to upgrade them somehow but i’ll have to figure out what parts work with the /5 heads.

Rocker arms. /6 Needle bearing type on left. /5 Brass bushing type on the right.

BMW R75/5 flywheel lightening weight

I got the flywheel lightened from San Jose BMW.
According to my household scale, the original flywheel weighs in at about 12 pounds. Maybe a shade more.

Stock flyhweel from a 1972 BMW R75/5 motorcycle

The new lightened flywheel now weighs about 8 pounds.
Taking off 4 pounds doesn’t seem like much but that is about 1/3 of the weight removed.
In addition to removing a few pounds and making the bike a bit lighter, this should allow the engine to work easier so the RPMs can climb and drop quicker.

Lightened flywheel from San Jose BMW for a R75/5 Motorcycle.

Fender Trimming

While i was cutting up the headlight ears, i figured i might as well start trimming and fitting the fenders.

I hope to add some sort of rear fender under the seat to protect all the road grime and pebbles from getting kicked up into the engine area. On one of the donor bikes we acquired, the rear fender had the typical cracks where the mounting points are. But that damage was at the rear mounting points. I’m glad i held onto it because i realized that the two front mounting points have good fiberglass still. I cut the fender down and started fitting it under the seat and with the battery relocation kit.

Typical fiberglass crack on these old fenders.



Nice and whole.


Chop Suey!




It breaks my heart to cut up a brand new fender like this… but i definitely don’t want or need the massive size of the stock fender. So… off goes a few inches. I’ll let the person who preps this for paint do all the clean up and round the edges.

Front Fender custom made for me! Thanks to the guys at Boxercafe.com


Chopped up. The edges still need to be rounded and cleaned up.




Front fender with a test racing stripe

Photos of the rear fender mounted on the bike to come… I still have some trouble shooting to do with the cafe seat…

San Jose Triple Clamp Preparation

I received a San Jose billet machined upper Triple Clamp the other day. I also went on e-bay and got some headlight ears without the giant holes in the side for the reflectors commonly seen on the /5 BMWs. I believe these headlight ears are from a mid 70’s /6 bmw.
The solid-sided headlight ears will definitely be a cleaner look.
In order to adapt the much more rigid, and better looking fork brace, about .65 inches need to be trimmed from the top of the headlight ears.

San Jose Upper Triple Clamp - My other one is equally scratched. But looks better/or worse at certain angles. It must be the machining process. I don't think i want to powder coat this. The bare alloy looks nice despite the scratches.




Headlight ears and tripple clamp. The ear on the right shows the trimmed piece. The ear on the left illustrates the line for cutting.




I did a quick silver rattle can spray of the headlight ears and roughly threw together the front end to test fit everything.
Also, most aftermarket handlebars are 7/8 sized bars. BMW bars are 22mm which required shaving out the inside of the handlebar clamps for a better fit. Everything seems to fit nicely. She’s gonna be one fine silver beast.

Test assembly of the forks, triple clamp, headlight ears, and handle bar clamps.

update on the /5 tear down

She’s mighty naked.  i gave her  a quick rattle can paint on the frame to get an idea of what a silver frame will look like. The wheels are out getting the bearings removed and then i will de-lace them… so i can get the hubs powder coated.  I’ll slap another set of wheels on there in the meantime.

Next on my list are:

–Trim down a rear fender so you can barely notice it yet it will protect the bike’s frame innards from getting crap kicked up into it.

–Trim the headlight ears for a Billet upper fork brace modification.

Order some rear sets and weld a reinforcement plate to connect the rear sets to (near the passenger peg location).

It feels like Christmas. New rims and mufflers.

Not to much build progress has happened on the Cafe bike lately.    However, i have gone on a bit of a shopping spree.

In the mail, i got some pleasant packages from across the pond in Europe.

The gentleman i am building the bike for wanted to steer clear of all the traditional exhaust.  I couldn’t agree more and wish i could take credit for his idea.  Though it will complicate the build process, i am more then willing to take on the task.  After some hunting, we discovered some pipes from a R12 BMW motorcycle.  The R12’s were made in the 30s and 40s by BMW… and have completely different dimensions of a 70’s BMW pipe size and mounting region… but adapting it is all part of the fun!

Vintage Exhaust from a VERY old R12 BMW

But then the mother load came!

box from england... oh boy...

nice wrapping job! definitely like chirstmas!

Wheels!  Wheedo!  I ordered a set for my bike too (one rim is back ordered)… and hot damn, they sure look SWEET!

TASTY!

Yep! That's what we ordered. Spain's Akronts... via England.

I can’t wait to lace these on some clean, powdercoated hubs.  this bike is going to look so tasty. the wide shouldered Morad / Akront wheels are definitely the vintage, bad ass touch…