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Part V

Mechanical Meditations


Engine reassembly in progress.
  Part V photo

It’s been a while since I’ve posted; the MB5 project was put on the back burner while I flew to my hometown on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to marry my girlfriend of 9 years. Now I’m back in LA, and with the sun just rising in the sky, the wife still sound asleep, and a fresh cup of coffee at the ready, I’m eager to pick up where I left off.
Wife had flown East early and left me home alone for a time, and during that week I lingered at the kitchen table late into the night tinkering with the engine and any other components I had parts for. I got quite a bit done. The forks have been overhauled and installed, the swingarm, shocks, and center stand bolted up, I rebuilt the master cylinder, and reassembled the engine with a new balance shaft bearing and 70cc big bore kit. Whooyeah!

Part V photo

I phoned Rick Perkins at Perk LLC to inquire about engine gaskets and a new top-end. Rick and his brother peddle parts for a variety of mopeds, but MB5s are their specialty, and Rick had some great advice for my build. He had the gaskets in stock (none of the 5 dealerships I called did, they’ve been discontinued), but he was sold out of the various big bore kits and a special order from Europe would take weeks.

Being the impatient type – and eager to get the engine assembled before I took off for 2 weeks – I hit the internet for an alternative. Treatland.tv is another major parts supplier that I somehow overlooked during my initial online searches, and they had several kits in stock. I went with the 2-ring 70cc Malossi kit from Italy; the double-ring setup should provide better low-rpm performance and extended service life compared to the other racing-based single-ring kits. The parts shipped from San Francisco so it only took a day to get here. The kit came with a several base and head gaskets of varying thickness, and since there were no instructions (that I could read, anyway) I had to mock up the top end several times to figure out which gasket combination yielded the best port timing and squish band depth. With that sorted out I put a decent shine on the combustion chamber and exhaust port and torqued everything down. The engine is complete!

Part V photo

Next up? Sealing the tank so the rust doesn’t return, reinstalling the engine, and mounting tires on my sweet 18-inch Comstar mags. Once that’s done I figure the parts will start flying out of the boxes and finding their place on the chassis. And I figure that now that the wife is back the project will brobably have to be moved outdoors again, but she hasn’t said anything yet!

Resources:

Treatland.tv
-Malossi 70cc kit
www.treatland.tv

Perk LLC
-Case gaskets and technical advice. Supplier of hard-to-find moped parts.
www.perkllc.com
(317) 371-8530

Rusteco
-Rust removal treatment for the MB5′s gas tank.
www.rusteco.com
(800) 787-8326

Haynes Manuals
-Invaluable technical information and diagrams.
www.haynes.com
(800) 242-4637

Huntington Beach Honda
-Various OE parts such as gaskets, grommets, and seals.
www.hbhonda.com
(714) 842-5533

Just arrived? Check out earlier posts from the series:
Mechancial Meditations: Part IV
Mechanical Meditations: Part III
Mechanical Meditations: Part II

Mechanical Meditations: Part I

Categories: Editorial, Honda  

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