Main subject in focus

4. Researching Your Project – Vintage Series

You’ve got the bike. It’s sitting in your garage, and you’re itching to tear it down. Wait. Before you remove a single bolt, you need to become a student of your machine. Vintage bikes weren’t built like modern ones; they have quirks, “mid-year” production changes, and specific engineering “isms” that can catch you off guard. Researching now saves you from breaking rare parts later.

1. The “Holy Grail”: The Factory Service Manual (FSM)

There are three types of manuals, and you should ideally own two of them:


2. Join the “Cult” (Forums & Groups)

Every vintage bike has a “cult” of followers. Whether it’s SOHC4 for Honda fours or Access Norton for British iron, these forums are gold mines. I found a wealth of great information at XJ Bikes when I was working on the 1982 Seca Turbo.


3. Parts Diagrams (The “Explodagrams”)

Sites like CMSNL or PartZilla have digitized “microfiche” diagrams. These exploded views show you every washer, o-ring, and bolt in the order they were assembled.

Pro Tip: When you take something apart and a tiny spring falls out and you don’t know where it came from, these diagrams are your only hope of putting it back together correctly.


4. Create Your “Project Bible”

Start a physical binder or a digital folder. Print out the wiring diagrams (enlarge them if you can!), save torque spec sheets, and keep a log of every part you order. This “Bible” stays with the bike, and if you ever sell it, having this documentation adds massive value.

Here’s a link to the spreadsheet that I use for every motorbike project. It’s partially completed with info for the 1971 Honda SL100 project. Simply insert your own project data and you will be good to go! Project Spreadsheet