Hey all,
Since I'm new here and new to working on these three wheelers, thought it might be worth starting a build thread to document my revival project and give me a place to get help along the way.
How did I end up here? I wasn't supposed to buy anymore projects, let alone a three wheeler! After all, I haven't even owned anything on two wheels yet! Well, I just helped one of my buddies do a revival on one of their two wheeled type vehicles, and I was having so much fun on it that I decided I needed one for myself! But why have two wheels, when I could have just as much fun on three!
Luckily, I pretty quickly found another local three wheeler enthusiast who was more than happy to sell me their most dilapidated, halfway-stripped machine from their collection.
That's a really long winded way of saying I'm the proud new owner of one rough 1982 Honda ATC110.
How rough? At first glance, everything seemed to be there. Frame, wheels, engine, tank, plastics, seat. But what is there is an amalgamation of one worn out 82 ATC110, a very rough tank of a 1980 ATC110, and a mystery seat with a nonexistent seat pan, and a lot of missing parts.
The front fork bearings are worn out. The rear axle bearings are worn out. The brake foot pedal moves, but doesn't seem to actuate the brakes. The gas tank clearly had holes, and has been absolutely slathered with tank sealer and JB Weld. The plastics are cracked, faded, and missing large chunks. I think the handlebars might be bent. The auxiliary transmission is disassembled, and the engine is missing nearly all of its accessories, and is locked up to boot.
When I first got it home, I performed this quick assessment, and decided the best course of action would be to unstick the engine. I pulled the rear wheels off, removed the chain guard, and couldn't find the master link on the very stiff and rusty chain. With the o-rings on each link, I think it might be original, but I couldn't find rivets on it anywhere either. I ended up pulling the engine mount bolts and manipulating the engine enough to pull the chain off the rear drive sprocket and remove the engine with the chain still attached.
From there pulling the head was a snap. Most of the phillips screws came free without the need for a manual impact, at least on the top end covers, but I ordered a set of Vessel JIS manual impact bits for future use.
The internals that had seen oil were in surprisingly good shape. The oil was dark, but didn't have any water contamination or evidence of rust or dirt, which gives me hope for the bottom end and transmission. The exhaust valve is in good shape and moves freely, but the intake valve is frozen by rust, and I found the piston near the bottom of the bore, with surface rust and cylinder wall scoring. So much for my hopes of freeing up rings and making this a running bottom end for free.
While I'm confident I can refresh the top end myself, I can't fix this bore with the tools I have at my disposal, so I decided to send it out. DrATV is both close to me, and offers very competitive pricing for his bore package, so I decided to have his business perform the work. In the meantime I got the head stripped down and the intake valve out. It has rust on the backside of the valve but the face looks like it will come out okay with just some lapping compound. We shall see after cleaning.
I've ordered fork bearings, rear end bearings, and a bunch of sub-transmission internals to get mine put back together. Most of what I have I think I can salvage, but I'm hoping to find someone parting out a similar machine so I can buy a bunch of what I don't have. Buying a carb/intake, exhaust, and recoil start at ebay prices would totally kill my budget for this project!