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In this blog I will be sharing my classic Motorcycle retoration projects and experiences starting with a 1961 BSA Super Rocket coversion to a BSA Rocket Gold Star Cafe Racer. Followed by a 1961 Ariel "Golden" Arrow Super Sport. I also have a 1960 Lambretta LI150 and a 1954 BSA Bantam 150 Major.

If you are renovating a classic bike and using this blog for help, please read the whole blog first, as I make mistakes and then have to correct them. It will save you doing the same.

Saturday 8 September 2012

11. BSA A10 Unbreak My Head!!

More on the continuing saga of the creation of a BSA Rocket Gold Star Replica. I should mention that we are getting very close to the present day and the current point of progress with this project. With the engine fixed in the frame and the cylinder head in place, it's time to fit the rockers and cover.

As with other points in this rebuild it's time to make more mistakes. It's at times like this that I am aware of my lack of specific BSA A10 knowledge. Looking at the cylinder head, it looked as though of the four fixed studs in the rocker box, the two rear ones should be longer as I would never get nuts on them as they would be hidden inside the fins of the head. So I put longer stainless steel studs in the back two rocker box fixings. Wrong! If you do this, you can't get the rocker box on at all as it hits the frame before the studs go into the head. Still on the wrong track, I decided to remove the two long studs, drop them in the holes in the fins, fix the rocker box and then feed the remaining long studs back up into the rocker box from underneath. The box went on, using the correct BSA tool (comb) which holds the push rods in the correct position.

Here's the next big mistake. As I didn't have the head-steady bracket yet, I decided to bolt the rocker box down and then remove the four long bolts, that pass through the rocker box into the head, again once I had the bracket. Wrong, wrong, wrong!!!. These long bolts are exactly the right length and, if the head-steady bracket is not in place, then the bolts bottom in the threaded holes in the aluminium cylinder head and when you tighten them you crack your cylinder head. What is worse, you cannot see the damage until you take the rocker box off again.

Whilst going through the original nuts and bolts off the cylinder head, I discovered two special nuts with deep collars, still on two short rocker box studs. All was revealed. All four rocker box studs should be the same length and these two special nuts fit up into the fins at the back of the head to reach the short studs. Unaware of the damage awaiting discovery, I decided to remove the rocker box again and fit the correct studs. O.M.G. With the rocker box removed the damage was immediately apparent . Two of the rocker box threaded bushes in the head were broken away from the head. I can only describe the feeling as how a football fanatic would feel having followed his favourite team to the cup final and then seeing them lose. Total devastation.

I removed the head and inspected the damage. Fortunately no cracks had gone through to the combustion chamber or the inlet or exhaust ports. I took the head to a friend who is a wizard with a welding plant. After long discussions he rigged up a pipe to feed gas between the fins of the head while he welded the head with an extended mig (or is it tig?) welding rod. It took him a whole morning but in the end it was welded, but not very pretty. Several hours of my time followed as I reworked the head with a Dremel until the welds blended into the head and virtually disappeared.

All that was left was to bolt the head back on again, with another new head gasket and refit the rocker box, with spacers on the long bolts, to stop them bottoming again. I should say that even with the right comb tool, fitting the push rods into the rockers is not easy and takes considerable time and patience. But it is all back together, bolted down and when I turned over the engine, the rockers opened and closed the valves beautifully.


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Copyright K. Hopcroft  08.09.12 All rights reserved
 You can contact me on: hopcroftscoot@gmail.com

My Other Blogs:

1961 Ariel Arrow Super Sport Motorcycle :
http://60sclassicmotorbikes.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/1961-aerial-golden-arrow-restoration.html

Miniature Land Rover Defender:
http://miniaturelandrover.blogspot.co.uk/2016/02/1-miniature-land-rover-defender-idea.html?view=timeslide

1971 VW Karman Ghia Convertible Car:
http://karmannghiarestoration.blogspot.co.uk/2017/03/1-karmann-ghia-retoration-project.html

Motorcycle Trailers / Caravans:
http://motorcycletrailersandcaravans.blogspot.co.uk/2018/01/1-motorcycle-trailers-problem.html

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