Japanese companies use American lettering because its fancy kinda like every hyabusa has kanji on it to make it look cooler... While we as Americans are used to people from our culture idolizing Japanese culture its actually also super common for Japanese people to idolize our western culture especially our music and movies.
that chinese and japanese comment that got left in was WILDY dumb. considering how the facist woke runs the youtube-sphere you guys dropped the ball with that objectively ignorant horseshit. and im saying ignorant based on pre 2019 virture signaling.
LOL!! The clutch is released! It won't turn the engine unless you back the adjusting screw out on the right side cover until the clutch is engaged. To adjust it properly, loosen the locknut, and back the screw out completely. Then keep a little pressure on the shifter, while turning the screw in, until you feel some resistance on the shifter. There should be about 1/4 - 1/2" of play before it hits the internal clutch linkage to release the clutch between gears. Hope this helps!😉
@@NerdyByNatureGFA Heh heh, I had a 1966 C50? (step-through frame). They had the same setup, and it hasn't changed much in 50+ years! Mine was old enough to still have the old pushrod engine.. and they STILL revved to 10,000 and beyond.😄All of 3.3 hp. on a good day!
Watching Craig fix these bikes, almost makes me believe that I could do it myself! But then I realize that I don’t quite have the skill. Or the time. So I live vicariously through my favorite bike mechanic
You guys make the absolute perfect team. Your approach/knowledge varies extremely, but at the same time it meets in the middle to get the task completed. Awesome stuff.
I'd be willing to bet that model uses a similar kick start system that the old Trail 90 does, which doesn't connect directly to the engine but rather goes through the clutch. You need to adjust the clutch (should be a screw with a lock nut on the right engine side cover, under a rubber cover) in order for the kick starter to engage the engine properly.
It definitely does it's a horizontal Honda. But I doubt it's a adjustment issue since the shifter was sticking up or down and they mentioned the clutch cover and stuff have been replaced somebody was in there messing with stuff and it has a broken spring or something not put back together right. The shifter releases the clutch for shifting that being said on any horizontal Honda if you hold the shifter up or down the kickstart will do absolutely nothing
@@1997cr80r good assessment, you likely hit the nail on the head. I had forgotten that the shift lever is what releases the clutch. I'm working on a CT90 right now that had been sitting for several years and the kicker was barely engaging, very slight adjustment brought it back.
@@TomsTinkeringandAdventures I have a 69 K1 ct90 it was all sorts of screwed up when I got it I rebuilt the engine the clutch and a bunch of stuff now it's got that honda reliability again. I ride it to work most days unless I'm late then I take my Africa twin
@@1997cr80r fun little machines, I have a mutt version built up from a 70 CT90 frame with some CT110 parts, XL100 forks and a 125M ATC engine so it has electric start, CDI and a 12 volt system.
You guys are so nice to see working together again. Like friends who haven’t seen each other for a long time and pick up again where they left. Keep doing more interactions
I put a video of yours on while I was outta town visiting a buddy and the way he lit up watching your humor and expertise, reminded me of why I also am a huge fan of the channel. A Good guy being authentic, educating and entertaining me along the way.
Craig! Your videos are some of the most well made videos on RUclips. You've helped me feel more confident working on my bike, and understanding the mechanics of how just about everything works on a bike. I look forward to every video Thanks man!
I've got a 3 speed auto clutch 60s Cub that I rode for a year before figuring out the shift pattern, Honda gets bonus points for having both a heel and toe shifter so you can mix up which one goes up or down. Finally realized it's meant to be normally ridden like a 2 speed with high and low and that 1st gear you shift into the opposite direction is basically a granny gear for pulling away uphill with a passenger
I really love your channel :D I myself do like repairing my bikes since childhood. I'm from Poland so brands were different like Simson or Jawa, but seeing same problems and solving them on the other side of the planet feels very exciting, additionaly learning new stuff. I'm just a hobbyist, but I bought myself this winter a Chechoslovakias Jawa 50 Mustang from 1976, that wasn't running at least for last 10-15 years to rebuild it. Now after 2 months I started it up and I'm getting ready to repaint it. Thank you again Craig, keep it up.
Of all the Honda bikes, the Motra is the one I most wanted to see (and ride..). I doubt that there is even one in the UK, although perhaps one in a museum. A fascinating bike. Hope we can see this one put right and ridden again. Les in UK 🇬🇧
These guys are the best bike dues ever. Wish we can get more of these was sad when he moved because i knew all the videos together was going to be cut. Bring more of these.
So while serving in the Marine Corps, I lived in Japan (Okinawa) for 2 years. Rode many motorcycles while there. They all have English markings on the Gauges and controls. The VIN Plates and tech info stickers were in Kangi (Japanese letters).
This episode reminds me of the stories of my grandfather cussing out his Datsun truck every winter for how hard it was to start. Turned out there was little lever on the carb that said summer/winter in Japanese. Was told he only found out after 2-3 years of owning it because an old army buddy that new Japanese was there one day when he was complaining.
Great video! Its good to see you and Sean working together again. This bike was made from 1982 to 83. Its engine has 4.5 hp and needs 1 quart of oil to fill it.
Just when I thought I was spared the Sean cringe when you got your own channel, here he is lol. It's Japanese, Sean, not some magical nonsense language, and certainly not Chinese like you said at one point either.
The reason some parts contain English, I think, is because when they make a new product, they may have no plans to sell it at that time in an English-speaking market, but that could change in the future. So, the very expensive tooling for the clocks, etc, is made with English wording, as producing it in Japanese then changing everything to English if they decided to export the product would be prohibitively expensive. The stickers are in Japanese because it's easy and cheap to slap on an English sticker instead of a Japanese one on the production line!
As I stated on Sean's video... The Dynamic Duo.... Back In Action!!! Awesome seeing you guys back together for not only one... but, TWO great videos in one day! 💙👊🏼
One time, when I was 12 or 13, I got an old Honda Twinstar 200 that nearly killed my dad from trying to get it push started when the kick start wouldn't engage. It wasn't until after what seemed like 12 miles of pushing, that I realised the kick starter wouldn't engage with the clutch pulled in. The bike had to be in neutral, then you could kick it with ease.... Live and learn.
My two FAVORITE mechanics! Love both of y'alls channels (live in Gallatin Tn). This one is particularly funny with you two going through what was probably hours of step by logical step as your mechanical skills were tested. It's funny that the bike only needed some gas to start! I'm glad you stumbled up on the quirky shifter before y'all took the engine apart. I see there a lot of informed commenters below. This one got some attention. Cool little bike... It's Jan 4, 25 now. This is the first time I've seen this video. Looking forward to seeing more of you in '25. Happy New Year And The Best to you Both...🏍🛵
In 1964 my elder brother had one of the early Honda C90s in the UK. The user manual was an interesting translation into English but the captions to the pictures were in Japanese. Fortunately my Father was able, courtesy of the Royal Navy in World War II, to explain the vital ones to get my brother started moving.
In japan they have 3 alphabets, one of them uses the roman alphabet. They also use a lot of English in Japan because they think it looks cool, kinda like we think Katakana looks cool. English is also taught in schools so they often know a little bit of it.
Japanese uses a Sillabubs not alphabet each sound has a representative symbol. And technically it’s 4. Kanji original Chinese symbols. Hiragana represents words that don’t have Kanji symbols ie foreign words or newer words like computer. Katakana I think is for very young children who are just learning Kanji. Romaji or Roman symbols that are used in our Alphabet.
Hands down one of my favorite video you guys have ever done. Just a couple of guys hanging in a garage not exactly sure what the hell you're doing, but darn it didn't work. And more time spent trying to siphon gasoline then just driving 5 minutes to go get a tank. Exactly what we would do
You guys were killing me with that siphon pump. You squeeze the bulb with the hose open and when you release the bulb you hold your thumb over the end of the hose. LOL
I'm only halfway through as I write this but my brain's just screaming, "It's a magneto ignition"! Hence the lack of battery. It was a popular thing back in the 1970's with minibikes from Europe and Japan, even the street-legal ones. I had a Benelli Dynamo (65cc) and it didn't have the signals for street legality but it had everything else. The neighbors hated when I rode past their houses because the magneto would screw up TV reception from 50' away.
All the Honda ATCs from the 90 up to the 185s never used a battery, it had 2 mag coils under the flywheel, one for the ignition and the other for the head and tail light. They would brighten or dim depending on engine speed. The Honda 200s and big red had a battery as they were electric start
hey man I love your content. I also miss when you and Sean were together but i know things change. I can say thank you for shipping out to help him out. you guys make a good team from what shows on camera.
Just watched the Bikes and Beards video earlier this morning. Always enjoy seeing the two of you together. Also, Sean had commented saying y’all do rides? I’ll have to join in on one and buy you guys a beer. Would be great to meet y’all.
Some one probably said it, but that siphon you have to put your thumb over the out end.. squeeze the pump place thumb over the end and let pump go. Fuel sucks up, if not all the way the repeat process until it's running on its own
Your sticking shifter kept your semi auto clutch disengaged as it does when you depress shifter to allow gear changes to happen.... AKA "the semi auto clutch dump" feature
The reason it's English (not exclusively American) is due to cost. They already have all the parts on export bikes and labelling everything would add an additional cost.
if you hold the shift lever down on any of those little Hondas it will disengage the clutch (if it is working properly). The shift shaft on this one was stiff for some reason, so when you guys were shifting gears, it was sticking in the disengaged position.the kick starter works through the clutch on these, so if the clutch is disenagaged, the kickstarter freewheels.
Gotta love Google translate. Craig and Dan are the best team. Sean has a lot of knowledge, too. So cool that there is an old 80's Interceptor in the group. I've owned three in the 90's. That green scooter is awesome.
So you got 2 clutches on this, one is centrifugal and allows you to pull away smoothly from idle when in gear, the other clutch disconnects the engine from gearbox when the gearlever is moved to shift gears. Your slipping kickstart problem is probably because the adjustment is wrong on the gearshifting clutch part, the adjuster is on the clutchside casing, it's a screw and locknut, generally it's slacken until it turns freely, then screw in until it meets resistance, back it off half a turn or so then do up the locknut, you may need to experiment to get it right, my guess is that it is set too tight causing the clutch to be partially disengaged all the time. Love your show, greetings from an English car tech and sometimes bikes and quads and vintage.
If you look near where you pour the oil in, it probably tells you the capacity. Also there likely aren't two oil drain plugs one is the timing chain tensioner.
I had a solution for the curly hose. I drilled out a old brake bleed screw, and pushed it onto the end of the hose. Its heavy so it drops straight to the bottom. Presto no sucking air!
I like all the different bikes your channel shows and getting them back on the road. What shocks me is sometimes you blast right through the basics if mechanical functions for engines to run. Fuel and spark. You the start going down more complex paths and circle back to the basics. Get a motorcycle lift. And have gas on hand. You guys are no longer amateurs.
When you push the lever on those engines it disengages the centrifugal clutch so if the lever is not recentering after being used it will hold the clutch partially or fully out of engagement.
Also I think there's 6 gears total - The Motra's 3-speed gearbox is coupled with a second stage to provide the same 3-speeds with a lower final ratio for low-speed off-road travel in steep terrain. Hope that helps. I just looked it all up and it's how I got the battery type used as being SN2-2A-8
my Sanyang gears were said to be international pattern, (circular, 0,1,2,3,4,) you could shift down all day, because 4th down would go back to neutral, or if you shifted up, it would circle backwards 0,4,3,2,1,0) not sure if that's part of the way the shift pattern on that is patterned, but it does have that second set of gearing for high/low. Looks fun (Sanyang 125, Taipei 1990-1993/ Kawasaki Versys X300 now, and it is nice to have the dash read out the actual gear, instead of just the green neutral light.
I am a Frenchy who grew up and lived quite a while in Australia (mum was Aussie) and there we are used to having quite a few bikes from Japan, for the Australian and New Zealand market. 150, 175, 200, 250 dirt bikes, not for the European market. You guys are doing a super great job, working on an old 125 Yamaha TY right now! I have a true passion for the 50cc bikes myself so mu fun, any 500 ccd in the US?
I know some small Honda engines you have to put the transmission in gear, then pull the clutch, then kick the Kickstarter as the Kickstart clever attaches to the engine behind the transmission, not in front of it.
Pressurise the gas tank to get the syphon going. I just use another short length of hose and a rag then blow using lung power or shop air will send it uphill..
on the 70 and 50 its easy to over power the clutch when kick starting . my 90 does it to even with new plates i can over power the clutch on starting it
Interesting point about all the controls in English. Some mates and I had a few grey imports way back when - Japanese domestic market bikes imported unofficially - and I'm pretty sure the controls were in English on those too.
Bought a honda xr150 and the result is me binge watching your content. I have prolly watched more than 50 videos subed! Love the front rack on this thing.
We had a Tohatsu 125 twin street bike. Really had to watch when shifting, as it had a rotary gear box (with heel/toe shifter) wherein you shifted down from nuetral to 1st, down to 2nd, down to 3rd, down to 4th AND down to nuetral! But if you forgot you were in 4th, it would either go to nuetral ( bad enough) or worse, INTO 1st!
14:30 Why does the floor feel more comfortable than your bed. lol, it must be a machine thing 🤣 😂 I fell asleep under my car when I was changing the starter motor
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Japanese companies use American lettering because its fancy kinda like every hyabusa has kanji on it to make it look cooler... While we as Americans are used to people from our culture idolizing Japanese culture its actually also super common for Japanese people to idolize our western culture especially our music and movies.
So they use the clutch for kick start and trans adjust the clutch on the kick start side there a lock nut and flat head screw
that chinese and japanese comment that got left in was WILDY dumb.
considering how the facist woke runs the youtube-sphere you guys dropped the ball with that objectively ignorant horseshit.
and im saying ignorant based on pre 2019 virture signaling.
I didn't realize how much I missed you two together.
Same here.
@@jessebracamontes2845I was gonna say that 😂
Yah they really shine together
Word
It's awesome having a couple video of them together again.
LOL!! The clutch is released! It won't turn the engine unless you back the adjusting screw out on the right side cover until the clutch is engaged. To adjust it properly, loosen the locknut, and back the screw out completely. Then keep a little pressure on the shifter, while turning the screw in, until you feel some resistance on the shifter. There should be about 1/4 - 1/2" of play before it hits the internal clutch linkage to release the clutch between gears. Hope this helps!😉
14:30 😂
Guess we found the Guy yelling at the Screen
@@NerdyByNatureGFA Heh heh, I had a 1966 C50? (step-through frame). They had the same setup, and it hasn't changed much in 50+ years! Mine was old enough to still have the old pushrod engine.. and they STILL revved to 10,000 and beyond.😄All of 3.3 hp. on a good day!
They also said that it had no oil in it so I wonder if they clutch is dry when it should be wet. The plates need to soak in oil for a bit
they need to turn it in, it's out too far. don't tell people how to do things when you don't know yourself. It has a left hand thread on it.
Watching Craig fix these bikes, almost makes me believe that I could do it myself! But then I realize that I don’t quite have the skill. Or the time. So I live vicariously through my favorite bike mechanic
Don't you mean "mechanicing" ... LOL!
Totally agree !
You can Todd, give it a shot.
I wouldn't let that moron fix me a ham sandwich.
I'm sure he banged his knuckles more than a few times when starting out
You guys make the absolute perfect team. Your approach/knowledge varies extremely, but at the same time it meets in the middle to get the task completed. Awesome stuff.
It's a good day when a new video from Craig is on my feed
Cheers to that buddy
I'd be willing to bet that model uses a similar kick start system that the old Trail 90 does, which doesn't connect directly to the engine but rather goes through the clutch. You need to adjust the clutch (should be a screw with a lock nut on the right engine side cover, under a rubber cover) in order for the kick starter to engage the engine properly.
It definitely does it's a horizontal Honda. But I doubt it's a adjustment issue since the shifter was sticking up or down and they mentioned the clutch cover and stuff have been replaced somebody was in there messing with stuff and it has a broken spring or something not put back together right. The shifter releases the clutch for shifting that being said on any horizontal Honda if you hold the shifter up or down the kickstart will do absolutely nothing
@@1997cr80r good assessment, you likely hit the nail on the head. I had forgotten that the shift lever is what releases the clutch. I'm working on a CT90 right now that had been sitting for several years and the kicker was barely engaging, very slight adjustment brought it back.
@@TomsTinkeringandAdventures I have a 69 K1 ct90 it was all sorts of screwed up when I got it I rebuilt the engine the clutch and a bunch of stuff now it's got that honda reliability again. I ride it to work most days unless I'm late then I take my Africa twin
@@1997cr80r fun little machines, I have a mutt version built up from a 70 CT90 frame with some CT110 parts, XL100 forks and a 125M ATC engine so it has electric start, CDI and a 12 volt system.
Did you yell at the Screen? :)
You guys are so nice to see working together again. Like friends who haven’t seen each other for a long time and pick up again where they left. Keep doing more interactions
I put a video of yours on while I was outta town visiting a buddy and the way he lit up watching your humor and expertise, reminded me of why I also am a huge fan of the channel.
A Good guy being authentic, educating and entertaining me along the way.
The kick start is connected to the clutch and its slipping occasionally you can tighten the clutch on the right hand cover helps engage the kick-start
From what I remember undo the 13 millimetre and tighten the screw in
Craig! Your videos are some of the most well made videos on RUclips. You've helped me feel more confident working on my bike, and understanding the mechanics of how just about everything works on a bike. I look forward to every video
Thanks man!
I've got a 3 speed auto clutch 60s Cub that I rode for a year before figuring out the shift pattern, Honda gets bonus points for having both a heel and toe shifter so you can mix up which one goes up or down.
Finally realized it's meant to be normally ridden like a 2 speed with high and low and that 1st gear you shift into the opposite direction is basically a granny gear for pulling away uphill with a passenger
I really love your channel :D I myself do like repairing my bikes since childhood. I'm from Poland so brands were different like Simson or Jawa, but seeing same problems and solving them on the other side of the planet feels very exciting, additionaly learning new stuff. I'm just a hobbyist, but I bought myself this winter a Chechoslovakias Jawa 50 Mustang from 1976, that wasn't running at least for last 10-15 years to rebuild it. Now after 2 months I started it up and I'm getting ready to repaint it. Thank you again Craig, keep it up.
Of all the Honda bikes, the Motra is the one I most wanted to see (and ride..). I doubt that there is even one in the UK, although perhaps one in a museum. A fascinating bike. Hope we can see this one put right and ridden again. Les in UK 🇬🇧
These guys are the best bike dues ever. Wish we can get more of these was sad when he moved because i knew all the videos together was going to be cut. Bring more of these.
So while serving in the Marine Corps, I lived in Japan (Okinawa) for 2 years. Rode many motorcycles while there. They all have English markings on the Gauges and controls. The VIN Plates and tech info stickers were in Kangi (Japanese letters).
Actually, kanji is representing whole words, while kana represents letters (alphabet).
I love you and the Bikes and Beards channel.
This episode reminds me of the stories of my grandfather cussing out his Datsun truck every winter for how hard it was to start. Turned out there was little lever on the carb that said summer/winter in Japanese. Was told he only found out after 2-3 years of owning it because an old army buddy that new Japanese was there one day when he was complaining.
Gotta say how much fun your guys videos are to watch. The guess and check method is somthing I can relate to working in my garage also.
Seeing the two of you together once again was sweet 👍
I own a 1974 Honda PC50 that belonged to my father, those 50cc 4 stroke motors are amazing!
Awesome to see the team back together. You have great chemistry.
Great video! Its good to see you and Sean working together again.
This bike was made from 1982 to 83. Its engine has 4.5 hp and needs 1 quart
of oil to fill it.
Just when I thought I was spared the Sean cringe when you got your own channel, here he is lol. It's Japanese, Sean, not some magical nonsense language, and certainly not Chinese like you said at one point either.
The clutch is centrifugal if there has been no oil in the engine the plates are dry and slippage city !
The reason some parts contain English, I think, is because when they make a new product, they may have no plans to sell it at that time in an English-speaking market, but that could change in the future.
So, the very expensive tooling for the clocks, etc, is made with English wording, as producing it in Japanese then changing everything to English if they decided to export the product would be prohibitively expensive.
The stickers are in Japanese because it's easy and cheap to slap on an English sticker instead of a Japanese one on the production line!
Could also just be parts that they also use on other bikes that are sold in english speaking countries.
pretty sure the controls and guage cluster are the same as the ct70 and ct90 which we got 1000's of in australia
Also the Japanese are SUPER SMART. You'd be shocked how many ACTUALLY CAN speak or read english at a level that exceeds your average Texan.
Nah. All Japanese vehicles have the writing in English, always have.
My guess is it has to do with the US helping Japan rebuild after WWII and that being the start of their manufacturing prowess.
As I stated on Sean's video...
The Dynamic Duo.... Back In Action!!! Awesome seeing you guys back together for not only one... but, TWO great videos in one day! 💙👊🏼
One time, when I was 12 or 13, I got an old Honda Twinstar 200 that nearly killed my dad from trying to get it push started when the kick start wouldn't engage. It wasn't until after what seemed like 12 miles of pushing, that I realised the kick starter wouldn't engage with the clutch pulled in. The bike had to be in neutral, then you could kick it with ease.... Live and learn.
Great to see you two together again more of this guys!
I love that Australia is a part of Asia, we get all the good bikes!!
I'm from Brasil and I'm jelous now.
Australia aint in Asia, boy...
@@antonioquesada-castro4925 Ahh yeah it is? Hence Australasia..
@@Rooster1172T That's not a thing. The rest of the world refers to Australia as being Austronesian, part of the Polynesian islands.
Im hispanic, we call it Oceanía, the fifth continent...
You guys are great together man..
Much love to both of you..
It was the mid 80's BMS K75 flying brick. Pulling the clutch would retract the side stand.
My two FAVORITE mechanics! Love both of y'alls channels (live in Gallatin Tn). This one is particularly funny with you two going through what was probably hours of step by logical step as your mechanical skills were tested. It's funny that the bike only needed some gas to start! I'm glad you stumbled up on the quirky shifter before y'all took the engine apart. I see there a lot of informed commenters below. This one got some attention. Cool little bike... It's Jan 4, 25 now. This is the first time I've seen this video. Looking forward to seeing more of you in '25. Happy New Year And The Best to you Both...🏍🛵
In 1964 my elder brother had one of the early Honda C90s in the UK. The user manual was an interesting translation into English but the captions to the pictures were in Japanese. Fortunately my Father was able, courtesy of the Royal Navy in World War II, to explain the vital ones to get my brother started moving.
Great stuff! Informative and just damn fun to watch! Go Bearded Mechanic and Bikes and Beards, keep moving forward!
In japan they have 3 alphabets, one of them uses the roman alphabet. They also use a lot of English in Japan because they think it looks cool, kinda like we think Katakana looks cool. English is also taught in schools so they often know a little bit of it.
Japanese uses a Sillabubs not alphabet each sound has a representative symbol. And technically it’s 4. Kanji original Chinese symbols. Hiragana represents words that don’t have Kanji symbols ie foreign words or newer words like computer. Katakana I think is for very young children who are just learning Kanji. Romaji or Roman symbols that are used in our Alphabet.
@@paulgambill8833 your not wrong, I was trying to make it as simple as i could :P
Great to see you guys together.
Ah, the Honda Super Cub. That's a lot of happy memories :)
Hands down one of my favorite video you guys have ever done. Just a couple of guys hanging in a garage not exactly sure what the hell you're doing, but darn it didn't work. And more time spent trying to siphon gasoline then just driving 5 minutes to go get a tank. Exactly what we would do
You guys were killing me with that siphon pump. You squeeze the bulb with the hose open and when you release the bulb you hold your thumb over the end of the hose. LOL
You guys love any bike. Brilliant attitude.
I'm at 17:00 and I say centrifugal clutch so no piston movement while in gear as your hand spinning rear tire
I'm only halfway through as I write this but my brain's just screaming, "It's a magneto ignition"! Hence the lack of battery. It was a popular thing back in the 1970's with minibikes from Europe and Japan, even the street-legal ones. I had a Benelli Dynamo (65cc) and it didn't have the signals for street legality but it had everything else. The neighbors hated when I rode past their houses because the magneto would screw up TV reception from 50' away.
All the Honda ATCs from the 90 up to the 185s never used a battery, it had 2 mag coils under the flywheel, one for the ignition and the other for the head and tail light. They would brighten or dim depending on engine speed. The Honda 200s and big red had a battery as they were electric start
Nothing to do with the magneto, you should have used a suppressed spark plug.
Electricity just doesn't magically happen for spark and lights.
@@dave1135 The magneto on my Benelli was the size of a tall Red Bull can.
yeah my honda mr50 didn't have a battery either.......
Cool little bike. Hope to see it finished proper.
This is an SSA video.....Saving Sean Again. :D
You and Sean have the best chemistry together, you love to see it!
As much fun as I'm having watching you two trying to solve this bikes starting problem I'm also yelling at my screen JUST READ THE DAMN BOOK!!!!! haha
They said they couldnt cuz it was in japanese lol did you not pay attention?
Glad to see y'all two working together, I really miss that.
No unwarranted bible verses what a great channel
Much better lol
hey man I love your content. I also miss when you and Sean were together but i know things change. I can say thank you for shipping out to help him out. you guys make a good team from what shows on camera.
Sean needs a cycle lift in his new spot.
Just watched the Bikes and Beards video earlier this morning. Always enjoy seeing the two of you together. Also, Sean had commented saying y’all do rides? I’ll have to join in on one and buy you guys a beer. Would be great to meet y’all.
My condolences for having to fly Frontier.
Some one probably said it, but that siphon you have to put your thumb over the out end.. squeeze the pump place thumb over the end and let pump go. Fuel sucks up, if not all the way the repeat process until it's running on its own
You used Google to translate Japanese into English, but didn't Google, "Where is the battery on a Honda Motra?"
Your sticking shifter kept your semi auto clutch disengaged as it does when you depress shifter to allow gear changes to happen.... AKA "the semi auto clutch dump" feature
The reason it's English (not exclusively American) is due to cost. They already have all the parts on export bikes and labelling everything would add an additional cost.
if you hold the shift lever down on any of those little Hondas it will disengage the clutch (if it is working properly). The shift shaft on this one was stiff for some reason, so when you guys were shifting gears, it was sticking in the disengaged position.the kick starter works through the clutch on these, so if the clutch is disenagaged, the kickstarter freewheels.
It's a Japanese bike but you say "I don't know any Chinese", I think this is suppose to be funny but it is also offensive.
It's all greek to me. Also pull the stick out.
Yup, the extremely religious guy is the most bigoted. Not surprised.
I really enjoy watching Craig & Sean working together.!! 👍 👍 👍
Stay safe out there & the very best wishes from Scotland 🏴 🙏 ❤️
I can't say how much I like this episode and seeing these guys. I'm giving this a 100 out of 10..
On the clutch case there’s a screw loosen the nut to turn screw to adjust clutch
Gotta love Google translate. Craig and Dan are the best team. Sean has a lot of knowledge, too. So cool that there is an old 80's Interceptor in the group. I've owned three in the 90's. That green scooter is awesome.
So you got 2 clutches on this, one is centrifugal and allows you to pull away smoothly from idle when in gear, the other clutch disconnects the engine from gearbox when the gearlever is moved to shift gears. Your slipping kickstart problem is probably because the adjustment is wrong on the gearshifting clutch part, the adjuster is on the clutchside casing, it's a screw and locknut, generally it's slacken until it turns freely, then screw in until it meets resistance, back it off half a turn or so then do up the locknut, you may need to experiment to get it right, my guess is that it is set too tight causing the clutch to be partially disengaged all the time. Love your show, greetings from an English car tech and sometimes bikes and quads and vintage.
Together again! If only for a few videos, I’m happy to see it!
If you look near where you pour the oil in, it probably tells you the capacity. Also there likely aren't two oil drain plugs one is the timing chain tensioner.
Always fun to see the two amigos hangiing out
So nice seeing Sean and Craig back together.
Never doubt the bearded mechanic and well…Sean’s tinkering to get a bike started
Just finished the other video. Good timing craig haha ❤
I had a solution for the curly hose.
I drilled out a old brake bleed screw, and pushed it onto the end of the hose. Its heavy so it drops straight to the bottom. Presto no sucking air!
The fixed forward headlight leaves an err of mystery at every turn
I like all the different bikes your channel shows and getting them back on the road.
What shocks me is sometimes you blast right through the basics if mechanical functions for engines to run. Fuel and spark. You the start going down more complex paths and circle back to the basics. Get a motorcycle lift. And have gas on hand. You guys are no longer amateurs.
I usually learn a lot about fixing motorcycles when watching you Craig. Today's lesson "JIGGLE IT"
When you push the lever on those engines it disengages the centrifugal clutch so if the lever is not recentering after being used it will hold the clutch partially or fully out of engagement.
Also I think there's 6 gears total - The Motra's 3-speed gearbox is coupled with a second stage to provide the same 3-speeds with a lower final ratio for low-speed off-road travel in steep terrain. Hope that helps. I just looked it all up and it's how I got the battery type used as being SN2-2A-8
in the clutch cover side there is a nut for adjusting how much the cluitch is open. adjust it and you should have no problem shifting.
my Sanyang gears were said to be international pattern, (circular, 0,1,2,3,4,) you could shift down all day, because 4th down would go back to neutral, or if you shifted up, it would circle backwards 0,4,3,2,1,0) not sure if that's part of the way the shift pattern on that is patterned, but it does have that second set of gearing for high/low. Looks fun (Sanyang 125, Taipei 1990-1993/ Kawasaki Versys X300 now, and it is nice to have the dash read out the actual gear, instead of just the green neutral light.
So cool!!! I wish you all could collaborate and get together on these videos more often. That mini bike is fun. Thank you for another great video.
That was a fun, nostalgic video! And what a weird cool bike haha
I am a Frenchy who grew up and lived quite a while in Australia (mum was Aussie) and there we are used to having quite a few bikes from Japan, for the Australian and New Zealand market. 150, 175, 200, 250 dirt bikes, not for the European market. You guys are doing a super great job, working on an old 125 Yamaha TY right now! I have a true passion for the 50cc bikes myself so mu fun, any 500 ccd in the US?
I love that motorcycle 🤩🤩🤩 please make it in 2026 200cc with the low and high gear❤❤❤
Good to see you two lads working together again
Was waiting for Craig’s video this week.
That means it’s finally Friday
I know some small Honda engines you have to put the transmission in gear, then pull the clutch, then kick the Kickstarter as the Kickstart clever attaches to the engine behind the transmission, not in front of it.
The reverse shifting where it's 1 up 4 down are racing clutch systems. They're designed not to back shift when taking left corners.
Thanks for all of your videos man.
I love seeing these two together
Oh my gosh that little guy looks like it'd be SO MUCH FUN to ride!!
Pressurise the gas tank to get the syphon going. I just use another short length of hose and a rag then blow using lung power or shop air will send it uphill..
So glad you and Shawn are still doing stuff together some times! That little thing looks fun you 2 should do a Small Bike trip back to Craigs house :D
on the 70 and 50 its easy to over power the clutch when kick starting . my 90 does it to even with new plates i can over power the clutch on starting it
I have nothing but respect for both of you but watching you search for the battery gives me hope.
Really did enjoy this vlog great to see you and Sean bouncing off each other
Very nice to see both you guys in one video
Interesting point about all the controls in English. Some mates and I had a few grey imports way back when - Japanese domestic market bikes imported unofficially - and I'm pretty sure the controls were in English on those too.
Bought a honda xr150 and the result is me binge watching your content. I have prolly watched more than 50 videos subed! Love the front rack on this thing.
We had a Tohatsu 125 twin street bike. Really had to watch when shifting, as it had a rotary gear box (with heel/toe shifter) wherein you shifted down from nuetral to 1st, down to 2nd, down to 3rd, down to 4th AND down to nuetral! But if you forgot you were in 4th, it would either go to nuetral ( bad enough) or worse, INTO 1st!
14:30 Why does the floor feel more comfortable than your bed. lol, it must be a machine thing 🤣 😂 I fell asleep under my car when I was changing the starter motor
Dynamic Duo back at it again with the white vans