Archive for the ‘ My Bike – Honda Camino PA50 ’ Category

Fix my moped …. LIKE A BOSS

Managed to get the moped started.

I’m the world’s greatest mechanic!

It certainly wasnt just out of petrol. Definitely not!

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Turns out I am a helmet holder….

What a plum I am.

It’s a 4% oil mix on the moped.

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That was a lucky escape!

Glad I checked and my Honda Camino brother on VZi told me the correct amount of oil!

Well….half way to finding out what the problem is.

I filled my Jerry can last night. That worked out as a tank of petrol for my car PLUS the jerry can for £100! Ouch!

This lunchtime I’ve got a litre of 2 Stroke oil.

I might be in position of knowing if it had just run out of petrol or maybe it will be something a little more serious. How much can actually go wrong on a moped! 😀

Non-starting bike

I’ve just peered in the petrol tank with my torch and I can’t see any petrol. The tank is at an angle (like / ) so you can’t see the bottom of the tank.

I have got a 20litre jerry can which I’ll get filled with petrol and 2stroke oil. Hopefully I’ll have the bike running this week.

A mixed bag today

So since my trip to tesco last year the bike hasn’t been anywhere or been started.
This week I moved the bike into the kitchen so I could fix the chain issue and re-tighten the nuts holding the back wheel on. With the bad weather we have had recently, moving the bike inside meant it would be dry and wouldn’t matter if it was raining outside.
It was lovely and sunny outside so I set about fixing my bike.

The chain cover came off easily and I tightened the tensioner so it wouldn’t slip while I pedal started it. I also found the lose bolt on the rear wheel and wanged the spanner on that to sort it out.

Wheeling the bike outside I realised it had been ages since I last rode it.

I jumped on and peddled to start it.

Nothing! Eeek!

I remembered that there is a choke so once I’d pulled that out an peddled like crazy the mighty camino jumped into life!

I revved the engine and it happily buzzed away. Going back into the house I grabbed my helmet (phnarrrrrrr phnarrrrrrr) and started wheeling the bike to the front of the house.

It cut out!

😦

And no matter how hard I peddled or where the choke was positioned I couldn’t get it started again.

Damn!

I’ll try again later but I do know it starts. It could be out of petrol I guess but I’d have expected to do 70-100 miles to the tank and I’ve probably done maybe 5 or 10.

I did take a picture for those who are interested.

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1 Month and Counting

And I’m shitting bricks.

I’ve still got loads to organise and I hope to start getting these ticked off. Once the clothes arrive I will do a few journeys round town. I know I’ll look stupid but I could do with the practice.

I think I might get some mirrors too as they are only £20 (ish) off ebay and could help my safety.

Finally, I need to fix my pedal start. I’ll be moving the bike into the kitchen to work on this while we have this crappy weather. It can still be bump-started but I think I’ll soon get bored of doing that.

If the clothes arrive soon I might have some more photos for you to enjoy. Lucky you guys!

My Group for JOGLE

Ok, so I’m not overly happy with the name but I do think that this will be a case of ‘slow and steady gets the breakfast ready’!

Slow shit.

The Darkside – Honda SGX50 Sky
Twon – Honda Camino
David92 – Honda Camino
Bugsbuggy – Tomos
Mr Lee Esquire – Puch Maxi
Foot Flyer – Raleigh
Adrian Manning –  Raleigh
Southern –  Honda Express.
Woofs –  Honda Express
Dangermouse – Peugeot 101

Although we have a good selection of bikes hopefully the Honda riders will be able to share common spares. Interestingly a lot of these bikes were ones I had previously looked at so I guess I’ll be in good company!

First Test Ride Completed

So I’m back. I’m still alive and both me and the bike are in 1 peice.

It was strange being on a motor powered bicycle and I must say the seated riding position isn’t the most comfortable but it might just be me needing to get used to the position. I’ve got plenty of time to do that.

My journey to Tesco was a short one. My moped doesn’t have indicators so I wanted the first journey to be small. My house to Tesco is a loop so I knew the lack of indicators wouldn’t be a problem. I had planned on using hand signals but needing my right hand for the throttle meant I could only really indicate left… I’ll also need to work on that!

I parked up at Tesco and chuckled to myself on my ‘not quite a bicycle/not quite a motorbike’ ride. I put it in the bike rack but hadn’t remembered to bring my bike lock – schoolboy error. I hoped that the nice people of Wokingham weren’t on the look out for a classic ’83 Honda Camino and luckily they weren’t.

Photo of the Honda Camino Parked at Tesco

Honda Camino's first test ride to Tesco

Supplies purchased I went back outside to mount my trusty steed. As I tried to start it, it was like the chain was slipping. This wasn’t a good sign. I took the plastic covering off the chain-side and it looked like the chain was too loose. What had actually happened is that bottom bolts holding on the rear tyre had come loose, allow the wheel to move forward. Not a good thing to happen. I tried to use my fingers to tighten the nuts but strangely that didn’t work and I was left stranded in Tesco.

What I had done was forgotten that I had a mo-PED… so I packed my helmet in the lock-box and tried to pedal home. The slipping chain meant that I couldn’t go quickly and the moped is hard to manouver at slow speeds. This meant I had a push the bike home. 😦 BOOOOO!

So I sat on the bike and started pushing it home. Going down the pedestrian ramp at Tesco I managed to get enough momentum to jump-start the bike! FREEEDOM! Knowing I had a loose rear wheel meant I kept the speeds low on the journey back and I made it home safely.

My first test ride was was both a success and a failure. But really I’m chalking it up to a success.

Things that went well.

  1. I didn’t die
  2. The bike can handle my weight
  3. It can accellerate to 25mph no problem (I wimped out before I hit 30!)
  4. The top-box can hold my helmet (Phnarrr Phnaar)
  5. When its going, its quite enjoyable to ride

Things that didn’t go so well

  1. Rear bolts need checking
  2. The fenders work themselves loose which makes an awful racket
  3. I think the top speed will be around 30mph
  4. Its quite uncomfortable
  5. No indicators

I’ll be checking the bike over again before I take it out. I will need to work out what I can do to keep the rear wheel bolts on. They are probably supposed to be torqued to a correct setting, not just me leaning on the spanner saying, “That’ll do.”

First test ride take 2

The bike is out of the garden.

Time to take this beauty out!

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Refitting is the opposite of removal – my arse!

So it was sunny this morning and it looked like great weather to put the rear wheel back on the camino.

I got my tool-kit out, put absolute radio on my iPhone and started refitting the wheels.

Helpfully when I took the wheel off I recorded it and uploaded it to YouTube. Unhelpfully I wasn’t getting a wireless signal in my garden and no 3G signal either so I did what any man would do; I looked at the bolts and guessed where they went.

The wheel was on!

Except I’d forgotten to put the chain back on. What a twat! So the spanners came back out and I took the wheel off to put the chain on and then put the wheel back on.

Great job done!

I went to tighten the brake cable but no matter how I tightened it, it was too slack at the wheel end. Then I noticed I’d not put the cable through a guide which then would tighten the cable.

I thought I would need to take the wheel off again but it was designed to slip the wire through so that saved me having to take the wheel off again.

Except I couldn’t hook the brake cable onto the hooky thing it should live in. I loosened the brake cable as much as I could but it was no use…I didn’t need to take the wheel off but I would need to loosen the bolts off to allow me to rotate the wheel enough to get the brake cable connected. Done! Finally!

I tightened up the bolts again and put the plastic chain covers on. The chain side went on and when I got round to the drive belt side I tried to put the belt on the pulley but it was no good, it wasn’t going on.

That could mean only 1 thing, I needed to loosen the bolts again to pivot the wheel to allow the belt on the pulley.

Back with the spanners and before you know it I’m done!

The plastic is on both sides, I’ve tightened the brakes and started her up.

We are good to go!

Finally!

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