DJM wrote:Good Job,
The standard gear linkage on these bike looks great but does wear very quickly resulting in a sloppy change. The pins and clevis ends also wear making maters worse.
When I restored my CB77 a few years ago I fitted a new old stock drop arm, change lever, clevis ends and pins and still had half an inch up and down play in the pedal from day one.
I suppose that I could have rebushed all the moving points or fitted oversize pins but I took the easy way out and fitted a rose joint conversion kit, one of the few departures from standard spec. on my bike. Not cheap but I'm very pleased with it, NO slop in the gear linkage at all resulting in a very positive gear change.
Appreciate it.
After staying out of the garage for a few days due to the crazy cold wx we’ve been having, and taking care of some yard work my wife wanted done (priorities?), I finally got back out there to get to work on the lever. That can be construed as an excuse because the most un-nerving, and hardest part of this project was the first step – increasing the bore of the pivot hole using a ¾” bit. I’d been having a mental wrestling match on the best way to secure the thing to enlarge the hole to make room for a bushing, and that was a bit of a challenge. There were just too many protuberances coming off the portion of the lever that needed to secured so it could be gripped tight to be drilled as straight as possible. And what if I’d screwed the pooch? This used to be his dad’s bike, so it had a lot of sentimental value attached to it. He told me not to worry about it, but if you work on people’s stuff, there’s always a chance that things can go to hell in a hand basket pretty quickly; I’m sure some of you know the drill.
Good or bad, I finally settled on a method you see in the attached picture, and decided to just go for it; had no other choice. Think it came out “okay” and we had already figured out the rest of the plan to finish the job.
I am not a machinist, more like a machinist wannabe. The semi-clapped out condition of my ’43 era South Bend lathe, inexperience and learn-as-you-go process all seem to compliment one another. Definitely enjoyed a nice cold beer when I was done.

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