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PB Blaster and Shock Disassembly

Posted: Mon Jun 08, 2009 12:01 pm
by Kirk
I am pretty new to restoration of motorcycles, but I thought a few of you may not have used either of these products and have found them to be lifesavers. The first is PB Blaster penetrating oil; I spray my fasters down for a few days before even trying to loosen them. I am just taking apart a Superhawk and could almost do it with my hands; the fasteners wouldn’t budge before with a wrench.

http://www.pbblaster.com/products.html

The cheapest place I have found to buy it is Home Depot.






The second is a Progressive shock spring compressor it’s the best $45.00 I have ever spent takes a shock apart in less than 60 seconds. Their was another thread on the board about this between Loud Mouse and Someone else,

http://www.bikebandit.com/product/13181 ... =338726025





I thought a few of you might not know about these thought I would post it.

Thanks,
Kirk

Posted: Fri Sep 18, 2009 6:13 am
by bsanorton
PB Blaster is the shyt! Been using it for years. Only thing that freed a stuck pistin ring to the cylinder wall on my BSA 441. Recently used it to free a stuck ignition switch on my 63' CB77. The seller could not free it. Once home, one hour of soaking in PB & it was free!

Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 11:44 am
by brewsky
OK, what's the difference between "PB 50" and "PB Penetrating Catalyst" ??
http://www.pbblaster.com/products.html

Posted: Sat Oct 30, 2010 12:16 am
by bikedoctor99
In August '09 a friend generously gave me an original and stock '63 CB77!! Excited because I hadn't been on one since 1970, however there is always a hook in a freebie---this poor bike was stored outside for more than a few decades in north N.J. and was , as you can imagine, very weather beaten (lots of rust and serious corrosion). What was I thinking?
For it's dissection I used Aerokroil, a little pricey but great results-- it freed up the ignition switch, unstuck a seized piston, apparently the intake valve was open (there were mice living in the air filters)-- so you can imagine the corrosion in the barrel. Lots of Aerokroil in both barrels, a good sleep and in the AM coffee, more Kroil, propane torch, hammer + wooden block= done deal!
P.S. prior to the hammer I pried the cylinder up, other piston free and clean: crank & big ends OK- wedged a choice piece if wood under the barrels to dampen the shock and whacked away.
Moral: coffee, Kroil, hammer and block-- essential tools.