Hello all,
I've been working on a '76 KZ900 for a while and been a member of kzrider during that time and received great support and learned much. I posed the question below there, and one of the members suggest I come over here and see what y'all thought.
A short time ago I was able to purchase a lot of z/kz bikes and parts from an estate in my neighborhood.
Among the lot were two Z's - a '73 and a '75 as well as a KZ900, an early KZ1000 (frame number ending 23xx), and another chopped KZ1000 frame as well as lots of heads, carbs, cases, etc.
None of the bikes are assembled, but I have, what appears to be anyway, most of the parts for these machines, as well as lots of vintage drag racing gear.
With my '76 , (which I bought in crates), I went resto-mod, as I believe the heart of these bikes is the motor, so feel little hesitation in upgrading the brakes and suspension, bracing the frame, whatever. So it now has the front and rear ends from a late-2000's ZX6R, as well as significant mods to the frame (bracing and whole new sub-frame). The frame had already been "chopped" and "de-tabbed", and the exhaust/passenger triangles had been removed, so it was never again gonna be a concours machine, (without a ton of work anyway).
Having said this, I cannot bring myself to do any modding to the '73. While it needs a restoration, it is mostly original, pretty much rust free and well, it's a 73. In my mind, it makes no sense to hack into a '73 when these are so prized by collectors, and well, a KZ900 is really the same machine, (save things like the carbs), and can be had cheaply and are not really prized by collectors.
So here's the dilemma: what to do with the '73...
I am 99% sure it is a 73 Z1 - (frame number 0149xx), with what what appears to be the original engine (engine number is less than 10 digits from frame number). Date stamps on the swingarm, headstock and rear brake arm all match - 5/73. The rear drum also has no wear indicator.
The bike is mostly complete, including the clocks, mirrors, all its lights, grab rail, etc. It's missing the side covers and the tail cowl, (though I did get a tail cowl with it that was painted orange, but after some very careful sanding, appears to be Z1 brown underneath). It's also, crucially, missing the original 4 into 4, and has a 4 into 1 Kerker-style.
It has the original tank, and original paint. The clear coat on the top has peeled, and there appears to be some sun fading, and some very shallow dents on one side, (I've gotten dents this shallow out before without harming the paint - so I reckon, fixable).
Other than that, I think the only original pieces missing are the airbox (have the original carbs with the 17mm bolts in the bottom of the float bowls), and the seat needs recovering, though it does appear to be the right stitching pattern, ie. original.
The bike shows 37k on the clock, and I know for certain is it's been off the road for at least 13 years, likely significantly longer.
The engine is currently out of the bike, with the head and jugs off.
The bike needs a restoration for sure. The paint on the motor is chipped in places, and faded on items like the master cylinder. However, I can find very few parts on the bike that look like they were replaced, and being a Colorado bike, there is almost no rust on it. Even the grips look original, and the little ribbed boot on the MC is still in good shape and I have the little tray with the wiring diagram in the seat, (though no tool kit).
This, it would seem, in my humble opinion, a prime candidate for a "back to the factory" restoration, however, I am not really interested in doing a "back to the factory" restoration - not really my thing.
My question is this: Is it better (more desirable), for a restorer to have the bike in its present shape (partially disassembled), or should I get this thing up and running, or should I just bite the bullet, get out my toothbrushes and my calf-skin gloves, and go for the full restore?
If I were to sell it in it's current condition, what do you guys think it's worth?
Many thanks
Rob K
The 73 (with the "wrong" seat)...
[ img ]My shop the night I finished getting all the gear...(took hours just to get things quasi-organized) - the '76 mentioned above is the one on the table - hard to miss with a 180 rear tire.
[ img ]