tnbill
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Ran when parked

Ran when parked
Are you talking about the bike or the owner?Ran when parked![]()
so if you dont inspect the lower tank and if there is a tank full of crap/corrosion, there is a good chance you will send that in to the injectors, making them useless.
That is what the fuel filter is there for. If contaminants the size of rust particles can get to the injectors Honda has a serious design flaw with their fuel filter, which I highly doubt. Fuel filters in electrically controlled fuel injected engines are designed to prevent impurities that are large enough to cause any threat to the fuel system from getting to it, including the injectors. The filter is designed to remove small impurities from what is already considered to be clean fuel. These particles are much smaller than any rust particles that may be in the tank. If there is rust and if the pump runs the filter may become clogged to some degree but so what, if he intends to keep this motorcycle he is well advised to replace the filter and the fuel pump anyway, I know that I would. If any, the most likely mechanical problem with the injectors will be due to varnish build-up because of how long it has sat with very old fuel sitting in them, not from rust in the tank.Exactly!!
Did you type that wrong?You can’t access the crankshaft bolt via the front cover.
Your thoughts on “minimal exposure to air”, like “sitting in a bottle on the shelf” are Incorrect.For a list of what could happen it's hard to know where to begin. But it's very interesting and begs the question, could it run again?
Just what I might do, I'm no mechanic, my experience with these bikes wouldn't slosh out of a teaspoon if I was running down a hill, better advice hopefully chimes in.
Even if the fuel doesn't look bad or stink it's still really not gas anymore and I wouldn't move any of it through the system.
All or some of the clutch surfaces might be stuck together. If you work them free, I'm not sure you can know if you've worked them all free or as few as just one, but maybe after a couple oil changes and some light operating time [way way down the line of proceedures] they all free up.
I would remove the plugs and look inside with a camera.
If it didn't look bad, I might try spraying [so that everything is coated] some kind of oil into the cylinders and try to manually rotate the crank [push the bike in first? I dunno...] see what else comes out the hole. Maybe just the oil you put in, wouldn't that be great.
If it's locked, at least you didn't brown out the electrical system by trying to crank it.
Brakes and Clutch not moving and sitting with the same fluid are going to be challenging but you have the expertise of this site.
The only thing I have to say on that is I think there may be a snowball's chance of two things; the brakes didn't run hot and damage the fluid before lay up and the clutch slave didn't run hot and damage the fluid. I think it's possible that if the fluid was in good condition, it may have at least remained sealed below their respective reservoir diaphrams for seventeen years with minimal exposure to air, like sitting in a bottle on the shelf. Wouldn't that be good.
I'd be very interested to see how much of everything can be brought back to life and what you find after all these years.
Yes, god damn spell miscorrector! I fixed my post now.Did you type that wrong?
What's the crankshaft access hole turn that's used to rotate the the engine for a valve inspection.
Well, Jeremy, I think you have quite an audience who would like to know what you are planning to do and hope you will get back to us with progress posts.Hi all, I am after some advice please.
Same on my GF's '07 NT700VA purchased in 2019 and immediately receiving a full checkup by yours truly...... ANIWACK, who is a mechanic, and he reported that my brake system had a mass of something like a blood clot in it...