Joined: Oct 05, 2003
Posts: 1564
Location: Lara, Victoria, Australia
Posted:
Fri Feb 12, 2016 10:38 am
Came across these on ebay and thought I'd give 'em a try. A bit of a tight fit, but then it needs to be. Also re-used the original o-ring, as the kit version seemed a bit thicker. I bought 4, and fitted 2 to the VF, and a third to the 1100F. They're the same size.
Joined: Mar 04, 2005
Posts: 139
Location: Hannover/Germany
Posted:
Fri Feb 12, 2016 5:01 pm
G'day Ian,
Thank you for that great information. Going to order some.
Thanks
Cheers
AJ
BlueThunder Red CB1100F
Joined: Jun 12, 2006
Posts: 9256
Location: Sarasota, Florida
Posted:
Fri Feb 12, 2016 5:04 pm
Not sure, but I think tomk1960 makes these.
_________________ ... Brian
2014 CTX1300A - Black Thunder aka Predator
1980 CB750F - Blue Thunder
1977 GL1000 - Ox
tomk1960 Red CB1100F
Joined: Nov 13, 2009
Posts: 5016
Location: Worcester, MA
Posted:
Fri Feb 12, 2016 5:10 pm
Mine are made out of Lexan and don't hold up to DOT3 or DOT4 brake fluid. This guy on eBay has been selling a lot of these for several years now and they're glass, which is a better material for this application. He must have recently lowered his price, which I think is very fair. I'd say that this is a better alternative to what I offer. You just have to be careful installing it since they will break if you're too forceful.
Tom
_________________ Powder coating services, specializing in all F components as well as brake system restoration.
Dealer for Galfer, Spiegler, Apex, APE, 4-into-1, KOSO, Venhill, ProBoltUSA, and Cometic.
CB1123 RMII and WAY faster Kawasakis.
Bandit65 Silver CB750F
Joined: Feb 21, 2006
Posts: 562
Location: Goldsboro, North Carolina
Posted:
Sat Feb 13, 2016 12:21 am
tomk1960 wrote:
Mine are made out of Lexan and don't hold up to DOT3 or DOT4 brake fluid. This guy on eBay has been selling a lot of these for several years now and they're glass, which is a better material for this application. He must have recently lowered his price, which I think is very fair. I'd say that this is a better alternative to what I offer. You just have to be careful installing it since they will break if you're too forceful.
Tom
From the auction description;
EBay wrote:
Please note: These are press fit in place, you'll only need to remove your old trim ring and lightly tap this into place. Be sure to cover the lens with a rag or cloth to prevent damage. They are OEM style reproductions. While these are a great value priced option to replace your failing lens, they are not a long term solution like our traditional glass lenses. They WILL degrade over time. You can expect a few years out of these, possibly more. For a permanent repair, please order our GLASS replacement lenses.
Luckysox CB1100F
Joined: May 13, 2005
Posts: 3217
Location: NE OHIO
Posted:
Sat Feb 13, 2016 12:37 am
Bandit65 wrote:
tomk1960 wrote:
Mine are made out of Lexan and don't hold up to DOT3 or DOT4 brake fluid. This guy on eBay has been selling a lot of these for several years now and they're glass, which is a better material for this application. He must have recently lowered his price, which I think is very fair. I'd say that this is a better alternative to what I offer. You just have to be careful installing it since they will break if you're too forceful.
Tom
From the auction description;
EBay wrote:
Please note: These are press fit in place, you'll only need to remove your old trim ring and lightly tap this into place. Be sure to cover the lens with a rag or cloth to prevent damage. They are OEM style reproductions. While these are a great value priced option to replace your failing lens, they are not a long term solution like our traditional glass lenses. They WILL degrade over time. You can expect a few years out of these, possibly more. For a permanent repair, please order our GLASS replacement lenses.
That is why the perceived price drop .
Schurkey Twinstar
Joined: Jun 06, 2006
Posts: 128
Location: The Seasonally Frozen Wastelands
Posted:
Thu May 04, 2017 5:51 am
Tried to install these earlier tonight. Had to turn off the lights and come in from the garage--screwed-up both of them.
I'd purchased a "2-pack". They were delivered directly from Communist China in a padded envelope. No instructions whatsoever. I decide to practice on my spare master cylinder--needs an overhaul any way, the piston went in but won't come back out, and the fluid in it was orange and chunky.
I'd expected a snap-ring holding the original sight glass in place. Nope. Finally just punctured and cut the original plastic, then discovered there's a press-fit steel ring that has to come out. A diamond-point chisel worked nicely. Actually wasn't too tough. Did not scar the hole in the master cylinder.
Cleaned the hole, installed the O-ring, and tried to press the new sight glass in by hand. Nope. Found an impact socket the right diameter. Tapped with a hammer--cocked the sight glass and destroyed the steel ring. Except I didn't understand what had happened. I didn't realize that the steel ring on the new sight glass was actually damaged.
So I then proceed to do EXACTLY the same thing on the master cylinder that I'm actually going to use. Too stupid to learn from my first mistake, I guess.
Another two-pack of sight glasses on order. I probably should have ordered four of 'em.
My "new" plan is to cut or sand a bit of taper into the master cylinder casting at the leading edge that the sight glass presses into, hoping that the taper will guide (funnel) the steel ring around the sight glass into place.
cliffiec Friend of the Board
Joined: Mar 02, 2006
Posts: 5434
Location: Central Maine/Arizona
Posted:
Thu May 04, 2017 9:37 am
Schurkey wrote:
Tried to install these earlier tonight. Had to turn off the lights and come in from the garage--screwed-up both of them.
I'd purchased a "2-pack". They were delivered directly from Communist China in a padded envelope. No instructions whatsoever. I decide to practice on my spare master cylinder--needs an overhaul any way, the piston went in but won't come back out, and the fluid in it was orange and chunky.
I'd expected a snap-ring holding the original sight glass in place. Nope. Finally just punctured and cut the original plastic, then discovered there's a press-fit steel ring that has to come out. A diamond-point chisel worked nicely. Actually wasn't too tough. Did not scar the hole in the master cylinder.
Cleaned the hole, installed the O-ring, and tried to press the new sight glass in by hand. Nope. Found an impact socket the right diameter. Tapped with a hammer--cocked the sight glass and destroyed the steel ring. Except I didn't understand what had happened. I didn't realize that the steel ring on the new sight glass was actually damaged.
So I then proceed to do EXACTLY the same thing on the master cylinder that I'm actually going to use. Too stupid to learn from my first mistake, I guess.
Another two-pack of sight glasses on order. I probably should have ordered four of 'em.
My "new" plan is to cut or sand a bit of taper into the master cylinder casting at the leading edge that the sight glass presses into, hoping that the taper will guide (funnel) the steel ring around the sight glass into place.
Alternative: Just send the thing to Tom, he'll sort it and send back to you...
_________________ 1982 CB 985F
1982 CB 900F (the Animal)
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tomk1960 Red CB1100F
Joined: Nov 13, 2009
Posts: 5016
Location: Worcester, MA
Posted:
Thu May 04, 2017 11:04 am
I now offer an improved version that's made out of glass - no more Lexan. There's no trim ring - you sand the edge a bit to get a snug fit, then you lay down a bead of clear RTV and press in the glass. Send me your email address and I can send you a copy of my installation instructions to try with the glasses you ordered. You can also see how to install them on my YouTube video down below.
_________________ Powder coating services, specializing in all F components as well as brake system restoration.
Dealer for Galfer, Spiegler, Apex, APE, 4-into-1, KOSO, Venhill, ProBoltUSA, and Cometic.
CB1123 RMII and WAY faster Kawasakis.
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