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The Honda CA95 / Benly 150 Restoration The little brother to the CA160 in our family of Hondas |
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#16
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NIce bike , hope you enjoy it . I did a similar modification to one of my headlights and still have it in one of my bikes . Not the brightest at night so hopefully you don't plan on any nighttime rides . It will get you by if your ever stopped for an inspection though . Welcome to the group .
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#17
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I'd suspect he's ok, just using an incandescent bulb. As you know the Halogens get much hotter.
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#18
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Thanks for the feedback everyone! I hadn't considered the plastic tie melting. I'll keep an eye on it and see what happens. I guess worst case is the ties melt and the bulb comes loose. It doesn't have too far to fall in the headlight assembly. I have no idea if this bulb was designed for high and low beam but it seems to work.
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#19
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Any suggestions on a headlight that has the reflective coating rusted? Would like to do this conversion but don't think the light would function very well without the reflective coating. I managed to pull off the lens so I could conceivably have it re-chromed if that is possible and not prohibitively expensive. Hard to find these lights on ebay other than the Taiwan jobs. An original burned out would be fine as long as it had the reflective coating intact so if any one has one please let me know.
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#20
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Yeah actually that's what I have done but the can of chrome spray paint I bought was far from chrome so I either need to find spray paint that really is chrome or have it re-plated but it is pretty pitted so not sure if it can be done. Hoping to find another headlight with good chrome that's not too expensive. There's been one on eBay for a while at $160 but not willing to spend that much .
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#21
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Quote:
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#22
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Shiny side of aluminum foil using spray adhesive has been super effective in an old auto resto I did 15 years ago and the headlights still look great. Be sure and dont wrinkle the foil....buy maybe that will enhance the reflection! Better than paint and no cost.
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#23
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1911tex, what spray adhesive did you use, is there any concern with the heat affecting the adhesive?
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#24
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edcphoto: 3M contact adhesive, aerosol. Messy stuff, but works well and heat from lamp has no effect. Pretty common in older non-sealed beams when the original silver ebbs away. not a proper resto, but a quick remedy and no one sees it but you....but still knaws at your guilt for not doing it properly...or just buying a new headlight bucket.
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#25
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I couldn't remember if I ever posted pics of our Benly with the new seat, new tires and blacked out pipes. So here it is!
Last edited by Smithers; 04-08-2013 at 08:30 AM. |
#26
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That looks great! I was trying to figure out what made it look so different. I was thinking wow those tires are black.. then I looked at the exhaust. Cool!
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#27
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The white piping is nice 'pop'. The blackout isn't a bad alternative to rechroming as well.
Looks like you are out enjoying it and that's what counts! Nice... |
#28
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Thanks! Yeah a couple cans of PJ1 was a heck of a lot cheaper than rechroming. The clutch needs some work but otherwise running great.
http://www.cheapcycleparts.com/products/62103 |
#29
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Good lookin bike ! How much water did you have to use to grow those pipes ?
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#30
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A lot. It was exhausting. :X
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Tags |
ca95 bulb, ca95 bulb replacement, ca95 head lamp, ca95 head light |
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