Kawasaki Concours Forum
The C10, aka Kawasaki Concours - The Original => The Bike - C10 => Topic started by: pk74 on January 27, 2013, 07:56:01 PM
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1992 45k, a few farkles. Red, never repainted, but paint is in great shape. Only fading is the black dash/knee panels. Bar weights, autocom, upper and mid baker builts, awesome corbin seat, taller than stock windshield.
Bike hasnt been ridden more than around the block in 5 years. I took it 2 years ago to have the carbs serviced. Bike ran like its great self after, but it once again sat in the garage for two more years. It starts and runs, eventually, on full choke until it gets warmed, then 1/4 choke. Needs tires front and rear. Altenator was replaced 4 years ago (100 miles).
I wont be returning to riding anytime soon, if ever. It kind of depresses me to see it in the garage, rotting away. If it were you, would you part it out, or sell it whole?
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Whole...
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Please sell it whole. Taken care of these are great reliable bikes!!
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Yes they are. Im just out of resources and health to do so. Given that it needs tires, carbs cleaned, and a new battery, what should i ask for it whole? I would be willing to take bottom end of the range...
Please sell it whole. Taken care of these are great reliable bikes!!
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It might depend on where you are located...ie...How much winter is left? It could make sense to hang on a couple more months...
HTH...
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I'm in NC. As someone mentioned, it would take around $800-$900 to put it back in the condition it needs to be in.
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Sounds like a good carb cleaning is needed - good time for overflow tubes while you're at it.
It just seems wrong to part out a C10 with good fairing / body parts, nothing major wrong with it. Faded black inner fairing parts are easy to get looking good again.
45K mi. is just getting started.
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Where in NC? I could be interested.
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Parting it out will be a lot of work, doesn't generate the cash we always think it will, and you invariably end up with parts you can't sell at the end. Too much work for too little return.
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Is $1200 a fair price for it whole, considering the work? I guess I need to make a new post in the for sale area before this one gets closed...
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Posts don't get "closed", they just kind of end. Sometimes they come back to life.
Sounds like a fair price. People will of course want to reduce the price when they buy. I would try to sell it just as the bike season starts in your area. Give it a good wipe down and make sure the battery is charged. Also, if it was me, I would dump the old gas out and put fresh gas treated with the blue Stabil back in. Maybe an once or two of 2-stroke oil too. Run it at least minutes to get treated gas into the carbs. How quick it starts will probably determine if someone buys it or not for a good price.
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Followed your advice about draining the gas, replaced it, added a little blue stabil and maybe 1/4 ounce of 2stroke oil. Charged the battery, and to my surprise the bike fired right up after 5 seconds of cranking. I managed to let it die, then restarted it - now i have gas coming out of the clear tube behind the petcock/ next to the seat while it is running. Shut it down, but it sounded fine.
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Tapped the carbs with a screwdriver handle, stuck is now unstuck. Great, now i have a running bike in the garage that i cant ride :/
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Be patient. It was a nice day today and more on the way. Keep it running and someone will buy it for sure. ;)
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Here's a shot from earlier this afternoon..
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Nice! You really wanna' sell that?
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That's REALLY nice looking!
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Bought a new battery and put it in...she sure starts better.
However, she still dumps fuel when its running. I assume a stuck float still.
I apologize for the sound, the shakiness, and how crappy this video turned out, but im afraid to let it run for long with the fuel dumping... In person, it sounds like a normal connie, not a tractor being stuffed into a crappy cellphone..
http://youtu.be/QSSwBSoKeSg (http://youtu.be/QSSwBSoKeSg)
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Yep, sell it as a whole bike. Get some of that tire shine in a can or Mothers back to black for the bags & black plastic.
Try tapping the inboard carbs w/ a long drift to see if you can persuade the stuck floats if they're stuck.
Good luck.
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n00b here, barring the unforeseen, i'm picking up this bike for my first. I work with pk74, so I can beat him if anything comes up ;D
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n00b here, barring the unforeseen, i'm picking up this bike for my first. I work with pk74, so I can beat him if anything comes up ;D
Welcome! Read up on this bike here on the forum. You may have a carb issue from sitting. Connies like to keep running all of the time - sitting is not good. I would keep it on the side stand until you are sure the float needles aren't stuck and the petcock is working correctly. Its not the best "first" bike to have. Its quite top heavy and a little bit intimidating at first. Lots of people drop them at 0 mph in the driveway or garage. Other than that little "hump" you will probably love the bike. Put about 1,000 miles on the bike before you start changing things. Plenty of power and storage space. Very dependable if you keep on top of things.
When you change the oil, there are 2 drain plugs and the filter plate - you'll need to know this.
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When you change the oil, there are 2 drain plugs and the filter plate - you'll need to know this.
So i've heard! I've already been doing some poking around the forums.
Something a bit smaller and lighter would be great, but the availability and price put me onto this one. I'm also a bigger guy, so something like the old honda CM450's I have as projects around the house are really a bit too small for me.
I'm mechanically adept, so i'll probably start with a bit of carb tapping and some seafoam to try and loosen up that sticky float. If that fails, i'll just pull em for a quick cleaning.