1957 BSA B31 Restoration

For the last couple of months my brother and I have been working on his 1957 BSA B31 motorcycle. Approximately every Tuesday night we gather at his place to work on the bike. We started by removing the wheels to have new rims, spokes and tires fitted and are currently working on the engine. The cilinder has been bored to 400CC and we’re about to reassemble the engine. After that we still need to strip the frame and give it a new layer of paint, after that we’ll reassemble the bike and fit a new Amal MK1 Concentric carburetor to replace the Amal Monobloc.

You can watch the photo-blog here: https://goo.gl/photos/SDsVTUn5aQaWHniY9

Update: 15-may-2014

We have been working on the bike steadily for the past few months (almost every wednesday evening). The frame was recently powdercoated along with some custom fenders, engine mounting brackets and some other small parts. The cylinder was bored to approximately 400CC’s and a Honda piston was fitted too match the bore. We’ve begun reassembling the engine and tried to bolt on the cylinder head yesterday when we discovered that the firering (the protruding ring on top of the cylinder base) was higher than the depth of the corresponding groove in the cylinder head (am I still making sense?).

BSA B31 cylinder firering
BSA B31 cylinder firering, 3.2mm
Firering measures approximately 3.2mm
Firering measures approximately 3.2mm
Groove in cylinder head measures approximately 2.3mm
Groove in cylinder head measures approximately 2.3mm

So either we have the head machined or the ring on the cylinder skimmed….

Update: 22-sept-2014

Well, as it turned out, we were wrong in thinking that the fire ring on top of the cylinder barrel should stick all the way into the groove in the head. That ring and the corresponding groove actually form the mating surface. So we put a bit of coppergrease on it and reassembled the engine.

The engine is completely overhauled with new bearings and bored to 400CC’s. We also decided to invest in a more reliable oilpump made by ABSAF in Appingedam (Netherlands) and a new sump plate with magnetic drainplug by SRM Engineering.

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