Quote:
Originally Posted by BeakersAdventure
I ended up getting contacted by a great fellow on this forum that worked as a "fixer" go between for me. He was instrumental in the entire process. I have a depost on a 1993 single owner 44,000km bike. Please fill me in on what you think I need to know  I am importing it to Canada. I know of the issues with Voltage Regulator, fuel pump and output shaft wear. Anything else a guy should know?
|
That's great. Hope everything goes smoothly.
Having exported one of my ATs from the Netherlands and into Bulgaria, I can say make sure you know all the import and vehicle inspection requirements (and have these in writing with you) for your country as the local authorities won't necessarily know jack and might start trying to make random irrelevant stuff up.
With regard to the bike, of course, the fuel pump, reg/rec and output shaft are known issues.
In an ideal world, the bike will have always had a Honda OEM front sprocket, so the shaft will then still be mint. If there's any damage consider urgency fitting a front sprocket from
https://kkbike.it/
Also, take a couple of spare reg/rec units and starter relays with you to Canada. When the reg/rec goes south it'll likely take the starter relay with it too. It might also kill the CDI unit. I also carry a spare CDI on long trips (mine has never failed though. Several reg/recs and starter relays have

)
The clutch on the 1990s ATs and Transalps are well known to be chocolate teacup. If you're intending to ride it aggressively or off pavement, I'd take spare clutch plates with you to Canada too. I've never killed clutch plates on my AT, but twice on my TA, once in a Siberian river and once in sandy Morocco.
The suspension on a 30 year old bike will be weak and require at least a service/setting up for your weight/luggage/riding style. The front forks were already too soft, even from new.
On both my ATs I have Wilbers after market rear shocks and Wilbers progressive springs in OEM forks (on my 1995 AT) and 50mm KTM forks/ springs (on my 1993 AT).
Enjoy the bike!
Hopefully the 2 attached pics are visible