I was lucky enough to recently pick up a very cheap 78 Yamaha XS750 special. The previous owner had just spent $300 putting new tires on it, and I picked it up for $350, somehow managing to tow it home on a uhaul trailer behind a 1990s corolla for about $50 including gas, tolls and the trailer rental, for a total of $400 into this bike. For comparison, local craigslist has two clean, running XS750 standards priced at $3,500 each: one a cafe racer mod and one bone stock.
According to the seller, the electrics were "all broken", he couldn't get the motor to turn, and the wiring harness was "totally melted". All of this turned out to be wrong.
It was cheap because the #3 carb spit flames and lit the airbox and fuel lines (and a couple of wires) on fire, which spooked the previous owner. I'm pretty sure he didn't even try to put it out, and just let it burn until it burn until the tank ran out of gas.
Carnage!
After I got it on the trailer, I put the key in the ignition and the starter turned the motor without issue. Score! Also, all the electrics worked save for the lights and the turn signals seem to have a stuck switch or relay.
My plan, at least initially, is to get this thing running and riding for as little money as possible, as a personal challenge, and also because my RX-7 build is bleeding me dry. First, I want to get it to start and run for $0 spent, just using junk from my garage. Then, I want to get it running well enough to use in my city as a fair-weather daily. Finally, I want to swap out the cruiser tank for a standard tank, mount clip on bars and make it look like a mad max-esque cafe. I might even break out my new welder to make a rear frame hoop.
This past weekend, I was able to extract the melted air box, open the carbs, and solder the #1 plug wire back together. Carb #3 has a melted needle seat in the piston and a stuck float bowl valve causing it to overflow fuel everywhere, both potentially a result of the fire. The piston needle is still firmly attached, and somewhat aligned, so I'm hopeful I can get the bike running (probably poorly) after addressing the pissing fuel problem. I was also able to fix the not working lights - the circuit was just missing its fuse.
I welcome any suggestions, criticism or direction for this build.