Greetings! New rescued paso here
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 10:15 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Philippines
Greetings! New rescued paso here
Good Day!
6 months ago, I acquired a Paso 906 for a cheap price. But it was beyond recognition of what used to be magnificent bike. It had no wheels, no mags, no covers, no rear axle adjusters, no rear axle, no gauges, etc. Basically, it only had the tank, chassis, engine, tail piece, forks, swing arm and its rear shock. Parts here in the Philippines for ducati motorcycles are very hard to find and rare. I manage to buy a pair of wheels and mags from a motorcycle graveyard, it came from a Kawasaki GPZ 400. Had the rear axle and adjusters made from a local machine shop, the adjusters is not even a adjuster, more like a bushing. So I drilled holes on the swing arm to mount a cheap chain tensioner for the chains to tighten. You may not agree on the tail I made, but due to limited resources I had to cut it short leaving only me to ride on it(currently waiting for a custom made R1 tail to replace it) its basically looks like a street fighter now.
for now, this is how it looks like (pipe is not on because I had to have it repack)
My concern is, I personally rebuild the bike from scratch, most of the information I got from doing so came from this site or other websites. Im not sure if I have it all setup correctly, The main problem of the bike is that it takes a long time to start up, I had to run to a battery repair shop to get my battery charge. Let say, I was able to turn on the bike today and run a couple of miles, when I get back home I turn off the bike and a couple of minutes later turn it on, no problem. But if I leave the bike overnight, in the morning the bike wont start. I have to raise the tank a bit in order for my hands to reach and cover the intake of the carb to turn it on, even doing so takes some time to turn it on.
What I did notice before when I was cleaning the carburetor is there is a lever at the front were you can pull it and if you release it, it goes back in place. I'm not sure if this is affecting the start up, or if it suppose to be part with the throttle grip or not. I'm not sure, for what I can see on the throttle grip it only have the throttle cable and there is another hole that I can put another cable. please help.
P.S. please forgive my english and grammar.
6 months ago, I acquired a Paso 906 for a cheap price. But it was beyond recognition of what used to be magnificent bike. It had no wheels, no mags, no covers, no rear axle adjusters, no rear axle, no gauges, etc. Basically, it only had the tank, chassis, engine, tail piece, forks, swing arm and its rear shock. Parts here in the Philippines for ducati motorcycles are very hard to find and rare. I manage to buy a pair of wheels and mags from a motorcycle graveyard, it came from a Kawasaki GPZ 400. Had the rear axle and adjusters made from a local machine shop, the adjusters is not even a adjuster, more like a bushing. So I drilled holes on the swing arm to mount a cheap chain tensioner for the chains to tighten. You may not agree on the tail I made, but due to limited resources I had to cut it short leaving only me to ride on it(currently waiting for a custom made R1 tail to replace it) its basically looks like a street fighter now.
for now, this is how it looks like (pipe is not on because I had to have it repack)
My concern is, I personally rebuild the bike from scratch, most of the information I got from doing so came from this site or other websites. Im not sure if I have it all setup correctly, The main problem of the bike is that it takes a long time to start up, I had to run to a battery repair shop to get my battery charge. Let say, I was able to turn on the bike today and run a couple of miles, when I get back home I turn off the bike and a couple of minutes later turn it on, no problem. But if I leave the bike overnight, in the morning the bike wont start. I have to raise the tank a bit in order for my hands to reach and cover the intake of the carb to turn it on, even doing so takes some time to turn it on.
What I did notice before when I was cleaning the carburetor is there is a lever at the front were you can pull it and if you release it, it goes back in place. I'm not sure if this is affecting the start up, or if it suppose to be part with the throttle grip or not. I'm not sure, for what I can see on the throttle grip it only have the throttle cable and there is another hole that I can put another cable. please help.
P.S. please forgive my english and grammar.
- paso750
- paso grand pooh-bah
- Posts: 5558
- Joined: Sun Jul 18, 2004 12:00 am
- model: 750 Paso
- year: 1987
- Location: southern Germany
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
I`ve seen this pic before and it`s a shocker. I wonder how narrow those rims are as the tires look like balloons.
However the lever on the carb is for the choke. What you do by covering the air intake is making the mixture richer to start the engine.
The choke lever is normally connected to the clutch pump but in case it`s missing you can adapt any other choke lever. I guess at this point it doesn`t make much difference.
G.
However the lever on the carb is for the choke. What you do by covering the air intake is making the mixture richer to start the engine.
The choke lever is normally connected to the clutch pump but in case it`s missing you can adapt any other choke lever. I guess at this point it doesn`t make much difference.
G.
- JWilliam
- Posts: 331
- Joined: Wed Oct 06, 2004 12:00 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1989
- Location: Nottingham, UK
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Awful isn't it, here is a pic of mine to restore your faith in Humanity.
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 10:15 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Philippines
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Thanks for the responses, However 2 nights ago my paso burned. Only thing I was able to save was the engine, carb, fuel pump, chassis, mags, swing arm, fork, cdi, regulator and the original tail piece. Tank burned but just the paint, im surprised that it did not blew up. All the plastics parts, hoses, both wheels and wires are beyond recognition. What happened was I made the same mistake as what the other member of this forum did by putting gas on the air intake of the carb. A backfire occurred and fire started. I'm planning on rebuilding it when I get back from Qatar. New swing arm, new upside down fork, new mags and wheels, new electrical harness and new fairings(Planning to order one set of ducati 1098 from DH gate).
Any inputs on what swing arm and forks to use?I don't mind machining the mounts just to fit it. And where to buy compete wire harness?
Any inputs on what swing arm and forks to use?I don't mind machining the mounts just to fit it. And where to buy compete wire harness?
-
- Posts: 364
- Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 5:52 pm
- model: 907 I.E.
- year: 1992
- Location: Essex UK
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Sorry to hear that. I thought the overall rat/Mad Max style you created there was cool. You've got a big job on your hands by the sound of it. I don't think 1098 plastics will fit though.
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 10:15 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Philippines
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Thanks 900streetfighter, I was thinking about it if it would fit or not but. It's probably the tank that may cause it, So I was thinking in buying 1098 tank and make it fit then the rest would follow. A cut there and here, I don't think it would be that hard, I wish
-
- Posts: 373
- Joined: Mon Apr 03, 2006 12:00 am
- model: 907 I.E.
- year: 1993
- Location: Northampton UK
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
SImplest will be another 907 or Paso arm - there's nothin wrong with them at all - cheapest will be a Paso part but I do have a slightly damaged but overall sound 907 arm sitting here thats surplus to requirements if you get desperate - it is in the UK though
-
- Posts: 364
- Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 5:52 pm
- model: 907 I.E.
- year: 1992
- Location: Essex UK
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
907 arm would be easier to fit a rear wheel to. A lot of Monster, SS and ST 17" wheels will bolt straight in, but I guess you have to make use of whatever you can get hold of there. As for front forks you are a bit restricted because they are very long on the Paso.
-
- paso grand pooh-bah
- Posts: 1878
- Joined: Wed Dec 05, 2007 12:35 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Newzealand
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Jwilliam, that paint job looks cool , but I gotta say that the back tire looks so wrong , Probly works real good but to me the profile is way to high . I know tire's are a bitch to get for the paso but Im ( have done now ) going for the 17" conv .... mostly to avoid the very thing I see at your back wheel, but I do like that tricoloure paint job
Hamish
Hamish
I wish I was young again............Id be heaps smarter than last time
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 10:15 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Philippines
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
I was thinking of selling the entire thing living me the engine. I had this idea of building a new entire bike from scratch. I was surfing through ebay looking for parts and came across with a wide range of ducati 1098 parts. So, I was thinking in buying ducati 1098 frame, swinger, subrame, forks, wheels, and rim. It would cost we around $2000. But would the paso 906 engine fit in a ducati 1098 frame?
-
- Posts: 364
- Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 5:52 pm
- model: 907 I.E.
- year: 1992
- Location: Essex UK
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Should bolt straight in but the swingarm pivot width and bore might be different.
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 10:15 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Philippines
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Thanks for the response their 900streetfighter, I was thinking about that too. Would the swingarm pivot width and bore longer/shorter than of the paso's original? Thanks
- JWilliam
- Posts: 331
- Joined: Wed Oct 06, 2004 12:00 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1989
- Location: Nottingham, UK
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Grip is super, way better than the Michelins ever were. The tall profile looks a bit Motogp I know but I can get some serious lean. If I was going to get new wheels I'd want BST carbons - £2K+ tho but the axle and disc fitment is all taken care of by them as they make custom hubs. I'll dream it will happen one day.Mc tool wrote:Jwilliam, that paint job looks cool , but I gotta say that the back tire looks so wrong , Probly works real good but to me the profile is way to high . I know tire's are a bitch to get for the paso but Im ( have done now ) going for the 17" conv .... mostly to avoid the very thing I see at your back wheel, but I do like that tricoloure paint job
Hamish
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 10:15 am
- model: 906 Paso
- year: 1990
- Location: Philippines
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
Question, does a paso 750 timing belt fit in a 906? Thanks
- paso750
- paso grand pooh-bah
- Posts: 5558
- Joined: Sun Jul 18, 2004 12:00 am
- model: 750 Paso
- year: 1987
- Location: southern Germany
Re: Greetings! New rescued paso here
no, it`s too short and has square teeth instead of round ones.
G.
G.