The Lambretta Li150 Series 3 Rebuild - Rebuilding the engine, Part 1

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This weekend I will commence the engine rebuild, more than likely this is going to take a while as i may have missed parts along the way, I thought I had ordered everything needed but with an engine there are always bits you will miss.

I am going to start by adding the Silent Blocks first then the Bearings, once this is done i n then go about dry fitting everything first so I know what else to by.

Lambretta Engine Stand

I ordered an engine stand online today from a Scooter shop called Yesterdays Scooters in Christchurch New Zealand of all places for $80 with air freight, what a bargain.

Dev Tour Exhaust - Polished not Chromed

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After 2 minutes on the polishing wheel, quite amazing.

Dev Tour Exhaust - Polished not Chromed

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Before spending 2 minutes on the buffer!

Dev Tour Exhaust - Polished not Chromed

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I had posted a question on the Lambretta Club of Australia Forum about what to do with my Dev Tour Exhaust, when it arrived from the UK it came looking very rough indeed. The burn marks on each of the welds really stick out for me and I was not very happy about it, particularly when you see some really sparkling exhausts on Lambretta’s these days, plus it looked a lot shinier on the web site that I bought it from.

Anyway, the general consensus from the local enthusiasts was to polish it. I looked into doing this myself to save a few bucks but in the end I was up for three types of polishing compound, and extra polishing wheel for my angle grinder, so it made more sense to give it to an expert.

A few phone calls later and the exhaust was dropped off to Derek at TigMig in Brookvale for some initial testing to see if this would work & boy did it.

You can clearly see the results of 1 minute on the buffing wheel this below, the weld in the middle of the shot was on the buffing wheel for no more than a minute and you can see what it looked like based on the weld on the top right of the picture.

The other two shots are a before and after of the worst effected burn marks, came up a treat.

Needless to say I left it with him to finish off the whole exhaust.

Original condition of my Li150 engine

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Compared to this!

Nice shiny engine after being Vapour Blasted

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Looks brand new.

Crankshaft housing

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Crankshaft housing, originally uploaded by Barry P Smyth.

This is a shot of the crakshaft housing before vapour blasting, you can see how filthy it is.

Crankshaft housing post Vapour Blasting

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Looks like new, compared to the previous photo.

Test Fitting Dev Tour Exhaust

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DSC_5660, originally uploaded by Barry P Smyth.

Just got my engine back from being Vapour Blasted, this process uses wet spherical glass beads to remove all surface contaminants, if you look closely at the engine casing you would think it is brand new, not 46 years old.

I’ll be getting quite a few parts near the engine Powder coated and I was dry fitting the Dev Tour Exhaust by MD Developments in this shot to see which of the connection parts could be powder coated.

Flickr

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This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

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