Six-Days 125 Questions

Started by Ron, December 04, 2005, 10:40:56 PM

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Ron

Hi to all,

I joined this board several years ago, but for various reasons my Pentons have not been out of the shed in as many years.

I'm finally ready to get started and have some questions for someone.

I have two Six-day 125's, frame #30262530 & 30161683. I believe they would be a 1971 and 1972.

As I sort through the parts it looks like I only have parts to complete one bike. But since they are all mixed together now, I could use some help sorting them out.

The 71 frame appears bent in the rear fender loop, so I'll be using the 72 frame.

1st Question: The triple clamps are not the same, however both bikes have 32mm forks.
 
One set appears much beefier and slightly wider than the other. I'm assuming these are correct for the 72 frame?

2nd Question: I only have one seat between the two bikes and I believe it came from the 71. Is there any diference between these years?

The seat mounting brackets are bent so the seat doesn't fit to either frame right now.

3rd Question: I have the cross-over through the frame exhaust with the chrome heat shield. Is this correct for a 72?
I don't recall which bike it came with.

4th Question, and finally; are aluminum fenders correct for the 72? I would prefer to run these vs white plasic fenders.

Thanks in advance for any assistance.
Ron

Dwight Rudder

The 71 and 72 bikes don't share components.  Different animals entirely.
The 72  and 73 are similar. As are the 70 and 71.
Now both of your frames are from 1973 bikes. But one is a 125 (30262530)
and the other is a 175 (30161683). Some items will interchange but others won't . The frames are different. One takes the 175 KTM engine and the other a 125 Sachs. As for the 32mm forks, there were 2 versions. The early '72, 32mm forks were shorter and narrower. Then later in '72 and '73 the 32's were 1 1/2" taller, with wider and stronger triple clamps.
Someone correct me if I am wrong.
Dwight

Dwight Rudder
7 time ISDT / E medalist
8 time National Enduro Class Champion.

Paul Danik

Dwight,
   I am lost as to how you have figured out that one of these machines is a Jackpiner?  The early Piners had a #7 stamped in front of the serial number and neither of these numbers has that according to Ron. Please set this Martian straight!
Thanks
Paul

Lew Mayer

I believe Dwight's getting that from the production year list on the site. He's a clever rascal.

Lew Mayer
Lew Mayer

Paul Danik

I just checked and that frame number is not listed.  
Paul

Lew Mayer

I figured Dwight was interpolating.(?)[:o)]

Lew Mayer
Lew Mayer

firstturn

Ron,
  From the information you provided I believe you have two 1973 Penton 100 (Bershires-Red) or 125 (Six Day-Green).  Most of the parts for these two bikes interchange except one being a 100cc verse 125cc.  As far as the triple clamps the frame numbers fall into ones that I owned that had 32mm fork (tubes).  The other set may have been changed out by the owner since this was done by people back in those days.
  The seat brackets(new reproduction) can be ordered through Al Buehner (see Suppliers) if he still stocks them.  The original fenders for 1973 goes as follows.  The early part of the year they were Alloy and then went to plastic.  The bike I had that was built in that same time  had plastic fenders.
  I hope this helps.

Ron Carbaugh
Ron Carbaugh

Ron

Hi All,

Thank you all for your responses.

Both of the bikes had Green tanks and Sachs 125cc motors installed, when I got them. One is a 1251/6b - #7432186, the other is a 1251/5a. I'm planning to use the 6b, six speeder engine.

I hadn't noticed the difference in fork lengths Dwight mentioned, but yes, one set is about an 1" longer. Unfortunately this is not the better of the two sets.

Is the length difference in the damping rods?
Are the upper tubes the same length? That would be an easy fix, otherwise my upper tubes are bent and pitted beyond use.

Is there a difference in rear shock length when these forks lengths are used?

Also, my cylinder has an aluminum plate welded to the intake side and  a rubber mount bolts to the plate, to adapt a Mikuni spigot mount carb.
The rubbber is cracked and not usable. Any ideas where I might find a replacement?

Glad to hear the aluminum fenders can be used. I realize how easily they're damaged, but they sure look sharp.

So is it correct to say both bike would use the same seat?
I'm pretty sure I can straighten and reuse the seat mounts I have.

I'm planning to ride this bike in the Adelanto Gran Prix Vintage class, next Febrary 2006.

Hopefully I can get it put together and still have a chance to ride it and check it over throughly before then.

Thanks again for all the assistance,
Ron

john durrill

Ron.
take some measurments on the intake manifold and see if one on this web page will work as a replacment
http://www.sudco.com/catalog105/068.pdf
John D.

Dwight Rudder

Quotequote:Originally posted by Paul Danik

Dwight,
   I am lost as to how you have figured out that one of these machines is a Jackpiner?  The early Piners had a #7 stamped in front of the serial number and neither of these numbers has that according to Ron. Please set this Martian straight!
Thanks
Paul

I didn't think all had that #7.  Early ones did , I don't know about 1973 production.  but the serial numbers match up in sequence. But I notice that the list isn't complete in sequence. Oh, well.
I stand corrected.
Dwight ;)

Dwight Rudder
7 time ISDT / E medalist
8 time National Enduro Class Champion.

Paul Danik

Dwight,
  The first year Piners built from June of 72 till June of 73 used the same basic chassis as the 100/125, obviously different motor mounts. KTM stamped a #7 prefix on the serial number of those machines.  I thought maybe you saw something else that told you that machine was a Piner.

  Ron, If I am not mistaken you can put the topend from the "A" engine on the "B" bottomend, if needed.  I was told that there is no difference in the "A" and "B" alloy topends. Good luck with your project.
If someone knows differently please correct me.
Paul

firstturn

Ron,
  Just remember that a lot of people mixed and matched the entire bikes to keep them racing or riding.  The two engines could be what they indicate(by the side cover) or they could be different since all you have to do is change the ignition cover to throw off someone.  I hope this helps.

Ron Carbaugh
Ron Carbaugh

John Ehrhart

Somewhat straying from the topic, but--does anyone know why the Germans at Sachs, of all places, put the engine serial number on such a dunderhead place?
I am reasonably sure mine is correct, since I bought it only a year old, but every other one is suspect unless you have owned the bike since new or at least have some personal knowledge of it's provenance.
\\"If life were fair, Elvis would be alive and all the impersonators would be dead.\\"
--Johnny Carson

socalmx

Ron, glad to hear that there will be another Penton at the AGP this coming February. I live in Southern California and pull out the Penton twice a year for Adelanto and Elsinore Grand Prixs. A word of advise for preparing the bike. Adelanto track is same year to year so the sand has gotten deeper. Last year I ran stock gearing and had problems with bike pulling in the sand. This year I plan to run a 60 tooth rear sprocket. This cuts down on the top end a bit but allows the bike to stay on the pipe and pulling on the long sandy fireroad on the back portion of the track.

Dobber

Ron,
 I have a 73 jackpiner the serial # starts with a 54 prefix. The bike has the green mx tank & the same exhaust you have. I have a set of green preston petty plastic fenders on it. I do know what you mean about metal fenders, they sure do look sharp.

Shaun (Dobber)

73 Jackpiner
Shaun (Dobber)

73 Jackpiner