This project will be similar to Scud's project here:
http://www.motobrick.com/index.php/topic,7638.0.htmlexcept Scud is much more skilled mechanically than I am and the two bikes in question are a 95 K75 ABS and 94 K75 ABS respectively and are therefore pretty much identical off the shelf, so maybe if I'm lucky I'll have fewer issues to deal with. This is the most challenging thing I've ever undertaken moto-technically, so I'll write it up here and maybe someone else will benefit.
THe backstory is that back in 2005 I had a front-end accident with an illegally left-turning Ford Taurus on southbound Aurora at about 85th St in Seattle (beware this very dangerous stretch of road). I broadsided the cage at about 20 mph and the front end of the bike was all busted up. The dealer, Ride West BMW, told me to total the bike out and get another one but it was my first K-bike and I couldn't let it go. They made it rideable, but didn't tell me about the frame damage whereby the stops that prevent the fork tubes from slamming into the tank when locking the steering left/right broke off in the front-end impact.
A buddy of mine welded some metal nubs back on the frame where the stops were (see pics), but though I've put over 50k miles on it since then, it's never been 100% right: makes an quiet but audible creaking sound under load, isn't as nimble as other K75s I've ridden, and I have a nagging fear there's some other damage that was unseen at the time but may eventually end in catastrophic failure. If I'm going to ride a 20+ year old bike, I'll breathe much easier with a frame/front-end that's accident free, not to mention the fact that the resale value of a bike with big blobs of metal where the factory stops used to be is more or less $0.
So -- I've decided to retire the damaged frame of my well-loved '95 K75 ABS with 108K miles and merge its engine and driveline with the frame from a well-loved and well cared-for +175k '94 K75 I found on Craigslist. The PO is an ex-Motobricker many of you know, and you may even recognize the bike. If you want to know whose bike it is, PM me -- but out of respect for his privacy I'm not going to put his name up here.
This is where I am now with this project. Next step is to roll the engine/drivetrain out from under the frame and disassemble it to make room the step that follows, which will be pulling the engine/drivetrain out from the damaged '95 K75 frame.
More to come. Btw I'll be having a K75 Retirement Garage Sale on the Marketplace forum soon -- keep an eye out for it.
--Motorhobo