I am restoring
a 1948 panhead and I am wondering where and how the one year
only throttle cable bracket mounts. I think it mounts to the
upper motor mount but there doesn't seem to be enough room above
the carburetor, even with the one year only throttle lever which
is basically flat. If anyone has pictures that would be great.
Thanks
Post by 48moon on Jul 20, 2007, 2:57am
I struggled with this same issue on my 48'. The bracket is mounted on the left
side of the top motor mount which is left of the frame curving around further
to the left. I found it nearly impossible to route the cable at a severe enough
angle to connect the control wire to a flat throttle lever. I looked at a lot
of old M35TP carbs (including mine) and I never found one with a flat lever.
I know the Palmer book shows a picture of 5 levers on page 246 but only describes
4 of them. It's confusing because the 2 levers used from 49' and up have 2 parts
to them. (Read the caption carefully). My belief is that the bracket furthest
left in the picture is not supposed to be there. Therefore the second from the
left is the real (#1238-4.
Below are pictures of my lever and bracket.
Routing the throttle control cables around the frame and tanks on a 48' is a
challenge also. Look at the close up picture on page 171 in Palmer's for a helpful
visual. Be sure to to move your handlebars full right & left before cutting
anything!
"Nothing worthwhile is easy."



Post by panfreak on Jul 20, 2007, 9:05pm
The fun part is trying to eliminate the dead spot in the controls when switching
direction (off/ on the throttle) I gave up a long time ago and have just gotten
used to it.
Post by theknucklehead on Jul 30, 2007, 5:53am
Thank you very much for the info and great pictures. Sorry it's taken me so long
to get back to you, been on vacation. Interesting point about the throttle lever.
My M-75 linkert had the third one from the left, (palmer pg.246), on it. I looked
all over for the lever on the far left, (the flat one), and ended up paying way
too much for it, just my luck. I am using the second from the left, what I thought
was 1947 on my '47 knucklehead. Talk about a snowball effect!! It would be interesting
to hear from someone with an original unrestored '48 to find out what throttle
lever they have.
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