I have return with a huge smile,
2400 miles in 8 days on my '52 A10. Cruised happily between 55 and 70MPH but was a little uncomfortable at 45-50MPH, in fact it vibrated so much I couldn't find a comfortable spot on the seat for couple of days after doing 45 for 3 hours while sitting behind a '51 Panther outfit
The A10 made a fantastic mount for what was a very long way even for a few modern machines. 2 Harleys and a Suzuki M109 were seen on trailers during the trip and 5 others didn't make the distance.
The A10 dynamo failed on the first day... right hand fork seal lasted to the 2nd day then nothing until the last full day. After a fabulous run through the Grampians and then the Great Ocean Rd I noticed a new sound, just an occasional light tinny arching sound but no other symptoms other than the need for 2-5 kicks to start instead of one.
The run to the first stop on the last full day was uneventful until, 20km short of the start of the final leg through the Snowy Mountains I came to a halt
After a painful 20km at 30-35MPH I made it to the nearest town with an additional problem, the clutch wouldn't disengage.
I discovered the 2 screws holding the end of the magneto in place had vibrated out but were still in the casing, tightened with lock tight and problem one was solved. The clutch issue turned out to be the actuating rod... or lack there of, seems the rod wasn't hardened and is now too short to do anything.
The final run was brilliant, the bike was flying, 60-65MPH through most of the ranges to Canberra and then 70-75MPH to Sydney... Then it happened again! coasted to a halt, After checking the spark (none) I pulled the end off the magneto and gave the kick start a push (plugs out) and found the points unmoved for my efforts, I pulled the timing cover off and found the fibre gear had no teeth. A huge thank you to Musky, I fitted his spare and got her running again but in the end decided to have the bike carried home, riding through Sydney with no clutch seemed like a suicide mission.
In conclusion, the only failure of a component that I had rebuilt was the magneto. The rest were failures of things I hadn't got to yet.
So, will an old bike do a big trip? yep, would I do it again... I am! in 2013 I will head off on the ride to Cooktown, this time we will arrive with both of us on our own wheels
A huge thank you to eveyone on here that helped with their advice and an even bigger one to Musky, without whom we wouldn't have had such a fantastic trip.
A link to my photos of the trip for those that are interested
http://www.freewebs.com/longride2010/apps/photos/album?albumid=12598358