Chuck,
When I was stationed in Seattle, a guy in a Toyota p/u t-boned me and my Sportster at about 35mph. After I got out of the hospital, the insurance company I had at the time, Allstate, gave me two options, I could total it, or have it rebuilt. The only thing that was savageable on the Sportie was the engine, everything else, including frame had to be replaced. So I had it rebuilt as a Roadster. But that's not the point. After all the work was done, I maintained the same title on it that I had when I picked it up from the dealership. There was never any discussion about a salvage title and I never received one. I actually made money when I sold it because it was no longer a "standard" sportie, but now a Roadster.
Cheers
,

Charlie,
These are great stories to hear. I think everything is going to work out fine. I freaked a bit this morning, but that is Ok. As soon as I get the neck to the dealer a new frame will be on order and I can start turning the pile of parts back into a morotcycle. I'll be glad when that happens as the basement is a pretty depressing place to go now with all the parts strewn from one end to the other.
I've got to get it back together soon so I don't forget all those little details I told myself I'd remember about how it was assembled.
One thing I'm definitely going to do is to take the battery box to a local Line-X dealer and have them shoot the inside bottom so the battery will stop grinding into the metal. Maybe chrome a few brackets in the meantime too, like the horn bracket. Might be time for a chrome rear master cylinder.
If I'm going to do it, might as well be now while it's all apart.
Does anyone have any other little improvements I might consider at this point of disassembly?
