So with a crappy anti-sump valve in line, it got me worried - the oil tank would take ages to get hot, and the return to the tank was a feeble dribble not a squirt.
This was looking like a strip down job for sure.
Enter my Dad...
Let me tell you about my Dad over the next couple of posts, and why he is an important part of this story.
My Dad is my best friend, and has always encouraged me to be practical and hands on. He's retired now, but his background is engineering.
I can remember from a very young age helping him in the shed. And over the years, we've done many projects together around the house, down the shed, and on various cars.
Dad had a Sunbeam S7 Deluxe among many other bikes which he rescued from someone's back garden.
Here he is in the Summer of 1976.
Well, he stripped in the Sunbeam down in about 1978 and started with a restoration - it needed a lot of work, and he made parts when he could, and sourced others from various bile jumbles.
Back in those days, there was no internet, and parts were hard to come by - so it was a frustrating process.
In about 1982 at the ripe old aged of 6, I asked Dad if he was ever going to finish the Sunbeam.
I think that got him asking himself the same question, and he eventually boxed it up and sold it.
I reckon he has resented me ever since for making him sell his bike, and it was 24 years later when he got back into bikes again.
My Mum (who is no longer with us) decided that she was going to buy him a motorbike for Christmas!
They has spent 40 years of struggling to pay for life, saving to do-up the house, saving for their pensions and retirement, and struggling to make ends meet.
With retirement in their sights, and retirement not too far away, Mum decided that Dad should have something for himself, and that should be a motorcycle!
So we selected an Ariel Huntmaster - he had mentioned them before, and was following with interest a restoration that Frank Westworth was doing in the Real Classic Magazine. He like Frank's writing style, and I think this made him all the more enthusiastic about it.
The Ariel Huntmaster for those that don't know is kinda based on the BSA A10 - it's a 650 Twin, but Ariel took the BSA engine and made a lot of changes to it. In it's day it was a deluxe (and expensive) bike and because of the latter factor, it wasn't quite as popular as BSA's, Nortons or Triumphs.
So on Christmas morning, Mum and Dad came round to my house.
Dad knew something weird was going on, as this is the first time in over thirty years that we had not been at the family home on Christmas morning.
And so it started... the treasure hunt!
We spent the next hour sending my Dad backwards and forwards on a cold, dismal, rainy morning following stupid clues.
We thought it was marvelous fun - Dad was getting increasingly pissed off, as he hates Christmas, unwrapping things, kids, fun, etc...
We were all laughing at the fact that he was getting so annoyed, and the clues kept on coming!
And finally it led to my garage, where his Ariel Huntmaster was waiting for him!
Well, i'd never seen my Dad cry before, but he was so happy.
It really was a special moment, and one i will never forget for the rest of my life.
I think we were all forgiven for laughing at him!