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1968 Norton Fastback 750 on 2040-motos

$14,500
YearYear:1968 MileageMileage:29 ColorColor: Red
Location:

Marne, Iowa

Marne, IA
QR code
1968 Norton Fastback 750 , $14,500, image 1

Norton Other photos

1968 Norton Fastback 750 , $14,500, image 2 1968 Norton Fastback 750 , $14,500, image 3 1968 Norton Fastback 750 , $14,500, image 4 1968 Norton Fastback 750 , $14,500, image 5

Norton Other tech info

TypeType:Classic / Vintage PhonePhone:(712) 781-2351

Norton Other description

1968 Norton Fastback 750, Fully Restored Fastback! - Ground up restoration of a first-year Fastback Commando! Numbers match, starts and runs great. Lovely bike that is getting more and more collectible.

Moto blog

The first Norton to roll off the assembly line in 2021 will be Commando

Wed, 23 Dec 2020

The British company plans to produce 40 motorcycles of this model, most of which have already been prepaid. And only after the end of the story with Commando, the company will move on to the assembly of the V4 model, and then the two long-awaited Atlases. According to the company's management, the new model, Norton Atlas, currently still requires a number of final fine-tuning works before the start of mass production.

See Britain's land speed record hopeful at Race Retro 2010

Tue, 09 Mar 2010

SEE THE MACHINE that could propel Britain to a new motorcycle land speed world record at The Race Retro 2010 show, held at Stoneleigh Park, Coventry from 12th to 14th March. Almost a year has passed since Visordown broke the news of the planned UK assault on the land speed record - this coming August the Angelic Bulldog team travels to Bonneville, where it is hoping to smash the 400mph barrier and bring the motorcycle Land Speed Record back to the UK for the first time since 1937. The current record stands at 360.913mph over a kilometre.

Norton to Race Isle of Man TT with RSV4-Powered Prototype

Wed, 18 Apr 2012

Norton Motorcycles announced it will compete in the 2012 Isle of Man TT with a new racebike. The as-yet-unnamed racebike will use an Aprilia RSV4 engine with a chassis from Spondon Engineering. If that formula sounds familiar, it’s because it sounds like of MotoGP’s new Claiming Rule Team machines.