You must have at least 5 feedbacks to bid or your bid will be cancelled, sorry but due to past EBAY experiences that is the way it is.
CHECK MY OTHER AUCTIONS PLEASE!
DO YOUR HOMEWORK AND PLEASE MAKE SURE THIS ITEM WILL WORK FOR YOU. ASK QUESTIONS
THE PHOTOS SHOW THE FLAWS.
IF YOU FEEL THE PRICE IS TOO HIGH, MAKE AN OFFER...
LOOK CLOSELY AT THE PHOTOS THEY ARE THE MAJORITY OF THE DESCRIPTION.
1967 HONDA CL90 Low miles. Speedometer says 452 miles...I have no way of knowing if this is correct. I bought this with some other bikes, but I haven't done anything with it except buy a high-quality seat cover with the correct silver metallic piping. This has a title. This does turn over with compression but makes a "clicking" sound that I am unfamiliar with.
UPDATE! I had my motorcycle mechanic friend with over 50 years' experience, feel the engine while I kicked it over. He felt no vibrations anywhere on the top end. The clicking sound is coming from behind the clutch cover.
I do not know what it will take to get this running again, but Hondas are usually pretty simple. This looks like an easy project to finish up. Everything looks original except maybe the tank has been repainted? It looks so nice that it could have been redone. It has the proper plastic badges, and the paint appears to be the right type (satiny silver with no metalflake). It has some surface rust inside as seen. The chain was missing when I bought it but I did spin the counter sprocket and it shifted through the gears fine.
The things I see that it still needs are...
chain
footpeg rubbers
counter sprocket cover
slide for carb (carb and carb top are there)
front tire is flat (may need tube)
seat recovered (new cover included)
HERE IS A SHORT VIDEO OF THE ENGINE SOUND WHILE KICKING https://youtube.com/shorts/q100AjNgkzY?feature=share
Possible delivery to Portland Indianna scooter show, 3rd week in June.
SHIPPING COSTS AND ARRANGEMENTS ARE THE BUYER'S RESPONSIBILITY. I WILL HELP LOAD ONTO A TRUCK.
PLEASE MAKE SURE YOU KNOW THIS WILL WORK FOR YOU BEFORE BIDDING, THANKS