Honda CB tech info
Honda CB description
Just completed and ready for a new home. Engine has all new gaskets, valve seals, carbs rebuilt and rejetted. the following parts are new. Firestone tires/tubes, chrome spokes and nipples front and rear,fork seals and boots, clip on bars, mini speedo, headlight and mounts, horn, gas cap and latch, mini LED blinkers with electronic flasher, LED brake light, drive chain, rear shocks, air filters, ignition, battery, points and points cover, new shifter/kicker/peg rubbers, fuel lines and filter, oil filter, 4 ito 1 stainless exhaust, 100% custom wiring harness, all hard parts have new paint and or polishing, all new cables, brake pads, and the list goes on. hand made seat with diamond pleats and matching grips, topped off with brown metallic/cream paint. ready to ride or show. Clear transferable Vermont registration as well. Feel free to ask any questions you may have. thanks.
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Honda CB for Sale
- 1980 honda cb(US $800.00)
- 1975 honda cb(US $12000)
- 1982 honda cb(US $600.00)
- 1972 honda cb(US $4200)
- 1972 honda cb(US $10000)
- 1988 honda cb(US $8300)
Moto blog
2014 Honda Forza Scooter Gets CARB Approval
Fri, 19 Apr 2013The Honda NSS300 Forza scooter has received approval from the California Air Resources Board. The 279cc scooter was first announced at the 2012 EICMA show for the European market and Canada, and it looks like it will be available for sale in the U.S. The Forza still needs to get a certificate of conformity from the Environmental Protection Agency, but that should not be difficult after getting the O.K.
Schwantz and Mackenzie on the Nurburgring box
Mon, 10 Dec 2012A 500GP bike never fails to stop me in my tracks and that’s exactly what happened when I spotted this Schwantz example from the early nineties, proudly displayed on the Arai stand at the recent Motorcyclelive show. On loan from Crescent Suzuki and accompanied by a rostrum publicity shot from the 1990 German GP at the Nurburgring, I felt the urge to write a few words on that special weekend. I started the year running my own 250 GP team with fairly standard TZ Yamahas but was drafted in as Kevin Schwantz’s team mate after Kevin Magee suffered a serious head injury at the second Grand Prix in Laguna Seca. With no testing and some major Spanish food poisoning I finished 8th at the next round in Jerez then followed that up with a 5th place in Misano. Next up was the Nurburgring and after qualifying on the second row of the grid, my crew chief Geoff Crust informed me he had a premonition of a race day rostrum finish. He also told me I better make it come true as he was already looking forward to a few post race celebratory refreshments. While I hoped Crusty was the new mystic meg, the truth was I would have been more than happy to buy the beers if I made it to the flag inside the top five. I had an outside chance of catching one major scalp as Wayne Rainey was riding with a nasty hand injury but I suspected adrenalin would see him through the day. I also followed Mick Doohan a fair bit in practice but he was beginning to find his feet on the Rothmans Honda so was going to be another problem. When the lights went out Schwantz and Rainey went straight to the front I while I hung in behind Doohan and Pier Francesco Chilli, and then it happened. Coming out of the bottom right hand hairpin, Doohan and Chilli simultaneously high sided in one of the most spectacular crashes of the season. I never liked seeing any fellow riders crash but I made the most of this early race gift and rode my 160bhp/115kg RGV hard to the flag, claiming my first podium of the season. We partied hard (win or lose we always did) that night and I went on to have my best ever season finishing fourth overall in the championship. After the last round in Australia, I finished second to Kevin at Sugo in Japan then won in Malaysia at another international race that KS didn’t attend. I also tested at Eastern Creek for the following season but then was flicked from the team for reasons that still remain a mystery. Hey Ho!
Experience Morocco with Honda and Mick Extance
Tue, 24 May 2011Press release from Honda Britain’s Dakar endurance rider Mick Extance is to lead two eight-day and two ten-day trips of a lifetime in Morocco. Riders will experience some of the most diverse and adventurous terrain in the world to include the famous Atlas mountain range, lush river valleys, beautiful sandy coasts and wide expanses of desert. Each adventure trip begins in Ouazarzate – the gateway to the Sahara - before taking in the stunning scenery through Chicaga, Tafrout, Merzouga and Boulmane Dades through the amazing Dades Gorge.
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