Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1984 Honda Nighthawk on 2040-motos

US $3,000.00
YearYear:1984 MileageMileage:16
Location:

Tiffin, Ohio, United States

Tiffin, Ohio, United States
QR code
1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 1

Honda Nighthawk photos

1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 2 1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 3 1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 4 1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 5 1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 6 1984 Honda Nighthawk, US $3,000.00, image 7

Honda Nighthawk description

1984 Honda Nighthawk S CB700SC, 16,489 miles, new Bridgestone tires, battery, front brake pads, Progressive fork springs and seals, starter and clutch.  All gauges and lights work, very good, shiny paint, runs and drives excellent, reliable, meticulously maintained.  You will be hard pressed to find a cleaner one available, no disappointments.

Moto blog

BMW 1000RR and the Honda C70, are they indestructible?

Wed, 20 Apr 2011

I’ve managed 1374 miles on the Michelin Power Pures (mostly on track) and although we’ve had some decent temperatures they still look like new so there’s plenty meat left for another month at least. I’ve been running them at 30psi front and 32psi rear and find they warm up after a few miles but I wouldn’t say the temperature comes any quicker than any of the competition so it has to be four miles before I get brave. I’ve had a few out the seat moments with my BMW but I have got the rear suspension  set pretty hard (8 rebound,8 compression, two turns on pre load) and in slick mode, so 190bhp in first gear at the Knockhill hairpin is always going to be dodgy.

2023 Honda ST125 Dax Announced for Europe

Mon, 14 Mar 2022

Fast Facts T-shaped chassis Tiny 1-gallon fuel tank IMU-based ABS No word on US availability Another friendly little retro Minimoto from Honda Honda announced a new 125cc Minimoto for Europe, reviving the Dax model name for a new generation of riders. The name was originally used in Europe in 1969 for Honda’s ST-series in 50 and 70cc models, and last produced from 1995 to 2003 in Japan. The name comes from “Dachshund”, as its distinctive T-shaped frame resembles the weiner dog breed, helping it stand out from Honda’s other minibikes like the Monkey and Cub.

Taliban Magazine Condemns America but Praises Honda

Wed, 11 Dec 2013

Manufacturers are usually glad to hear positive reviews of their products, but we’ve got a feeling Honda is not happy about the ringing endorsement it received from the latest issue of the Taliban-published magazine “Azan“. The English-language magazine is a pro-Jihadist quarterly; pure propaganda designed to recruit impressionable and disillusioned Muslims in the West. It’s somewhat jarring then to find buried within the radical rhetoric a full page spread on a 125cc Honda as one of the Taliban’s “Steeds of War”.