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The CB750 was the first modern four-cylinder machine from a mainstream manufacturer, [24] and the term superbike was coined to describe it. [4] [10] Adding to the bike's value were its electric starter, kill switch, dual mirrors, flashing turn signals, easily maintained valves, and overall smoothness and low vibration both under way and at a ...
CB 750 "Four" 1969 to 1978, the model that set a new standard for "Superbikes" CB 500 "Four", the first model with a 500 cc engine 1972 to 1977 CB 450 N, a later, simpler version of the CB450
The Honda CB350F is a four-cylinder, four-stroke, 347 cc (21.2 cu in) motorcycle based on the larger versions of the day (CB750, CB500). The motorcycle was manufactured by Honda in Japan from 1972 to 1974. At the time, the CB350F was the smallest capacity four cylinder motorcycle ever to enter into full-scale production. [1]
Four (CB750) 736 Hondamatic (CB750A) 736 NC750X: 745 VFR750R (RC30) 748 Africa Twin (RD07) 750 CBX750: 750 Interceptor (VF750F, VFR750) 750 Magna (VF750C V45) 750 Magna Deluxe (VF750CD) 750 Sabre (VF750S) 750 Nighthawk (CB750, CB750SC) 750 RVF750 (RC45) 750 NR: 750 XLV750R: 750 CB750 Hornet: 755 XL750 Transalp: 755 Crossrunner (VFR800X) 782 ...
The Honda CB500 Four is a standard 498 cc (30.4 cu in), air-cooled, 8-valve, SOHC, transverse inline-four motorcycle made by Honda from 1971 to 1978. [2] It was introduced at the London Racing and Sporting Motorcycle Show in February 1972, [3] and sold in the US market until 1973, replaced by the CB550 in the 1974 model year, while continuing in the European market until 1978. [2]
After introducing the four-cylinder CB750 motorcycle in 1969, Honda followed with a string of smaller-capacity four-cylinder models; the CB500 Four in 1971 and the CB350 Four in 1972. The CB350F was available for two years until Honda announced the CB400F model. [5]
THE 1972 MIAMI DOLPHINS ROSTER. NUMBER, NAME, POSITION: CURRENT STATUS, ‘72 HIGHLIGHT. 1. Garo Yepremian, kicker: Died in Pennsylvania in 2015, at age 70, after a bout with high grade ...
At the 1978 IFMA in Cologne the new CB 750 was presented as the successor to the CB 750 four for Europe and available for sale later that year. With a new DOHC engine design and numerous other new features it was presented as "what happens when you keep winning races".