The Honda CB750
It’s genuinely hard to believe that the bike in camera dates from early 1970 and is from the first batch of 30 CB750/4s to be sold in the UK. And amazingly it’s also the next chassis number on from ‘YLY’, the first 750/4 sold in the UK.
As if that’s not enough, what’s even more amazing is that not only is it ticking away with the precision of a Swiss watch but I’ve been given unfettered access to it. Oh, and while we’re dealing in superlatives, I’m finally getting to ride a Honda 750/4. Mad as it might sound for someone who now scratches a living from old motorcycles, I’ve never piloted an example of what must surely be one of the most iconic machines to ever come out of Japan.
When unveiled at the 1968 Tokyo Motor Show, Honda’s new baby threatened to make every single other machine obsolete overnight.
The public had only just got their heads around OHC (overhead cam) engines in small Hondas and here in metal, rubber and plastic was a full bore, 750cc, four cylinder motor. This was the very fabric of dreams and totally unknown outside the race track.
The likes of Velocette and Norton had played, but normally shied away from such over-engineering. To add to both sophistication and bragging rights, the engine also had an electric start, four carburettors and the front forks ran a disc brake for crying out loud –
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days