Always nice when a customer sends pics of gauges we have restored! @eck_eck00 killer Honda cb77 is looking awesome! #seattlespeedometer #hondacb77
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Always nice when a customer sends pics of gauges we have restored! @eck_eck00 killer Honda cb77 is looking awesome! #seattlespeedometer #hondacb77
An oldie but a goodie! A before/after of a Honda cb77 Superhawk gauge we did! #seattlespeedometer #vintagegauges #hondasuperhawk #hondacb77 #hondacb #hondarestoration
HONDA CB77
Honda CB77
The Honda CB77, or Super Hawk, was a 305 cc (18.6 cu in) straight-twin motorcycle produced from 1961 until 1967. It is remembered today as Honda's first sport bike. It is a landmark model in Honda's advances in Western motorcycle markets of the 1960s, noted for its speed and power as well as its reliability, and is regarded as one of the bikes that set the standard for modern motorcycles. The CB77 had, at only 305cc, a relatively big engine in comparison to most other Japanese bikes of the period, although it had performance to rival much larger motorcycles from other countries. It quickly built a reputation for reliability, and was equipped with luxuries such as an electric starter.
The CB77 had a steel-tube frame instead of the pressed frames of earlier Hondas, and a telescopic front fork. The parallel twin engine, the biggest then available in a Honda, was an integral element of the bike's structure, providing stiffness in a frame that had no downtube, and was capable of 9,000 rpm. It could propel the bike at over 100 mph; as fast as British parallel twins with higher displacements, and with great reliability. Cycle World tested its average two-way top speed at 168.3 km/h (104.6 mph), and its 1⁄4 mi (0.40 km) time at 16.8 seconds reaching 83 mph (134 km/h).
Author Aaron Frank called it, "the first modern Japanese motorcycle... that established the motorcycle that we still operate under now, more than forty years later."
BEAUT!!!
#panning @sigitbaskoro #honda #hondacb77 #hondacb #cb #cb77 #motorcycle #motor #motorclassic