Тёмный

The Honda Superhawk was the first Japanese Sportbike 

bart
Подписаться 120 тыс.
Просмотров 373 тыс.
50% 1

The Honda Superhawk CB77 was a Japanese sporting motorcycle from 1961-1967. Arguably the first Japanese sportbike, this motorcycle paved the way for Honda to make more, better high revving sporty machines
📚Check out my Children's Motorcycle Book!
rb.gy/bdh14b
Support the channel!
☕ www.buymeacoffee.com/bartcycle
Subscribe for more Motorcycle content! ➔ tinyurl.com/ybuffutr
📷 INSTAGRAM ➔ / bart.cycle
Disclaimer
Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing."
I do NOT own some or all of the video materials used in this video. In the case of copyright issues, please contact me at bartcyclebusiness@gmail.com for any further action.

Авто/Мото

Опубликовано:

 

2 июл 2022

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 782   
@Turbodog1000
@Turbodog1000 2 года назад
I just rode my 1964 Super Hawk CB77 yesterday, It starts right up and puts a smile on my face every time!
@omgdwayne1565
@omgdwayne1565 2 года назад
In 1971 when I was 16-years-old, for some reason my Dad came home pulling a trailer with a 305 Superhawk and a 160 Baby Hawk; both from 1966. He bought them both from a friend who had bought them new. They were both red. My brother was 13, and he quickly began using the 160 as his personal transportation. It was perfect for him. I liked it too. The police, however, had an unreasonbly hostile response to my brother's early transportation independence. I have to say I loved these bikes. I was a little too heavy for the 160, but it was still an awesome little bike. The 305 was fantastic. As you pointed out, both bikes looked super good. The proportions were spot on. Loved the chrome tank sides. Dad sold the 305 in the late-80s. Don't remember why. I ended up owning the 160 and also had a Suzuki T500 Titan and a 68 Triumph Bonneville 650. Loved all these bikes. I sold them when I moved across country in the 90s, thinking I would buy a new bike there. I still remember those old Hondas though. I'm too old to ride now, but I still think about finding a nice 305 to put in our sun room just to look at. My wife is unreasonably hostile to this brilliant idea.
@cjdeas1528
@cjdeas1528 2 года назад
That IS a brilliant idea!
@kzoo4053
@kzoo4053 2 года назад
Boy, you have my full sympathy. Now I think you must know why I never married. I have a beautiful motorcycle in the center of my living room. I own more than one old Super Hawks and if you can change your wife’s mind……
@chrisweeks6973
@chrisweeks6973 2 года назад
Two things, Dwayne. Firstly, you're not too old to ride. You're ten years younger than myself and I'm still riding. Secondly, my ex-wife tried to stop me racing (cars - which I'd been doing for years before we met). I told her not to make me choose between racing and her, 'coz she'd lose. She did; we divorced. I'm now happily married to a much more understanding lady!
@omgdwayne1565
@omgdwayne1565 2 года назад
@@chrisweeks6973 Well we age differently. Ha ha, I am definitely too old to ride. My brother still rides all the time however. Just kidding about the wife.
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 2 года назад
Have you thought about another wife?
@davidwillis4100
@davidwillis4100 Год назад
I owned two Superhawks, one in 1965 and another in 1968. Great bikes that bring back memories.
@carlatamanczyk3891
@carlatamanczyk3891 2 года назад
In high-school, I owned the last year of the 305 Honda Scrambler.... it was a good machine. Wished I still had it.
@montemasterson9588
@montemasterson9588 2 года назад
In 1961 my uncle landed the first Honda dealership in Kentucky (Louisville). He made a small fortune with the Japanese brand within 9 years. The Hawk and Superhawk 305's are definitely the bikes that put Honda on the map, and put the British companies on the road to failure. My uncle had no trouble selling the Superhawks, it was keeping them in stock that was the problem. He was the premier motorcycle racer of his region in the 50's. He ran BSA's back then, but he immediately saw how Honda had made advances light years ahead of the western motorcycle manufacturers. Thanks for the video bart, you are doing great man.
@aaron___6014
@aaron___6014 2 года назад
The hawk? Is that the baby-hawk cb160
@montemasterson9588
@montemasterson9588 2 года назад
@@aaron___6014 The Hawk CB72 came out in 61 and was 250 cc. The CA77 Dream 305 also came out in 61 and was not as powerful as the Superhawk, but the Hawk had the sleeker design of the Superhawk, whereas the CA77 Dream was kind of dorky looking.
@BuzzLOLOL
@BuzzLOLOL 2 года назад
The 1960's Suzuki 250cc X6 Hustler also put the kabosh on 500 - 1200cc bikes of the day!
@dorseyjack3206
@dorseyjack3206 2 года назад
I have 6 Hondas at the moment I also had every British big bile you can think of. sorry not a Vincent or a Brough. I would give them all away for one Rocket Gold star. My favourite was the BSA Shooting Star but that might be because it was my first big bike.
@dorseyjack3206
@dorseyjack3206 2 года назад
@@aaron___6014 My friend had a Honda 161 he loved it.
@drex23100
@drex23100 2 года назад
My first bike was a 305 Superhawk. It would just hit 100 MPH. I rode with a guy who had a big Harley sportster. The Hawk kept up with it and was exponentially more reliable.
@stevefirth6472
@stevefirth6472 2 года назад
This was my first motorcycle also. Loved it!
@billchessell8213
@billchessell8213 2 года назад
I rode with a guy who had a Bonneville. He left me in the dust.
@stevefirth6472
@stevefirth6472 2 года назад
A 650 will generally outrun a 305. My 3rd bike was a Triumph and it was stronger than my Super Hawk, but required a lot more maintenance.
@BuzzLOLOL
@BuzzLOLOL 2 года назад
@@stevefirth6472 - Only the dual carb. Bonneville 650 in especially good tune would keep up with a 305... single carb. 650's were asthmatic...
@doublel7337
@doublel7337 Год назад
@@stevefirth6472 I agree, even the Honda 450 would seldom beat a Triumph or BSA 650 with the twin carbs.
@pugix
@pugix 2 года назад
I bought a crashed CB77 Superhawk around 1970, for $150. It came in several pieces. The front forks were wrecked and had to be replaced. I tore the whole bike down, except for the engine, and rebuilt it. This was my second Honda, the first being a 90cc, bought new. The Superhawk really was the perfect road bike.
@philtucker1224
@philtucker1224 Год назад
This interesting story was very nicely told. I was an apprentice back in the early seventies working on bike development including the new Honda fours. The general quality of the aluminium castings and machining tolerances were a world above the British bikes of the day. Thank you for sharing🙏
@michaelcoggins4351
@michaelcoggins4351 2 года назад
My first street bike was a 64 CB-77 305 Super hawk. Started my 57 year motorcycle journey
@shenmisheshou7002
@shenmisheshou7002 Год назад
The 305 engine was an excellent engine that was at its best on the CL77 305 Scrambler. Prior to the fours, the 305 scrambler (with the suppressor off) was arguably the best sounding motorcycle in the marketplace at that time. Winding out to redline, it was quite glorious.
@gwilliamwallace
@gwilliamwallace 2 года назад
I rode a friend's Super Hawk a few times in the '70s and it was definitely a way cool bike. It loved being power shifted at redline up through the gears without backing out of the throttle. And it would do that all day long without missing a beat and of note without leaking oil all over the pavement like the Triumphs of the day.
@johnstone7697
@johnstone7697 2 года назад
I had a black Superhawk. '66 model year. Just loved the thing.
@bearpuf
@bearpuf Год назад
Riding a CB-77 Superhawk across the country from Philadelphia to San Francisco in 1969 was an experience that gave me some profound character building along with the enjoyment of the dependability of the bike. The Hawk made it across with only one failure of the headlight switch needing replacement. Two years later I took another Superhawk across country and returned home without any mechanical issues. That model was something else in reliability and very solid engineering. It being so quiet gave me a lot of appreciation. Thanks for your video. The Superhawk was a machine that ushered in a new era to not having to fuss over one's motorcycle before taking off to ride.
@whalesong999
@whalesong999 2 года назад
There was a mix of attractions for the CB72/77s as sport bikes back in the day. One inspiring aspect was that these machines carried over the race-bred geometry and construction of the factory twins and fours that were so very impressive on the technical front. Along came the CB-93/96 whose frames were very close in fabrication to the factory twins of the early '60s that were hallmarks of engineering and performance to follow up the CB92s which amazed us as the earliest of mechanical marvels. As a Honda mechanic and dealer service manager, I had a CB77 and later on several CB160s which were so good one tended to take for granted just how good they were. Fond memories of the early Hondas.
@barryrudge1576
@barryrudge1576 2 года назад
The CB72/77's were the most attractive bikes to emerge from japan at the time. British manufacturers had nothing to compete with them. Electric start, indicators, fuel gauge, plastic lightweight mudguards, none of these features appeared on any British bike of the time
@BuzzLOLOL
@BuzzLOLOL 2 года назад
@@barryrudge1576 - British bikes looked fine... lean... classic... but only the top biggest dual carb.s models could do 'the ton'... 100 MPH...
@fjp3305
@fjp3305 Год назад
I loved that Super Hawk when I was a kid in the sixties.
@MAplet1
@MAplet1 2 года назад
I had a Superhawk while in high school. It was a great machine. Another feature is that the foot pegs were mounted in a way that would allow them to be mounted in a more rearward cafe racer type configuration. This pedal system was the reason that the CB77 required a forward rotating kick starter. I later swapped the CB for a CL77 Scrambler which was the cat's meow for any high school kid in my day. The two shared the same motor minus the electric starter on the CL77 and with a more conventional rear rotating kick starter since the Scrambler had more conventional foot peg location.
@BlindTom61
@BlindTom61 2 года назад
I wanted one in 1964 and I still want one.
@cameroncameron2826
@cameroncameron2826 Год назад
hehe love the turn of phrase ( and know the feeling )
@chrisweeks6973
@chrisweeks6973 2 года назад
Thank you for posting this video. Back in 1968 I bought a '65model CB77 in England, where they were marketed as the 305 SS; mine was identical to the Shropshire-registered blue one in the latter part of the video. Compared to British bikes of the period (and I'd ridden quite a few, including Triumph's 3TA, TR6 and 6T, BSA's B34, A7 etc), it was considerably more advanced. The electrics package (12-volt, starter, indicators) was far superior, handling was excellent and it would give most British 650 twins a big scare in terms of top speed. The quality of the engine castings was beyond reproach, it was oil-tight and the carbs stayed in balance. The only thing one had to do was to change the oil twice as frequently as the book said, as, due to the close engineering tolerances, dirty oil would cause piston-ring failure.
@stevemitz4740
@stevemitz4740 Год назад
At 17 years old my Honda 305 Superhawk amazed me with the double leading brakes, I loved racing it down windy mountain roads! With brakes the worked!
@donmardle5162
@donmardle5162 2 года назад
When the 305 came out we fell instantly in love with the style. That close finned engine was a thing of beauty and it had an electric leg. It was a no brainer. Goodbye Triumph Thunderbird.
@kevatut23
@kevatut23 Год назад
I can still smell my first, and brand new bike. The 1968 CL175. I was so proud of it. Polished it every week, and cleaned it after every ride home from high school. Thanks Bart. Watch every vid.
@edhastie6074
@edhastie6074 Год назад
I had the CD version of the 175. All blue, no chrome except for the tank sides. Brand new. So proud of that bike
@kevatut23
@kevatut23 Год назад
@@edhastie6074 I feel ya. 30 plus bikes later, none ever got the TLC of that CL175
@PhD63
@PhD63 2 года назад
My first motorcycle was a 1964 Honda C72 which I bought in 1972. I didn’t have it for too long but it was my introduction to the 2 wheel world. I was 17 at the time.
@MrGardman
@MrGardman 2 года назад
I think this one one of your best vlogs. I was around all those motorcycles you were talking about and you could just tell Honda was going to dominate markets.
@kenanderson5240
@kenanderson5240 Год назад
Very nicely presented! My first bike was a '66 CB77, and it wasn't until years later that I found out it's exactly the same kind of bike as Bob Pirsig rode on the adventure with his son in "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance." That bike's on display at the Smithsonian!
@Bbbbad724
@Bbbbad724 Год назад
By 70 the XS 1 Yamaha was the British killer of the decade!
@AubMar
@AubMar 2 года назад
Brilliant detailed history - The first bike I ever rode on the road was a Super hawk with clip-ons, fairing and rearsets, I was 12 years old, and now on a 1800VTX - Yes HONDA make Fantastic Bikes!
@lewismocaby3646
@lewismocaby3646 2 года назад
Great video,glad someone finally documented a little bit of the history of these bikes. Built my first Honda Scrambler at the ripe old age of 14. Later on dad handed down his Superhawk, still have both bikes even after all these years. Excellent bikes for sure, worked for the local Honda dealership when I was 17 and 18. Still building, restoring and machining parts for bikes although it’s switched directions to antique Harleys and Aermacchi’s. Again, great video footage and history. 👍
@user-vf3gf4xq3v
@user-vf3gf4xq3v Год назад
I bought a new CB400 (Hawk) in 1978 for $1,300. That was quite a lot back then, especially for a college kid. Those were the days of 19% interest on vehicle loans so I paid it off in a little more than one year. It was a very nice bike that I ended up having to rely upon for transportation after my car died. Rain, snow or sun that thing served me quite well for a few years. It’s a shame Honda doesn’t make small displacement multi cylinder bikes anymore for the US market.
@petershepherd6889
@petershepherd6889 Год назад
My first twin cylinder road bike was a Honda CB 160. Bought it off a friend as a non runner and fitted a new crankshaft and away I went on my little Honda. Lovely little bike.
@StephiSensei26
@StephiSensei26 2 года назад
1972, I bought a used Honda Hawk 125 from a shop in Nice, France. Drove the entire South of France, La Cote d'azur. It was a dream come true. Black, silver / chrome trim. Very Cool!
@pede8889
@pede8889 3 месяца назад
This is too cool. You got the t shirt and are a total Boss
@StephiSensei26
@StephiSensei26 2 месяца назад
@@pede8889 Big Smile back at you! Great memory!
@oltimer5544
@oltimer5544 Год назад
Great memories. I was a part of that early 60's Honda generation. First I had a Super 90, then a CB-160, and finally a CL-450. Friends had the Triumph 500 (I was jealous), Honda 150 Dream; and a Norton 750. One friend had the Suzuki 250 X-6. He only rode that thing one way; wide open throttle...I always admired the Super hawk, would have loved to have owned one.
@eddie75935
@eddie75935 Год назад
exactly how i feel. i had a 150 dream and i loved it. it just cranked and went every time. not too fast but surely fast enough for a 15 year old kid..........great memories...
@John-ls2gp
@John-ls2gp 11 месяцев назад
SL 90 motosport, SL 175 my 1st 2. Then the DT 250 & 360 Enduros. I considered my Pappys 1970 CL 350 as the perfect motorcycle, along with the Yamaha 360 .
@jaycunningham2723
@jaycunningham2723 2 года назад
Takes me back to 1969. I owned several CL and CB-77's..One CB I set up as a Cafe racer. Fiberglass tank and seat. Clip on's.Engine mods included boring out the cylinder liners and installing 450 sleeves and pistons.Schaller cam,lightened rockers, ported and polished head, locked out advance timing,CR-77 gearbox. Fun bike! Very fast for the times.
@oceanhome2023
@oceanhome2023 Год назад
I was waiting to find someone that loved and recognized the 305 Scrambler . I fell in love with it when I first saw it and it had that awesome sound as usualy the muffler was taken off and small washer type snuffers were put on each pipe . It had such a cool sound and it was so cool the way the pipes kicked up together in the back even the chrome heat guards looked so cool. The gas tank was so different, no chrome always silver with only the black Honda badge, but I remember some times the tank would be painted Candy Apple Red or custom metal flake , nothing looked cooler than the 305 Scrambler also remember that the frame came up on the back fender just behind the seat and made a good handle to put the bike up on its stand or a handle for a passenger . The front shocks were covered with the rubber flex covers and an honest Skid Plate added coolness it only had a kick starter which added to it’s sound . I wish I still had mine ! I also wished that they had made a 605 or 805 Scrambler if you catch my drift ! These were much more popular than the SuperHawk and it deserves it’s OWN mention as such ! A lot of people loved these bikes and most of us never drove it off road it was both art and culture . I miss it ! Thanks for your comments !
@oceanhome2023
@oceanhome2023 Год назад
T
@jaycunningham2723
@jaycunningham2723 Год назад
@@oceanhome2023 Ron, I also had a 305 Scrambler. With it, it had headwork, an x'ed gearbox, cam and locked-out advance. The frame was raked another couple of inches and I installed a Super hawk 18-inch rear wheel instead of the 19-inch Scrambler. It was painted by Dave Allee of Bill Krause Honda fame. multi blue with cobwebs in the side panel area. Nice bike. Wheelstand second gear pretty easy.
@glennwilkinson5035
@glennwilkinson5035 2 года назад
New Zealand. Purchased a brand-new 305 superhawk sports Red in colour, started my love life with Honda and moved on to CB 750s from 69 onwards, still riding Hondas to this very day, mostly sports bikes.
@NewBookz
@NewBookz Год назад
In 1966 Hondas, Suzuki 90cc were popular at the school, The Yamaha 250-305cc 2 strokes were the acceleration king.
@5tr41ghtGuy
@5tr41ghtGuy 2 года назад
Thanks for fleshing out the often overlooked importance of the 1960's for Honda's meteoric rise to dominance in the 1970's. I had no idea that the Super Hawks were so capable, as I was born in 1962.
@billmago7991
@billmago7991 2 года назад
Meteors don't rise, they fall😛
@5tr41ghtGuy
@5tr41ghtGuy 2 года назад
@@billmago7991 I misused the phrase, which commonly refers to a rapid rise to prominence, followed by a precipitous fall. Instead I should have said something like "rapid ascent".
@hwrdgrn
@hwrdgrn 2 года назад
I owned a CL-350 in 1970 when I was in college. I traveled all over the East Coast with it, and it never let me down, even once. I look back on it fondly, and I wish I had never sold it. Now, I have a VTR-250 which I plan to keep till the day I die. Why this bike was never sold in the US, I will never know, but it is as next to perfect as it gets.
@jameswulzen590
@jameswulzen590 Год назад
I have a Honda CB77 road racer full tilt in my bedroom , it had a top speed of 125 MPH with a little engine and chassis mods running in the 350 class and the engine was 305 cc's. mine is .020 over bore30mm Amal carbs , high lift cam light and polished rocker arms, heavy valve springs, racing clutch and springs, close ratio trans. Could run in the 500cc class and do good. The 350 class in the AFM was ruled by the Honda CB77. I'm 84 years old and was a Honda parts manager and General Manager during the 60's and early 70's.
@jeffreywarner6792
@jeffreywarner6792 Год назад
The first Honda l had was the 125cc CB92 followed by the C72 and then the 250 version the CB72 twin really great bikes in their day.
@barryrudge1576
@barryrudge1576 11 месяцев назад
1964 I was working as a joiner for a small firm of shop fitters that was a family run business. Their son also worked with the firm as an apprentice joiner and at 17 yrs of age his father bought him a brand new Honda CB72 250cc motorcycle, I thought it was one of the most beautiful 250cc machines I had ever seen. At the time my commuter bike was a little 98cc James Comet. Today these machines are very much treasured and command quite high prices.
@yakacm
@yakacm Год назад
It's great that a younger guy is into all this history of bikes. I could see myself commenting all day long on your videos. A bit of context, my old man was big in to bikes, he used to race when he was young and had raced at the IOM. I was his 3rd kid, so by the time I was born he only raced at our local circuit which was Aintree. Anyway by the time he retired he had a couple of early 60's small capacity Ducati's, a 1949 Moto Guzzi Arianne, a 250 4 Benneli, an MZ 250 ISDT, and an early 60's 125 twin Honda Benly, which he had 2 of. He got the Honda's from his mate who owned him money, and like a lot of his bikes arrived at our house in pieces. The Hondas were really nice bikes, with electric start, big massive brakes, just really good looking bikes, apart from the shitty pressed steel forks, and maybe the frame was pressed steel, I can't remember now TBH. He dies last year at 90, after battling with alzheimer's for 10 years, during which all his bikes were sold.
@stuarthart3370
@stuarthart3370 9 месяцев назад
It's lovely that he loved bikes.
@barryervin8536
@barryervin8536 2 года назад
I had a 305 Super Hawk back in the mid 60s. My buddy had a Triumph Bonneville 650. The Triumph was much faster than the Honda, which is only logical since it had over twice the displacement and almost twice the power. If you read contemporary magazine road tests the Honda turned the 1/4 mile in the low 17 second range. Cycle World put a 350cc kit and a roller cam in one and got mid 16s. A Triumph Bonneville at the time could get into the 13 second range on a good day. People who say Honda 305s were as fast as a 650 Triumph are looking back through rose colored glasses. But I could keep my friend on his Bonneville in sight on any ride, and when we stopped at an intersection my Honda wasn't smoking and idling rough and dribbling oil out the breather hose. And I spent a lot less time working on my Honda. Wish I had it today, whereas I rarely miss my later 72 Bonneville. BTW, the CL Scrambler was not a Super Hawk with high pipes, although it did use the same engine. It had a completely different frame and almost everything else was different too.
@bartmotorcycle
@bartmotorcycle 2 года назад
Thanks that's really helpful and informative.
@BuzzLOLOL
@BuzzLOLOL 2 года назад
The 650 needed twin carb.s and hot cam to keep up with a 305... a single carb. model couldn't...
@barryervin8536
@barryervin8536 2 года назад
@@BuzzLOLOL Keep up with? Keep dreaming. The Honda 305 was fast for a 300cc bike. It was not as fast as a 650cc Triumph. Dig up some contemporary Cycle or Cycle World instrumented road tests and compare the figures. I was there, I had a 65 305 Super Hawk, my friends had Triumphs and BSAs and I rode them all and they were significantly faster. Why would a 300 with 27 hp be faster than a 650 with 47 hp (and only about 40 lb heavier)?
@BuzzLOLOL
@BuzzLOLOL 2 года назад
@@barryervin8536 - I'm 74, I was there also... the Brit bikes were over rated in HP and the stock mufflers really choked off the engines... the carb.s were a nightmare...
@barryervin8536
@barryervin8536 2 года назад
@@BuzzLOLOL Everything was over-rated for HP back then. The Japanese were just as bad as everybody else in that respect. There were no "truth in advertising" laws, manufacturers could just pull numbers out of the air, and did. It's interesting that the first Super Hawk ads claimed 110mph top speed (an utterly ridiculous claim for a 300cc bike with about 27 hp, even with a 95 lb Japanese rider aboard) and later ads said 102 and then it went down to 98 I believe? Mine would barely reach 95 on the speedo, and I'm sure the speedo read way high like all bikes did back then, and some still do. But 90 mph was very fast for a 27 hp bike. And, no, the Suzuki X6 Hustler didn't really do 100 mph, although the speedo may have indicated that. I did a little online searching and the BEST recorded 1/4 mile dragstrip time I found for a stock Super Hawk was 16.8 sec. with Cycle World's resident drag strip ace riding it. Every other test I've seen was in the 17s. That's at least 2 sec. slower than any Triumph 650 time I've ever seen, even a single carb version. Brit 650s got hot cams and twin carbs in an effort to pass the Harley 883 Sportsters, they didn't need them to keep up with Honda 305s. In the late 70s my buddy was stunned when my Yamaha XS650 left his "Giant Killer" RD350 2-stroker in the dust. Bottom line, unless it's backed up by calibrated measurements, much of what people choose to believe is just mythology and exaggeration and inflated advertising claims.
@siwynjones
@siwynjones 16 дней назад
My dad was very proud that he owned the second Honda sold in Wrexham, Wales back in the very early 1960s. It was a CB72 Dream Super Sports, and he said that despite the ribbing he got from his mates on bigger British bikes, they soon followed him and got Hondas too once they saw how clean his hands always were. They sort of sold themselves. The guy who bought the first Honda? Well, in Wales, due to the fact that so many people have the same surname, you tend to get a nickname which sticks with you for life; the bloke who bought the first Honda was only ever known as “Eric Honda”.
@allenminer6244
@allenminer6244 11 месяцев назад
I bought a 1964 Honda Superhawk in 1969. It didn't run. $225. What stands out is exactly what you have identified here. It might have cost me $50 to get it running and it never cost me anything, at all, after that. i lost a race with a Triumph Tiger on I287, before I287 even opened, but he was alone (I had a passenger) and he barely walked away from me. Well, I did lose. That bike was SO reliable, did not leak oil, and, well, wow. I've owned many since then, but I regret selling that bike.
@kimhorton6109
@kimhorton6109 Год назад
I was in the Marines in ‘71 at Iwakuni when the 750 Honda came out. One day we were swimming in a river and we could hear this F1 sounding engine coming up the valley. I had never heard a four cylinder bike before. My big bike had been a Norton Atlas on Guam. We moved around to points where we could see the road and this thing rolls around a corner above us on the road. The rider was a guy who looked to be about 5’6”, mostly red Hawaiian shirt, no helmet, wrap around sun glasses and sandals. He was ripping down this valley leaning the bike way over and the engine was singing. Killer.
@johnfuller6338
@johnfuller6338 2 года назад
I still have fond memories of my 305 super hawk, bought it while I was in the army at ft Benning, bought it from a guy that was shipping out overseas, got my orders 7 months later, packed my duffle bag n found some bungee cords at a auto parts store n prepped it n myself for the ride home to see family before I shipped out, from ga to n.j. where my mom n brother lived, gassed up at the post station n made it to n.c. on that tank, fueled up n got a motel room for that night, took off again that late a.m. n got to Delaware the next night, had to stop once for fuel, n took off till I got to Delaware, hit rain, got a motel room n waited till the rain ended, left early a.m., made it home by the next nite by 10p.m. n got in the garage just in time to beat a rain storm, that bike was the best an only ride I did that far as I hadn't gone more than 50 miles previously, total reliability n performance, taught my brother how to ride it n maintain it while I was overseas, had to buy a bigger bike when I got back, as he wanted to keep it, had too much fun on it n loved it like I did.
@wz7285
@wz7285 2 года назад
In 1968 I borrowed a Super Hawk 305 and being 14, bending low over the tank, I achieved 98 indicated mph and experienced a speed wobble which scares me to this day!!
@tommontague5721
@tommontague5721 Год назад
In the late 60's I was 15 1/2 when I bought my first bike. It was a near new but used CL160 Honda. I'm in my 60's now and I have bought, built, traded and restored everything from Honda's,Triumph, BSA, Norton, Kawasaki, Suzuki, now Harley's. Funny thing, you never forget that first feeling of freedom like I did when I was 15 1/2 on that Honda CL 160. Now when I fire up my Harley and roll down my long driveway I still feel like I'm looking through the eyes of that 15 1/2 year old kid....Keep the shinny side up friends.
@johnflores2953
@johnflores2953 2 года назад
My dad had a 66 Cb77, I was able to ride it from time to time, very reliable and with electric starter, it didnt have turn signals, but we wired those in by hand. It had massive front and rear brakes all with leading shoes, operated by thick cables with grease fitting(rear cable)
@TOURMANBOB
@TOURMANBOB 3 месяца назад
The Honda Dream 305 was the first motorcycle of many I owned during the 1960's and the ONLY one that didn't leak oil. It was the first bike I ever owned where I could spend more time riding it rather than fixing it. Sold me for life on Honda. I currently own a Honda Gold Wing 2003 and it is a totally reliable and beautiful machine even 20 years later. Honda rocks !!!!!
@talldude5841
@talldude5841 Год назад
My first bike was a 1967 black Superhawk. Bought it from a man in Akron for 200 bucks when it was the summer before my senior year in high school, 1972. I rode the piss out of this bike while singing Elton John's Rocket Man in my head. LOL Brings back great memories here. Thanks so much. I loved this bike.
@babboon5764
@babboon5764 Год назад
I've owned & ridden Brit bikes & Hondas (and others) from way back then to today - Got to say this is as well balanced and as informative as you could pretty much squeeze into 20 and a bit minutes. Nice one Bart - Keep 'em coming
@yonniboy1
@yonniboy1 2 года назад
I tend to agree with you, the Hawk was called the black bomber in the UK and outperformed bigger capacity British bikes of the time like the 650 Bonneville and Royal Enfield Interceptor ,plus it was almost bullet proof reliability wise and didn't leak oil all over your garage. then when Suzuki released the T500 in 1968 it killed of Brit bikes as sports bikes.
@johnkestly4762
@johnkestly4762 2 года назад
I bought a new 1968 Suzuki 250cc X6 Hustler in April of 1968. My Honda friends struggled to keep up. I could beat Triumph 650 Bonnevilles to 60 mph, but then they went by me. My buddy bought a 450 cc Honda then, I rode on it and the vibration was so bad I couldn't ride for lone.
@chrislatchem1854
@chrislatchem1854 2 года назад
@@johnkestly4762 Remember to Suzuki ad..."Just when you think you've seen it all...shift into sixth!"
@tedecker3792
@tedecker3792 2 года назад
In the US the term Black Bomber was only for the first generation CB450. I was a mechanic at a Honda shop in the 60s and 70s.
@yonniboy1
@yonniboy1 2 года назад
@@johnkestly4762 I loved the Hustler ,a friend had a blue one with red and white tank stripes, I had a Kawasaki S2 350 and there wasn't a brit bike that could keep up with it.
@yonniboy1
@yonniboy1 2 года назад
@@tedecker3792 The Black Bomber name stuck with the 450s right through their import to the UK whether that was the proper name or not.
@theknifedude1881
@theknifedude1881 2 года назад
My first bike was a 1961 CB77 $250.00 in 1963, right after I got out of the USN. I added clip ons, rear sets, one of the factory seats and a faring. Thought I was a racer.
@Hiro.the.God.
@Hiro.the.God. 2 года назад
They need to make these bikes again. They look amazing.
@tedecker3792
@tedecker3792 11 месяцев назад
The scrambler at -8:00 brings back so many memories of my rowdy youth!
@mnpd3
@mnpd3 2 года назад
I'm a real old guy. For $30 in 1978 I bought a 1965 CB150 Honda twin that had 725 original miles, and the original whitewall tires (dry-rotted) --- the engine was seized up. I removed the heads and cylinders to find the rings rusted to the sleeves. New rings gaskets, tires and presto!... it ran again. I used it for college commuting every day (40-mile round trip), graduated after putting a few thousand on the odometer, then sold it to the next door neighbor for a couple hundred. On level highway with no wind, the thing would do 53 mph. Downhill with a tailwind would push 60. Neighbor still has it, although it hasn't been started in many years. :)
@clay1883
@clay1883 Год назад
I owned a black 305 Super Hawk. I think it was a 1967. I put a set of Wiesco 11.5 to 1 pistons in it, and jetted the carbs correctly and it would do an honest 100 MPH. Also very important for best performance was the valve adjustment. I had a set of Honda upswept pipes from a 305 Scrambler on it until my Wife got tired of burning her leg on them! I flogged the hell out of it for 30K. miles. A bulletproof design. My next bike was a 1972 Suzuki 750. Water cooled 2 stroke. Also a very fine bike. Many bikes later, my Wife and I have been riding GL1800 G/Wings for the last 17 years. We have been riding together 51 years. Thanks Honda! HAPPY TRAILS!
@robinoconnor1203
@robinoconnor1203 2 года назад
I had a few CB72/77 bikes. The CB72 sold well in the UK due to the 250cc learner law. They were so well engineered, the only weak area was the gearbox, they only had 4 speeds, unless you were lucky to find a 5 speed cluster from the CR race kit.
@lornespry
@lornespry 2 года назад
I remember seeing this Honda model for the first time and how awed I was at the finish and craft.
@ericsissenwein3601
@ericsissenwein3601 2 года назад
In high school, graduated in 1966, I always wanted a motorcycle but my parents said no. My girlfriend’s brother had bikes and he let me ride them. First a Honda 65cc then a Honda Super 90, a beautiful bike. After a while with those I rode his Super Hawk. Oh my God, I felt like I had a jet fighter under me! When I moved to California in 1969 I bought my own used CB -450. Within a year I was working for the Honda dealer and was there when the CB-750 came to America. We even converted a few for the police department to use. Still ride at 73. 😊
@dougyoung221
@dougyoung221 Год назад
That high pipe 305 with smaller tank was owned by a kid in my highschool in the sixties. It was the ultimate bike, soooo cool, everyone was jealous. Take out the baffels and it had a loud and unique sound. I still remember the longing I felt to this day. I was in love with anything Honda. However, my dad was a union man and and forbade me to buy a Honda. 😟 I ended up buying a two cycle Harley that looked a bit like a sportster, to it's credit, but had that awful two cycle rin tin tin tin to it when you let off of the gas. Generator didn't work, chrome was replaced with paint, a Honda 65cc could out run me. I tried to be cool despite all the disadvantages but only rode it the summer and sold it to buy a 10 yr old 57 Chevy on it's 3rd round of Bondo. Cars didn't last long in Michigan in those days. Appreciate the trip down memory lane. You only hit briefly on the sportier 305 and I can't remember it's name but it was king for a spell where I came from.
@johnmarsh2078
@johnmarsh2078 Год назад
I was a british is best teenager in the late 1960s and my first motorcycle was a BSA C15. It needed a full rebuild so i bought a Yamaha YL1 a 100cc two stroke twin. It was like riding a super-light screaming pogo stick. British brake linings, tyres and rear units transformed it and I really sniffed when the BSA was ready and I had to sell it. Early 70s and history repeated itself and, when my BSA Thunderbolt needed a bottom end rebuild( bad maintenence by a previous owner), I bought a Honda CB77, 305 at the right price. The Honda did almost everything the T-bolt did at half the engine size. It was a corker as was the CB350 I later acquired as a runabout. Still I love my T-bolt. With a Keihin carburettor instead of the manky Anal and electronic ignition, coupled with routine maintenance I enjoy performing and a super stainless micro mesh oil filter it is as reliable as a Honda. Miss the button start though.
@fjp3305
@fjp3305 11 месяцев назад
I loved the Superhawk when I was a kid in the 60s. I had a picture of it on the wall when I wasn't even a teenager
@benjaminmentink5955
@benjaminmentink5955 11 месяцев назад
Honda may not have continued with design but the Laverda SF750 shares the same DNA
@holzig5229
@holzig5229 11 месяцев назад
Thank you very much for the history and bringing back many fond memories! Honda and Pirsig changed my life for the better. My first motorcycle was a Honda CL175 that I bought from my neighbor in 1973 for $100. I rode it all over the Central Texas Hill Country backroads and even ventured to San Antonio and Houston. It was bulletproof and more fun per dollar than anything I've ever owned. Many motorcycles later, I ended up with a new BMW R100/7 due to it's good road and some off road characteristics for mountain trails. I'm an engineer and still have total faith in Honda engineering after many of their cars. After all, "you meet the nicest people on a Honda" 🙂
@64fairlane305
@64fairlane305 2 года назад
My first experience with Honda was the late 60s CB450. It was introduced in 1965. Bart seems to have overlooked this legendary model. Still my fav, followed by the CB350Four
@davidreed6264
@davidreed6264 2 года назад
The 500 four was great
@stevewzorn
@stevewzorn Месяц назад
My third motorcycle was a Super Hawk, first reliable bike. Could actually go somewhere and expect to get back home. Loved it. Just needed a five speed.
@rickhill6277
@rickhill6277 2 года назад
In ‘77 in purchased my Dad’s CB350 and just Loved it!! Great Bike!
@mattgoodmangoodmanlawnmowi2454
Matt’s dad here. Returning to riding with a 855i Triumph. Back in my youth I rode a very built 600 cc Norton Dominator. Very much a sleeper. A riding brother popped up with a SuperHawk. Very nice concept Looked and ran more like the big boy bikes. But check out its cousin The Honda Dream. Nothing else like it before then. I think the Japanese thought they were making the SuperHawk for rockers and the Dream for mods. But like the Mick, I’m neither. I’m a rod and a mocker. Lol. Ride it like you stole it.
@petermcalley4663
@petermcalley4663 7 месяцев назад
My first 'real' bike was a Super Hawk back in 1967. Great bike. Did many miles on it. Hard for parts though down here in New Zealand. Upgraded in 1969 to my first new bike, the Honda 350, which was actually 325. Another great bike. And exceeding the redline was never an issue for either of these bikes. A great introduction to bikes. Loved both of them.
@garygwong88
@garygwong88 3 месяца назад
Hey! I was born and raised in a motorcycle shop in Hawaii ,primarily japanese bikes , the biggest shop in our state from the 70's . I'm sure I knew or met the dude on that superhawk and absolutely sure my Dad knew him . As a lifelong motorcycle mechanic I can say for certain that Honda is the shit! In fact one of our benly's ended up being restored and was being displayed at the gugenheim . Keep up the good work !
@Sara_PY
@Sara_PY Год назад
Thanks for including a clip of my CB77. Yes, I still have her!
@AmateurRedneckWorkshop
@AmateurRedneckWorkshop Год назад
I had a new super hawk in 1968. The starter seldom was able to start the bike. I finally got in the habit just using the kick start. On the road one day it made a terrible whirring noise. The Honda dealer told me a cylinder sleeve had gotten loose and was going up and down with the piston. I did not know enough to question that. It got fixed under warranty but it showed a fragility.
@garygruber1452
@garygruber1452 Год назад
I bought a CA-77 (Dream) in 1972. It was my second Honda. I put 14,000 miles on my Sport 50 before I sold it. I trailered that Dream from PA to CA in 1974. It was my only means of transportation for a year. I had a CB450 and a CB750 after that. After 30 years on Harleys, I'm looking for another Honda, probably a 450 or 750 as my last bike. I'm 73 and can't live without one. In 1965 I was in Tokyo for 3 weeks and my father took me the Honda factory to buy some parts. I nearly wet my pants seeing motorcycles hanging from the ceiling because they were producing them so quickly.
@jdholbrook33
@jdholbrook33 Год назад
My first "big" bike was the 160. What a great bike that was. Rode it every day, rode it to school, rode it to friends house, sometimes I just rode it to ride. That wonderful exhaust note, that smooth ride. Wind in my hair, careless 14 year old. My next bike was the CL350 which I enjoyed riding the dirt trails of Arkansas. Next was the Suzuki GT550 3 cylinder 2 stroke. What a blast that was. Finally in 1979 I bought a brand new Suzuki GS1000 for $2400. I'll never forget that 160 and all those great rides on the country back roads of northern Arkansas. Old story. I lived in Arkansas when I had the 160. It started to have problems with one carb flooding. Seems the float wasn't floating any more. Later I went to Victorville, California to visit my uncle, he took me to the Honda place and they had the float and bowl gasket in stock!
@markhilsen2528
@markhilsen2528 Год назад
In 1968 I bought a 1964 model CL-72 "250 Scrambler", the older cousin to the more popular and more numerous B/CL-77s with their 305cc engines. I seem to recall that the CL-72 had 72 mm pistons (or maybe it was stroke) while the 305s were 77 mm. The fastest way to tell stock 250 and 305 bikes from a distance was from the right side, the final drive sprocket was smaller on the 250 (thus giving me a top end advantage over my 305cc friends when racing a long downhill), and from the left side, the upper pipe on the CL-77 (305cc) Scrambler was welded to the muffler and the lower pipe would slip out of a red rubber gasket, whereas the CL-72s (250) had both upper and lower pipes gasketed making the muffler easily slip-off removable. (I had "Snuf-or-Nots" installed in my pipes to quiet them down ... when I felt like it.) I also upgraded my tank emblems by buying 305 badges from the dealer and put my original badges marked "250" in a drawer; forty years later I learned my 250 badges were worth way more to collectors than the 305 badges so apparently I wasn't the only guy trying to pose as riding a more expensive bike. It was a great bike.
@glenmo1
@glenmo1 Год назад
Fantastic memories.. my dad bought a used super hawk 305 in the late 1960s.. he could not get out of the driveway without me on the back! .. in early '70s he bought a Suzuki 500 Twin 2 stroke... I turned 18 in 1977 and purchased a brand new 1978 Honda hawk 400.. the bike had a large bore Short stroke engine.. with a high red line.. it really loves to be revved! The engine wasn't unusual as was multiport with 2 intakes & 1 exhaust port per cylinder... The bike was fast and it also handled really well around corners I could lean it way over without anything scraping... The engine was actually part of the frame! And it had the new comstar wheels that look like mag wheels but flex like spokes..
@tomdunn2583
@tomdunn2583 Год назад
Always wanted a 125CC twin never owned one. I am restoring my 1967 305 Super Hawk now, love that blue frame and seat. Still have the original tank badges on it which are priceless!
@logotrikes
@logotrikes 2 года назад
Even today, this style of Honda is still evocative. Wouldn't mind any of them today....
@ronlheureux7623
@ronlheureux7623 2 года назад
I’m turning 74 and looking back at my life. In 1963, as I recall, I bought a CB 90. I beat the heck out of that bike for a few years until I leaned it against a friends curb on trash day. They hauled it off! In the early 1970s, during the gas shortages, a friend and I went to Pasadena and bought CB350Fs. I took much better care of that Honda, being a young adult. I paid $1,000 for it and sold it back to the same dealer with a weeping cylinder gasket for $900. I’ve also owned a 500 Ascot and a Sportster, as well. I did sell the Ascot for what I paid for about 18 months later in order to not show the CC balance when buying a new home. The reason, though for enjoying your video the most was my best friend owning a 305 SuperHawk. What a great bike that was. It was black and unmodified. I miss him and his terrific bike most of all. Thank you for this trip down memory lane!
@thevoxofreason8468
@thevoxofreason8468 Год назад
I have a CB77 in the shop right now. Such an elegant little machine. Beautiful.
@vendiracer5538
@vendiracer5538 2 года назад
I love your video essays! I hope you continue through the small displacement Hondas up to the 90s 250s, and further. The CBR250RR is famous for its high rpm engine but you should check out its luggage touring hook placements. Hooks on the passenger foot pegs, near the numberplate, and just behind the rider. The bike is a small cc super sport touring bike.
@ecliphelion
@ecliphelion 7 месяцев назад
Hi, I'm 20 and I'm currently restoring one. I'm absolutely in love with it
@josephbingham1255
@josephbingham1255 11 месяцев назад
A great presentation. 3:30 I had a white 150cc like this. Drove it from Burbank, Ca. -Bishop-Lake Tahoe-Lassen N.P.-Grant's Pass-Eureka-San Francisco-Ventura-Burbank. I did it with someone just back from Nam. who had a larger Honda. In Tahoe we met two gals who had driven their Honda step thru 50cc cubs from Saskatchewan, Canada! 5:25 a fellow up the street had one. He later got a 450cc like 1:36. I still remember the shock of one person hearing of Honda uping to a 450cc! From a little known 50cc cub that some thought was made in the USA, and were shocked to see a Made in Japan label, to a 450cc in a space of a few short years!
@utubedaveg
@utubedaveg Год назад
I was 14 in 1966 when my best friend bought a 90cc c200 red honda. the next summer I had a silver and red 1965 CL77. oh the memories.
@BobbyOfEarth
@BobbyOfEarth Год назад
Bought my low mileage Honda 250 Superhawk when I got out of the ARMY in 1973. Loved the bike, rode it everywhere in N. Cal.. ..I recall the inconvenience of my leg repeatedly breaking the key off in the ignition. Upgraded to a Honda 750F in 1981 and began road racing in the AFM.. for five years.
@TheTulerie
@TheTulerie Год назад
My very first bike was a 99 superhawk & man I loved that thing. Tons of torque & it sounded so cool! I would love to find another
@cycoklr
@cycoklr 2 года назад
My very first bike was a '67 model. I was a few weeks away from turning 16 when an uncle came back from Laos with a black Superhawk 305. That was 1969 and it was the first time I saw anything like it. He wanted to sell it and came to ask my dad but dad didn't know how to ride, so... now I regret not taking good care of it the time I had it.
@garyderoy
@garyderoy Год назад
In high school during the '60s I bought 3 Hondas from our local dealer in Laconia NH. 1st was a new CB160 but after a couple months it wasn't fast enough for me. Then I bought a slightly used CB450 that had been geared down like a farm tractor. Fast off the line but topped out at about 90. Then was a slightly used CB77, 305 SuperHawk. Custom paint job, Revisi race cams and bored out to 350. It was very fast for those days. We had a painted off 1/4 mile on the unfinished Laconia by-pass which now connects Laconia to Gilford. We'd meet at Week's Dairy Bar for burgers and fries the go about a half mile up the road to drag race on the by-pass. I usually won. I've had about 15 motorcycles in my lifetime. They included a Bonneville 650 and a 1000cc Kawasaki Z1R. I raced them briefly and was the sales manager at a dealership while I worked my way through college. Of all the bikes I've had, there are only a couple I'd like to have today. First is the 305 and 2nd would be the 72 RD 250 Yamaha. These bikes were just fun to ride and drive hard. If anyone has one of these for sale, let me know. Oh, I believe the early Honda scrambler in those days was 250cc up until 1965. That was the CL72.
@georgeveneziano2754
@georgeveneziano2754 2 года назад
Love those bikes had 2 305 / 175 both great 👍 thanks for the great video keep them coming
@doncates6848
@doncates6848 2 года назад
Great article very informative! Love the old school Honda's of the day! Can't touch one these days without digging deep!
@Lunaxoxoffs
@Lunaxoxoffs 2 года назад
Bart for president, as usual, bravo!!!
@energyasylum997
@energyasylum997 9 месяцев назад
Aaaaaaaaah! The one I always wanted, the 305 Superhawk! I owned 1972's CB750, CB350, CL100 and a CL350, but never a Superhawk. Beautiful looking design, with so much character! Thnx for the upload.
@BritIronRebel
@BritIronRebel Год назад
The Honda 305 scrambler was a gorgeous motorcycle!
@davidnelson6893
@davidnelson6893 Год назад
Yes high pipes
@BritIronRebel
@BritIronRebel Год назад
@@davidnelson6893 And they had a better shaped tank, or did later Super Hawks all get a nicer shaped tank?
@edwinbruckner4752
@edwinbruckner4752 2 года назад
Awesome video. I also have a CB77 from 1966. As far as I know, the CB72/77 engine sits ontop of the C70/71 engine. This engine dated from the late 50's and had some big problems with the crank. The were prone to break ! I think it was due to and oiling problem especially on the lower revs. Also, these engines had the clutch directly on the crank, and when you upgraded them to race bikes, the clutches could not handle the RPM's and exploded ! Basically all these problems where fixed with the new CB72 engine. It's has been such a process to create these little power houses. It's an awesome engine. Look up the Honda C70 or C71, you can really see where the engine came from. Also, Laverda later on picked up where Honda had stopped, and made the engine bigger :)
@sssp3071
@sssp3071 10 месяцев назад
My dad was working at a Honda dealership in 1961. He often told the story of the Honda sales rep showing up at the dealership with the first superhawk they'd ever seen in the back of his Honda company pickup. The rep told my dad to take it out on the highway and try to make the speedo / tach needles meet at the top of the gauge at 120 mph and 12,000 rpm. Dad said that it almost did it, well over 100 mph indicated. The dealership was soon selling superhawks and other models as fast as they could get them. Dad was working nights putting them together. He said that he'd never ridden another one that was as fast as the first one that showed up with the rep. Probably a modified, supertuned ringer.
@kennypool
@kennypool 2 года назад
Great video, thank you so much
@fearsomename4517
@fearsomename4517 Год назад
I like all vintage motorcycles, they had soul and the looks are awesome. Had a 305 Honda Dream and a few others. My '67 Triumph Bonneville was my favorite.
@edmain1137
@edmain1137 Год назад
I had one, it was the best bike I ever owned. I now ride a big cruiser, but this was my favorite. I got my license in 62, so I've been out her for a while.
@ziggysolczaniuk3797
@ziggysolczaniuk3797 7 месяцев назад
This bloke makes some really cool videos please keep them coming mate love ya work 👍👍
@mbeenz
@mbeenz Год назад
My 1974 CB750 Was An Awesome Bike And will Never Forget it!!! She Never Let Me Down!!!! I Miss Her!
Далее
The Motorcycle that saved BMW
17:39
Просмотров 155 тыс.
Despicable Me Fart Blaster
00:51
Просмотров 6 млн
Cat Plays with Window Washer
00:22
Просмотров 2,1 млн
The First Japanese Sportbike | Honda CB77 Superhawk
8:08
The Honda CBX was too much motorcycle for its own good
23:47
7 Coolest Vintage Motorcycles You Should See!
8:57
Просмотров 40 тыс.
10 Rarest Motorcycles in Jay Leno's Garage
17:39
Просмотров 101 тыс.
Full Restoration 60 Years Old Ruined Classic Motorcycle
42:47
The Yamaha RD350 was a David among Goliaths
18:07
Просмотров 357 тыс.