1970 Honda 750 Chopper Motorcycles for sale

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Honda : CB 1973 honda cb 750 cb 750 four motorcycle runs great vintage old school chopper

Honda : CB 1973 honda cb 750 cb 750 four motorcycle runs great vintage old school chopper

$1,199

Syracuse, New York

Year 1973

Make Honda

Model CB

Category -

Engine -

Posted Over 1 Month

1stkickcycles2000 Store <img src="http://ti2.auctiva.com/web/aswCredit.gif" border="0"><br><a href="http://www.auctiva.com/?how=scLnk0" target="_blank"><img src="http://ti2.auctiva.com/images/sc1line0.gif" border="0"></a>Up for bid is a 1973 Honda CB750 Motorcycle.The Carburetors where cleaned, New battery, Spark plugs, Fuel line, front master cylinder bleed and caliper cleaned. The bike fires right up on the first kick and sounds great no smoke or leaks.The starter must have an issue, it turns very slowly, even with a new battery, but very easy to kick, and always starts right up. Clear title. It was a one owner bike. This was customized in the 1970's. Very Cool 70's paint job, which is still very nice, A lot of old school Twisted chrome parts. handle bars, shifter etc. Shifts, Clutch works. No dents in the tank. Overall the chrome does have pitting/ Rust. No damage on the motor. Looks to have never been down. Reads 51,017 on the speedometer. Built in 5/73. Would make a great old school rider . you receive what is pictured. Also i noticed with the gas tank off, the 2 rails on the frame where cut out to get the head off easier, inside of having to pull the motor. Please see my other vintage motorcycles and parts. Also if you are looking for a certain pre 1985 motorcycle, just let me know! The bike is Sold as is. Email with Any questions. Please the payment must be made within 5 days of close of auction. Shipping is the buyers reasonability. <div style="text-align:center"><a style="text-decoration:none" href="http://mostpopular.sellathon.com/?id=AC1367044"><img src="http://www.sellathon.com/Resources/Images/countercredit.gif" border="0"></a></div>

Trim CB750

Honda : CB 1970 honda cb 450 cb 450 chopper bobber vintage honda twin cb 450 cl sl motorcycle

Honda : CB 1970 honda cb 450 cb 450 chopper bobber vintage honda twin cb 450 cl sl motorcycle

$650

Cleveland, Ohio

Year 1970

Make Honda

Model CB

Category -

Engine -

Posted Over 1 Month

For sale is a 1970 Honda CB450 bobber with a little over 10,000 miles, it is an early 1970 cb450 with the recessed ignition like on the sandcast cb750's, bike has been sitting for over 10 years and does not run at the moment but has good compression, and a clear title. It is not perfect but a solid project, its missing the front brake master cylinder, and other original parts as it was changed to a bobber style bike with a battery bypass ignition set up to work without a battery, tank has no dents and is pretty clean inside, has a chopper seat made for early cb/cl's think its a corbin, has extended front forks, handlebars are bent in but are aftermarket z-bars, chrome on bike has rust and pitting but would clean up better than it is. Its kind of a cool rat bike look it has now to it. with a little work this bike will run, and also is a good base for restoration or another project. Bike must be paid for within 3 days of auction close, and I must be contacted after the auction ends to discuss payment and pickup or shipping. Shipping must be handled on the buyers behalf if needed. Thanks and feel free to ask any questions

2012 Honda SHADOW PHANTOM VT 750 C2BC

2012 Honda SHADOW PHANTOM VT 750 C2BC

$8,995

Branford, Connecticut

Year 2013

Make Harley-Davidson

Model Sportster Seventy-Two

Category -

Engine 73.3 ci (1200 cc) cc

Posted Over 1 Month

Authentic 1970s chopper attitude meets modern power and premium H-D® styling in this bare-bones, low rider-inspired radical custom. The 2013 Harley-Davidson® Sportster® Seventy-Two® model XL1200V is a bare-bones radical custom motorcycle. From front to rear, the Seventy-Two sports a bold, vintage look that recalls classic bobbers and the styling of 1970s choppers. New for 2013, the XL1200V Sportster Seventy-Two model comes with optional Hard Candy Custom™ paint, a large metal flake paint finish that recalls the iconic styling of 1970s custom bikes, and offers blazing color showing through a deep, rich finish. With its large metal flake paint, peanut tank, round retro-style air-cleaner cover, ape-hanger handlebars, and brilliant whitewall tires, the Sportster Seventy-Two model boasts a one-of-a-kind custom style that's full of attitude. And the Seventy-Two is uniquely priced to be an incredibly attractive value. No other bike in its class offers so much no-nonsense retro attitude and modern high-end style at such affordable cost. The Harley Seventy-Two model is a masterful mix of vintage bobber and contemporary retro-chopper styling. Its powerful Evolution® engine gives it impressive road muscle. The XL1200V's big-flake paint on the fuel tank is eye-catching, expressive, and of the highest Harley-Davidson quality. Forward-mounted controls make the Seventy-Two model XL1200V comfortable for cruising across town. The H-D XL1200V model is an attractively priced bike that brings the best of modern chrome eye-appeal to an aggressive, old-school chopper attitude. The Seventy-Two screams high-end custom, at a price that makes it truly accessible. For more retro-inspired modern custom rides, take a look at other 2013 Harley-Davidson Sportster models, like the XL1200X Forty-Eight® model, or the new 2013 Softail Slim® model FLS, which brings the best of old-school 1940s-era bobber style to today's streets with a contemporary flair and up-to-date ride technology.

Triumph : Other 1973 triumph hurricane x 75 three cylinder limited production of only 1 172

Triumph : Other 1973 triumph hurricane x 75 three cylinder limited production of only 1 172

$30,000

Biddeford, Maine

Year 1973

Make Triumph

Model -

Category -

Engine 741

Posted Over 1 Month

We are thrilled to offer such a unique and rare piece of motorcycle history. If you’ve got a Triumph-sized hole in your collection and want something pretty wild and very cool, this might fit the bill. The Triumph Hurricane X75 was a bit of a mongrel from the word go. Originally a BSA design, with very sleepy, Triumph Bonneville-esque style, the honchos felt it was way too conservative for American tastes. Famous designer Craig Vetter was tasked with a stylistic redo, and the resulting bike was different, to say the least, with a very 60’s chopper style and a distinctive triple exhaust slung along the right side of the bike. When BSA went under, 1,200 engines were put aside and the bike was rebranded as a Triumph.Three cylinder motorcycles in general are pretty neat sounding machines. Not quite as brutal as a thumping twin or single, not as smooth or refined as a four [or six!], triples make a very raw, iron-fist-in-a-velvet-glove kind of roar. Vetter was commissioned by BSA's US distributor to customise the BSA Rocket 3 to appeal more to American tastes. When, in 1968, the new BSA Rocket 3/Triumph Trident triples were shown to the American BSA-Triumph management, they were underwhelmed. They knew Honda had an important bike (the CB750) coming along, and they felt the triple's price of $1800 [4] was too high and that technical details (like vertically-split crankcases and pushrod ohv valve train) were far from "cutting edge". However, they acknowledged that the bike was fast, and a sales team led by BSA Vice-President Don Brown decided to launch the bike by using a Rocket-3 to set some records at Daytona, records which were broken in 1971 by the Kawasaki Z1. Brown felt that the BSA/Triumph triples needed a different look to succeed in the USA, and he engaged designer Craig Vetter to give the BSA A75 a customised face-lift, with a brief to make it "sleeker and more balanced". (Brown revealed the Vetter project to Peter Thornton, President of BSA/Triumph North America, but as Brown's initiative had not been authorised by BSA, Vetter had problems being paid, waiting two years for his fee). Vetter created the Triumph Hurricane in the summer of 1969,[5] and in October 1969 he unveiled the prototype with "BSA" on the tank as the new ‘Rocket Three’.[6] Thornton and the American officials were impressed, and Vetter's bike was then sent to the UK, but the bike arrived in England just as the BSA marque was about to be ended. At BSA-Triumph's design facility at Umberslade Hall, the design was seen as too "trendy" by chief designer Bert Hopwood; but after very positive public reaction to the design when it appeared on the front of US magazine Cycle World in October 1970, the UK managers changed their minds. They realised they had a large stock of obsolete BSA Rocket-3 parts that could now be turned into a premium-priced motorcycle. Engineer Steve Mettam was given the job of supervising production for the 1972/3 season; and the Vetter BSA Rocket3 became the Triumph X75 Hurricane. 1,183 engines were put aside for X75 production. However, BSA was facing bankruptcy and the design went into a limited production run of 1200 as the Triumph X-75 Hurricane in 1972. Production stopped in 1973 after the X-75 was unable to meet new American noise standards. Here are the specs: 1973 Triumph Hurricane X75Years produced: 1973 Number produced: 1,172Claimed power: 58hp @ 7,250rpmTop speed: 114mph (period test)Engine type: 741cc air-cooled, OHV inline tripleWeight (dry): 458lbMPG: 40-45Price then: $2,295 Thank you for looking, please feel free to ask any questions. If you would like any additional photos don't hesitate to ask. We look forward to placing this rare Hurricane X75 in your collection.