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Honda : CB 1983 cb 1100 f

Honda : CB 1983 cb 1100 f

$6,200

West Boylston, Massachusetts

Year 1983

Make Honda

Model CB

Category Sport Bikes

Engine 1100

Posted Over 1 Month

I'm selling my CB1100F. Its in great shape with no issues. Your chance to own an incredible one year bike! It recently went through a complete mechanical overhaul and it runs flawlessly. I have a clear Mass title, receipts and build book. Here is a list of improvements completed since 2014: - Front and Rear Master Cylinders rebuilt - Front and rear calipers disassembled and rebuilt with new seals and dust boots - All brake pistons and caliper rods polished and brake pads replaced. - Anti-dive unit rebuilt with OEM parts. - Full tune up with iridium plugs - Valves checked and re shimmed where needed - valve job sheet included. - Clutch Master rebuilt. - Carbs Professionally Rebuilt, Polished, and Synched by Mike Nixon, Motorcycle Project - Front forks disassembled, cleaned, and rebuilt using new upper and lower OEM fork bushings. Filled with ATF. - New Fork seals and dust boots installed. - New Regina 530 chain. - New Sealed Battery - CBR F3 Coils installed - ProCom ignitors installed - New OEM AUTO Petcock - New OEM Petcock installed. - Valve cover powder coated and new valve cover, tach drive, and cover bolt gaskets replaced with OEM. - Ignition covers powder coated and new Cometic gasket installed - Headless R6 starter clutch installed. - Joe Alphabet 4 into 1 race header system installed with new OEM exhaust seals. This comes with the original box and all original paper work. Installed right out of the box 5/2015. - Oil pan removed and re powder coated. Gasket replaced with a new Cometic - Oil screen cleaned and all oil seals replaced, including the o-rings from the oil cooler. - Fresh oil change - New Pirelli Sport Demons installed less than 100 miles on them. - Front and rear wheel bearing replaced with new sealed bearings. - Mirrors, starter cover, Ignition cover, front sprocket cover all powder coated. - Left and Right Front Directionals replaced with new OEM cups and stalks. - Original tool Kit - Giuliari seat. - Minor blemishes noted in pictures. Buy it Now and I will include an OEM seat in excellent condition, a complete Japanese style tail trunk, and a Honda Shop Manual with binder in excellent condition, and a set of Progressive front shocks New in the box.

Trim CB1100F

2015 Triumph ROCKET III ROADSTER ABS

2015 Triumph ROCKET III ROADSTER ABS

$7,300

Dardenne Prairie, Missouri

Year 2013

Make Honda

Model CB 1100

Category -

Engine -

Posted Over 1 Month

For Sale: Well maintained, tastefully accessorized 2013 Honda CB1100, Always garaged, 7800 miles, Excellent Condition, New Michelin Pilot Sport 3 Tires (changed at 5900 miles) - Accessories Include: Honda CB1100 Deluxe OEM Four into Two Exhaust Header Pipes / Over Racing Stainless Steel Mufflers / Chic Design Road Comet 1 Color Matched Fairing with Tinted Sport and Touring Wind Screens / Chic Design Tinted Hand Guards / Chic Design Candy Red Side Covers / Corbin Leather Touring Seat / Ikon 7610 Rear Shocks with Adjustable Rebound Control / Honda OEM Heated Handlebar Grip Kit / Honda OEM Chrome Engine Guards / Honda OEM Silver Plastic Chain Sprocket Cover / Honda OEM CB500F Black Mirrors / GenMar 1" Handlebar Risers / Handlebar Mounted 12v and USB Power Outlets / Pilot Chrome Chain Guard / Kijima Chrome Passenger Grab Rail / PBI 19T Front Sprocket (OEM 18T sprocket also included) / Honda OEM Service Manual. - Other Detailing Modifications: Replaced silver screws and nuts on fairing windscreen and hand guard covers to black hex head bolts and black acorn nuts. Added upper fairing to handlebar bracing kit. Modified OEM muffler heat shields to fit gap between new header pipe and mufflers. Painted the Honda logos on engine side cases. Replaced OEM oil fill cap with custom aluminum cap. Painted Honda logo on rear of Corbin seat. Replaced OEM 2013 turn signals with smaller, different shaped OEM 2014 turn signals. Replaced OEM taillight with new Suzuki SR400 retro taillight. Added chrome license plate frame. Engine oil and oil filter changed regularly. Chain cleaned and lubed regularly. Engine air filter just changed. Other than these items, this bike is pretty much maintenance free.I am selling this bike due to a need for a four season vehicle.

Honda : Other Honda 1977 CB550F Super Sport RAT bobber VINTAGE custom motorcycle Lots of Mod

Honda : Other Honda 1977 CB550F Super Sport RAT bobber VINTAGE custom motorcycle Lots of Mod

$4,300

Platteville, Wisconsin

Year -

Make -

Model -

Category -

Engine -

Posted Over 1 Month

Hello and thanks for looking. (PLEASE READ EVERY WORD) First, an intro. I am a law enforcement officer and so when I set out to build this cycle for myself, it was my intention to build it street legal. The last thing I needed was to be seen as a hypocrite. And when I decided to sell it, the next owner would hopefully appreciate that fact. A lot of custom cycles I see sold here and other places are not street legal. You don't want the hassle... really. I have built many cycles, one award winner. I don't do anything half-assed and you as the next owner would appreciate that also I would think. Some of what I've built is on youtube as well as videos of this cycle and I would encourage you to check them out. My youtube ID is "bmwresto" If you have questions, you are encouraged to contact me. This is pick up only at my residence in the SW corner of Wisconsin, only 20 minutes from Iowa and Illinois. A $500.00 deposit is required within 48 hours and the remaining balance in cash when picked up in person within 7 days. (If you need a couple extra days, let me know) I will NOT SHIP this cycle. I want to meet you. If you want to test ride this cycle, you WILL show me your cycle license for liability purposes. And bring a helmet. Won't let you go out without one. If you are a new cycle rider, PLEASE DON'T BID. This is too much cycle for a novice in my opinion and that for me is enough to cancel your purchase. This sale will be totally by the book for your peace of mind and mine. I will tell you everything I can think of both positive or things that may be of concern to you. I want you to be happy with your purchase. If you get here and have second thoughts, you can walk away under no obligation to pay. We will immediately cancel your purchase and I will refund you your deposit except for any fees that paypal imposed. You will be happy with your purchase or go home with your cash. Is that fair? It's the way I would want to be treated so I'll treat you the same. I hope that would relieve any fears you may have about purchasing it. Ok, nuff said. On to the good stuff! VIDEOS FOR YOU TO SEE AND HEAR IT RUN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbQJw-kUSE&list=UURBEGEyaekxGW1bgl08aH6Q https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RW1rzjoY7y8&list=UURBEGEyaekxGW1bgl08aH6Q My whole purpose was OLD-SCHOOL and that drove my decisions when building it. This is a 1977 CB550F with a clear title with a long list of mods only partially listed here. Below is a summary off the top of my head: ENGINE: CB550F, a NOS new CB650 camshaft, PORTED HEAD, new valves and seals. THIS BIKE PULLS STRONG. I've literally almost fallen off the back of the seat when I grabbed a handful of throttle. CARBS: Purchased from a fellow here on Ebay from California who knows what he's doing. EXHAUST: A NOS new in the box vintage 1970s exhaust system was found. A JARDINE: 4-1 header and muffler. Looks and sounds awesome. BRAKES: This was done right with upgrades for safety all the way. New pads, rebuilt caliper, disk was cross drilled for the positive effect on cooling as well as stopping in wet conditions. The master cylinder and steel brake line are new. The brake lever is easy to pull and stopping is awesome. Rear brakes left alone and are good. TIRES: New when built. About 1100 miles. Lots of tread left. FRAME: Modified and reinforced. Rear suspension left in tact instead of hard tail. Hard tails look cool but are merciless to ride for anything more than bar hopping. This one can be ridden comfortably and the hands and feet position are comfortable. Forward controls from TC Bros. Seat: You won't believe it till you sit on it. It's comfortable. No B-S. ELECTRICAL: Plainly put, as simple as humanly possible. I've made a new wiring diagram and you'll get it. All lights work, horn works, turn signals, stop lamp, tail lamp. I don't have a license plate lamp installed and that's about the only thing that you may want to add if it bothers you. TRANSMISSION: Left stock and is working perfectly. KICKSTART ONLY for old-school. Always starts, never left me stranded. When cold, you'll have to give'r a few kicks. When hot, almost always on the first kick. HEADLAMP - SPEEDO: A lot of thought went into simplifying instrumentation. This is a new headlamp and the speedometer is too. I researched gearing and made sure the speedometer would be accurate. CONCERNS YOU MAY HAVE: Like I said, Old-school all the way so KICKSTART ONLY for the second time. I do have the starter and it's yours to have when you come pick it up in case you want to install it. There is a oil leak at the base gasket or head gasket. I think torqueing the bolts would do the trick or do what I have done, just wipe it down after a ride. Turn off the gas tank fuel petcock. The carbs may drool if you don't turn it off. And again, no license plate lamp which is illegal. About the only thing I didn't do that I probably should have given my profession. I don't know what else to tell you. I've really enjoyed riding this bike and every time I go for a ride, I grin ear to ear and come home telling my wife I don't want to sell it. It took me a year before I realized my wife should probably have her garage stall back. ASK QUESTIONS and REVIEW THE VIDEOS!. I'm doing everything I possibly can to be full disclosure. I hope this cycle excites you as it has me. It's a blast and I get tons of lookers with questions every time I gas up.

Honda : Other Honda VF1000R 1986 w/11K STREET LEGAL RACE BIKE 1000 CC RUNS GREAT NO RESERVE!!!

Honda : Other Honda VF1000R 1986 w/11K STREET LEGAL RACE BIKE 1000 CC RUNS GREAT NO RESERVE!!!

$2,795

Indianapolis, Indiana

Year -

Make -

Model -

Category -

Engine -

Posted Over 1 Month

This bike has only 11thousand miles. It is a 1986 VF1000R, honda built this bike just to win a race. It is a mechanical wonder. This bike runs and rides amazingly. The ONLY issue with this bike is cosmetics. The previous owner didn't like the HRC red/white/blue color scheme, so he rattlecanned over the stock. No cracked hoses, new tires, new brakes, and all the hard to find parts. Side covers that say "GEAR DRIVEN CAMS", uncracked rear cowl, rear seat cover, tool kit, original exhaust and mufflers (very hard to find), original turn signals, HID headlamp bulbs, fuse box cover, uncracked and in tact full fairing. HERE'S SOME INFO IF YOU'RE NOT FAMILIAR WITH THIS BIKE: Patterned after the FWS "Works Bike" that Steve Wise, Mike Baldwin and Freddie Spencer used to shred rear tires with regularity, this was Honda's effort to homologate an endurance racer. Full fairing (in fiberglass not plastic) with a single headlight lens and small vents on either side and two cute round tail lights out back, 16" front wheel & 17" rear wheel were of the NS/NSR style "Comstar" bolt together wheels, not cast (hub an rim where connected via bolted on struts), endurance racer spec. quick release forks, with the obligatory TRAC mechanical anti-dive mechanisms. Single rear shock w/ 2 sided Alloy swingarm, Gear driven cams, 4/2 exhaust. Color was typical Honda HRC color. Honda's enthusiasm for the V4 engine I layout in the early 1980s was such that by 1984 the VF range comprised six models with capacities ranging from 400 to 1000cc. The fastest and most glamorous was the VF1000R: a limited-edition super-sports machine that was created, with little expense spared, to dominate production racing in the way that the straight-four CB1100R had done three years earlier. With its full fairing and racy red. white and blue paintwork, the VF1000R looked every bit the street-legal competition machine. Its specification list was mouth-watering, based on a liquid-cooled, 90-degree V4 engine that incorporated gear-driven overhead camshafts and produced no less than 122 hp @ l0000 rpm. That peak power output was 6bhp up on that of the VF1000F, the standard 998cc, 16-valve V4 from which the R model was derived. The I000F, also released in 1984. was an impressively fast and sophisticated bike. Its styling was similar to that of the original VF750F sportster, which had promised much before suffering widely publicized engine reliability problems. The VF1000F handled well and its engine was flexible, powerful and reliable. The exotic VF1000R cost roughly 50 per cent more than the F. and oozed quality from every pore. Its fairing was reinforced with carbon-fibre, its adjustable handlebars were made from polished alloy, its streamlined seat hump fitted perfectly. Its engine's gear-driven cams allowed more precise valve timing at high revs, which accounted for some of the extra power. In March 1984, Honda introduced the VF1000R in Europe. Its styling was a celebration of the V4's racing heritage and the VF1000R was a showcase for the technology Honda had developed on the track with the FWS1000 race bike which was designed for competition in the Daytona 200 and AMA F1 class. The original concept Honda had in designing the VF1000R was that it would showcase and, more importantly, homologate all of the innovative and groundbreaking technology that had been used in the F1 class, for use in the production based classes of the time. This was not to be the case, though, as the finished bike weighed in at nearly 600 pounds with half a tank of fuel, roughly 85 pounds heavier than the VF1000F model, and for this reason was rarely used in competition, and struggled to be competitive when it was used. Many modifications were made to the VF1000F in its transformation into the "R" version including major engine reworking, major front suspension revision, bodywork revision, and rider ergonomics. The engine of the VF1000R was the same cast block as in the VF1000F, displacing the same 998 cc's as the standard model, but modifications were required to mount the gear train in each head, used for driving the cams. The crankshaft was also altered, in order to accept a straight-cut gear which would drive the gear train instead of the chain system, used in the "F" model. Each head had 2 gears held by a carrier, which was then bolted into the respective head, driving each of the two camshafts arranged in a dual overhead camshaft arrangement for each head. Total, there were 9 gears required to transmit power from the crankshaft to all 4 camshafts. The camshafts were altered in relation to the ones found on the "F" model in order to provide more power. This arrangement added 7 pounds to the weight of the engine when compared to the chain driven arrangement present in the "F" model. Gear noise is one of the major drawbacks of using a geartrain to drive cams. In order to thwart this, Honda used a rubber mounted double tooth system (essentially 2 gears slightly offset) on the gear mounted on each camshaft, as well as the lowest mounted gear in each head (driven by the crankshaft), offsetting the teeth by roughly half of the pitch. This allowed the lash to be entirely taken up by the tension of the two teeth resting on the gear below, hence eliminating some of the noise and lash inherent in this type of system. The motor still makes a whirring noise which can be heard, as this is an intrinsic property of the straight cut type of gears which were used. The gear driven cams went on to be a key feature Honda used in their line of VFR750 motorcycles throughout the remainder of the 80's and throughout the 90's. The heads of the engine were also redesigned relative to the "F" model, with a redesigned squish zone in the combustion chamber, aiding in eliminating detonation within the cylinder. The redesigned head raised compression to 11:1 (up from 10.5:1 on the standard model) and power to 122 hp (125 for the USA version), up from 113 hp on the "F" model. The coolant system was altered from that of the "F" model, via the utilization of different thermostat settings and through the use of 2 radiators. The lower of the two radiators had 2 fans which drew air through the radiator from the back side, while the upper relied on ram-air, drawn from vents around the headlight opening. The exhaust system was slightly altered, utilizing an exhaust collector box (directly downstream for each of the four header pipes) with slightly augmented output angles for each of the two exhaust pipes compared to the "F" model. This was done in an attempt to increase ground clearance while cornering. The rear suspension (air shock with adjustable damping control) and frame (square-section steel tube type) were direct carryovers from the "F" model, but the front suspension featured Honda's anti-dive system named "TRAC" which stood for "Torque Reactive Anti-dive Control". This system utilized the left brake hangar being pinned to the fork on the bottom mount and allowed to pivot in an anti-clockwise direction, thereby closing a valve in the left fork leg, forcing the damping fluid through a smaller passageway, and increasing the damping rate under hard braking. The left fork leg had a screw-type adjuster with four positions of adjustment which would change the amount of influence this system had under braking. The fork also featured a Schrader-type air valve which allowed air assistance from 0-6 psi to increase the spring rate in the fork. The right fork leg featured a 3 position hand adjustable dial which would increase damping rates. The fork also featured quick-release, swing-away axle clamps for faster tire changes in endurance racing. Many of these features were seen as very exotic for the time, and modern adjustable sportbike suspension can trace design roots to these features. The braking system was improved via the use of dual floating front discs and racing style piston calipers on the ventilated rear disc. This was the first time a ventilated disc brake had been used on a road going motorcycle Compared to the VF1000F, the VF1000R had completely different bodywork and rider positioning. The "R" model got fully faired, racer replica bodywork with rearset footpegs and adjustable clip-on handlebars. The handlebars were adjustable through a range of 4 degrees in 2 degree increments via a double serrated ring which meshed with the handle and the mounting ring parts of the clip on. Even with the adjustment available in the clip ons, period tests still criticized the bike for having too committed of a riding position, with a long stretch over the tank.[1] The gas tank had a 6.2 gallon capacity for the European models, and was redesigned, with a smaller 5.8 gallon capacity for the USA models. This was used with an eye on endurance racing, utilizing the larger tank for homologation in racing where the larger capacity would result in longer time between pit stops. The front fairing of the VF1000R was split into two pieces, including the upper half and the lower half of the fairing. These both attached to a metal bracket which ran around the perimeter of the engine. The lower fairing was held on primarily by the use of 6 quarter-turn, race type fasteners (3 per side) with the aid of 4 traditional bolts (2 per side). The bolts which held the lower fairing on at the connection to the upper fairing also went through holes in the upper fairing in order to ensure proper panel gaps and alignment. On models from 1985 and later, the lower fairing also featured spring-loaded vent doors which could be opened and closed in order to cool the engine and rider during high temperature conditions. The upper fairing of the VF1000R featured a sealed air intake behind the headlight, which directed air towards the upper mounted engine coolant radiator. Because of this, most VF1000R's used in competition had the front number plates mounted on the front of the windscreen instead of in the traditional location, where the headlight would be on the road going version. This area was filled with a mesh screen in order to feed the radiator with the maximum amount of air possible. Wheels were changed from the "F" model to utilize 16 inch front and 17 inch rear NS type bolt together aluminum ComStar wheels. These wheels were constructed of a 5 pointed design which used bolts to connect the aluminum "spokes" to the hub and rim. The 16 inch front wheel was used to aid steering response, and the 17 inch rear saw the first use of radial construction tire for the European models. The American market models were sold with the traditional bias ply construction tire. In order to complete the endurance racer appearance of the bike, a removable solo seat cowl was included as were dual round endurance racer headlights and taillights. The dual headlight was changed to a single square light with white and black plastic surround on the initial US release models in order to satisfy what most major manufacturers thought would be a requirement of USA street legal vehicles in the near future. The legislation never passed and Honda included the very desirable dual round headlight on the 1986 USA models