Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1981 Honda Cbx on 2040-motos

US $7,000.00
YearYear:1981 MileageMileage:39 ColorColor: Black
Location:

Novato, California, United States

Novato, California, United States
QR code
1981 Honda CBX, US $7,000.00, image 1

Honda CBX photos

1981 Honda CBX, US $7,000.00, image 2 1981 Honda CBX, US $7,000.00, image 3 1981 Honda CBX, US $7,000.00, image 4 1981 Honda CBX, US $7,000.00, image 5 1981 Honda CBX, US $7,000.00, image 6

Honda CBX tech info

Engine Size (cc)Engine Size (cc):1,050 WarrantyWarranty:Vehicle has an existing warranty TypeType:Touring For Sale ByFor Sale By:Private Seller

Honda CBX description

 1981 Honda CBX
6 cyl
good condition
odometer  39.900

Moto blog

Report: Honda to Increase NC700 Engine Displacement

Tue, 02 Jul 2013

British site Visordown reports Honda will release an updated version of its NC700 series with a larger engine for 2014. The larger versions will reportedly carry an extra 50cc, pushing its displacement to 720cc from the current 670cc used on the NC700X, NC700S and Integra scooter. But why would Honda introduce a larger engine so soon after introducing its NC line in the 2012 model year?

Mick Doohan NSR500 art sculpture

Wed, 04 Apr 2012

How do you best immortalise the great Mick Doohan and the big bang Honda NSR500 with which he dominated Grand Prix racing in the 90s? An Australian artist has answered this by creating an art installation that sees a hand-created replica of the bike exploded and suspended from the ceiling. The Doohan piece is appropriately titled 'The Big Bang' and as artist Eamon O'Tootle describes, "It is a complex sculpture comprising thousands of parts joining to make up a whole and symbolic tribute to the true inherent nature of art and sport – the creativity of design, where the mechanical is modified to suit the needs of man." Eamon added: "The way the Doohan piece came about was that one of the bikes Mick rode had an engine configuration called the Big Bang.

Taliban Magazine Condemns America but Praises Honda

Wed, 11 Dec 2013

Manufacturers are usually glad to hear positive reviews of their products, but we’ve got a feeling Honda is not happy about the ringing endorsement it received from the latest issue of the Taliban-published magazine “Azan“. The English-language magazine is a pro-Jihadist quarterly; pure propaganda designed to recruit impressionable and disillusioned Muslims in the West. It’s somewhat jarring then to find buried within the radical rhetoric a full page spread on a 125cc Honda as one of the Taliban’s “Steeds of War”.