It’s hard to overstate the importance of the Honda CB750. Simply put, it was the world’s first superbike and a milestone in motorcycling. And one of just four handmade prototypes can be yours — if you’ve got something north of $130k in your bank account.
A gorgeous blue prototype is up for sale on eBay, and it’s prompted one hell of a bidding war. Ninety bidders have pushed the opening bid of $1,969 — clever — to $130,300 by Friday afternoon.
To understand how revolutionary the CB750 was, you need to think back to 1969. Back then, bikes came in essentially three flavors: glorified scooters from Japan, heavy cruisers from Milwaukee or finicky twins from Britain. Soichiro Honda, whose company introduced itself to America just seven years before with the “You Meet the Nicest People on a Honda” campaign, wanted to offer something better. Something powerful, reliable, safe, and fun.
The CB750 was all that and more. It was a technological marvel, with a front disc brake and a powerful (for its day) 68-horsepower, overhead cam four cylinder engine that could rocket the rider to 125 mph. The same basic engine configuration dominates the market today, and the CB750 was so quick and agile that the term “superbike” was coined specifically for it.
The engine covers were sand cast. The crankshaft was milled from a solid chunk of steel. The carburetors were one-offs. Even the plastics were custom. It was handmade, a fact proven by the scribbled marks an engineer made on the underside of the fenders to indicate where the mounting holes should go.
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