Ol' Gramps has had an older CL77 upstairs at our dealership for a lot of years and got the wild hare to get it up and running.
Gonna need a lot of work and parts, but look forward to this forum for info and help!
new member - old flat tracker restoration
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- honda305.com Member
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- Joined: Sat May 16, 2015 12:20 pm
- Location: Rapid City, South Dakota
new member - old flat tracker restoration
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- honda305.com Member
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sat May 16, 2015 12:20 pm
- Location: Rapid City, South Dakota
- Hamamatsu Nippon
- honda305.com Member
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- Joined: Sat Nov 12, 2011 6:37 pm
- Location: SW Ontario, Canada
I really like this CL the way it is. It's a genuine period correct flat tracker. It's got the popular Goodyear dirt racing tires; tube foam filters, wide bars, modified exhaust, and stripped electrics with just a bar mounted cut off switch. If people don't preserve racing heritage, it disappears. This is not a clone, it's genuine.
How nice is it to see those old board track racers from the teens and twenty's? And how valuable are they now? Why don't you clean it up, detail it, and take a long look at what you have. Then decide if you want to change it.
How nice is it to see those old board track racers from the teens and twenty's? And how valuable are they now? Why don't you clean it up, detail it, and take a long look at what you have. Then decide if you want to change it.
1967 CA78
1965 CM90
The value of life can be measured by how many times your soul has been deeply stirred.
Soichiro Honda
1965 CM90
The value of life can be measured by how many times your soul has been deeply stirred.
Soichiro Honda
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- honda305.com Member
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- Joined: Thu Jun 19, 2014 6:04 pm
- Location: Nebraska
I'm with Hamamatsu on this one.
I love a custom build, I did one with a CA72, but that's because there's thousands of them out in the world and if I wanted one I could buy one today.
Realistically, you could sell that period correct one to a real collector for a good chunk of change and then buy another scrambler to turn into whatever custom creation that you'd like. And probably have plenty of money left over for new parts, etc.
I love a custom build, I did one with a CA72, but that's because there's thousands of them out in the world and if I wanted one I could buy one today.
Realistically, you could sell that period correct one to a real collector for a good chunk of change and then buy another scrambler to turn into whatever custom creation that you'd like. And probably have plenty of money left over for new parts, etc.
1964 CA72
1974 BMW R75/6
1969 CL450
1995 Toyota Corolla Wagon (The Hauler)
1974 BMW R75/6
1969 CL450
1995 Toyota Corolla Wagon (The Hauler)