I don't think it had more power. I think the sixth gear was more for gas 
mileage and comfort on long rides.

rodhall






-----Original Message-----
From: stanley/ Randolph <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, Feb 20, 2010 8:51 am
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] CL 350 - CB 360




Accidentally sent before I finished - the 6th gear, with the extra power or so 
the displacement would indicate, are my reasoning for the conclusion in the 
first half of my post...
 
Stanley




From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, February 19, 2010 11:45:50 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] CL 350 - CB 360


I had a cb360 my brother had a cl350. I liked both of them. some times we would 
trade them out for a week. It was like having 2 bikes. I think I liked the 
cl350 best but it was close.
 
rodhall






-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, Feb 19, 2010 11:32 pm
Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] CL 350 - CB 360


The CL350  was a lower geared "Scrambler" Style   The CB360 was a 6-spd


Feb 19, 2010 12:22:48 PM, [email protected] wrote:



What was the difference?  Mine had the pipes going up one side together, 
instead of swept down on each side.  Was that the CL?  What other differences 
were there?  Did it have more ground clearance?
Whatever the differences are, I sure liked that bike.  It would sip gas at 
about 60 miles to the gallon, and was quite nimble in Puerto Rican traffic, and 
quick.  Especially after I got on it from my 550 Four!
 



Stanley







From: Dennis Hammerl 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, February 18, 2010 9:50:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!


I bought a 160 for my first wife. I liked it so much, I rode it most of the 
time. After two years, I sold it and made money on it. I could never raise much 
interest in the Honda 200 and 250's... boring. I had an X-6 and that is the 
standard of 250 performance...to this day. When I met my wife (#2) she had a 
250 Rebel. The 305's ? One of the best examples of Italian design / influence. 
Both the CB/CL72 and CB/CL77 (250 and 305) were nightmares of complexity. More 
chains and bearings than you can count. Ball bearing cam,crank,, chain drive 
primary.. NOISY MOTORS. Fragile four speed.. Eventually Honda got onto the idea 
that a film of oil worked better than a bearing... FYI: Honda made more 350's 
than anything ever ('68~'73) Was your "scrambler" a CL350 or an SL350 ? Big 
difference. 





From: stanley/ Randolph 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, February 18, 2010 9:49:43 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!



Well, your comments explain why I was not to keen on my 550's lacklustre 
performance.  Or how it would flex.  I did go over 100mph on it, the only thing 
I liked about it, other than, as you said - it was smooth. Still, I didn't like 
it that much, so I rented it out and used my 350 most of the time.  I also had 
a 125 that I  bought (in PR), just because my dad made me bring back a classic 
Bentley 125 I had bought, back in Phoenix.  Kind of I can do what I want now 
and I will ride a 125.  It was fun, but not as much as the scrambler 350.  The 
350 Four?  Never had much interest in it because of my experience with the 550, 
so never rode one.  I repaired a CM200 for a gal, down here a few years back,  
and rode it after to test:   there again, not too  impressed with it.  Like the 
250 Nighthawk better.
My buddy in Phoenix had to get a bike when he saw me with my little step-thru 
50.  His dad gave him just about anything he wanted, so he got a 305 Hawk and 
that wasn't good enough so he had the engine balanced and blueprinted and put 
in a cam as well.  He soon grew tired of that and bought a Triumph Bonney  I 
rode it and also rode on the back one day with him.  He didn't see this car 
coming, and pulled out in front of him.  The guy hit his brakes, Gary went full 
throttle, and I held on for dear life.  The end result?  He pulled away in time 
and we were safe, 'cept for the two brown spots on his seat (lol).
Can you imagine jumping hills with a Bonney?  He did, and finally did the front 
forks in.  I did jump with him, on my 160, which was more fun, IMO.  I didn't 
take it to the extreme like he did, so never ruined my bike...
BTW, I could make quick work of a Yamaha 180 with my 160, two up on each.  I 
took my time breaking it in.  It was quick.  I can't give the exact year, but I 
think it was a '68.  I have done what you say, with the kickstarter, on my 160, 
on the center stand.  That's how I would start it, to oil my chain;  never 
tried in on the scrambler, but that wasn't a 350F...
 

 Stanley


 


From: Dennis Hammerl 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, February 17, 2010 10:14:46 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!


I never thought the old 550 K series were anything to write home about. Just 
big, smooth fours. The old 350 twins ran almost as well and the early twin-cam 
450 would make short work of one of those. For a bike like your 450, I'd use 
Bridgestones. Top heavy ? Not really, just more weight in general and, of 
course, above the axle center line. Ever ride a 350 four ? Another short lived 
bike from Honda. Very collectible now. Only made '73~'74. The CB400F not nearly 
as neat as the 350F. (CB400F not made very long either)  The 350F was a little 
jewel. I could pull out the kick starter with the bike on my lift at full 
height and start it with my hand.  





From: stanley/ Randolph 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, February 17, 2010 2:27:23 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!



Thank you for your input, Dennis.  On my 450, I would not put Kendas.  It feels 
faster than my 550 Four that I owned in Puerto Rico.  At least, acceleration 
wise, anyway.  But then, I am older and not as quick with the reflexes and 
inclined to take it more slowly; but it is, partly, because I am not used to 
that much acceleration on two wheels any more.  
Heck - I am not used to it on four wheels, what am I talkin' about???
The only thing about this 450 is that it seems a bit top heavy, unlike my 350 
scrambler, which was light and nimble.  Am I right about that?  Is its CG a bit 
high? 
Maybe after I ride awhile in the spring, I will become more familiar with the 
whole machine and get into it again...
 
Stanley




From: Dennis Hammerl 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, February 15, 2010 10:42:33 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!


Sorry about your father. We only get one set of parents. 
Home buying ? Be very careful. Good time to buy distressed. (they call it 
"motivated" ) 
Kendas on a 250 ? No problem. Not for sport bikes that may be ridden hard. 



From: stanley/ Randolph 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, February 15, 2010 2:36:32 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!




I do understand safety, and will be able to afford the best now, because of my 
inheritance.  Father died.  I have enough to buy a home (if I do it soon), plus 
some to live on as well.
The 250 was purely commute.  To work and to the store for groceries, etc.
Last three cars died from under me - transmissions - but now I have a nice 
F150, extended cab.  Great truck, but IMO, uses too much gas.  Will be hooking 
up one of my newly revised (fifth "generation" ) hydrogen generators this week 
to discover how much of an improvement it will make.
I think I will probably put it on a Ford analysing machine, to determine if 
there are any tuning issues.  It has a slight imbalance at some moments that 
comes and goes.   

Stanley
 


--- On Sun, 2/14/10, Dennis Hammerl wrote:


From: Dennis Hammerl 
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, February 14, 2010, 9:28 PM



No secret, they are a bargain brand tire that I won't use on any bike that can 
be used for anything other than commuting. When replacing tires, I like to use 
a better grade than OEM. IMHO Kenda is not. Plenty that are though. I 
understand budget concerns but can't justify sacrificing safety. 



From: stanley/ Randolph 
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sun, February 14, 2010 6:26:53 PM
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!




Dennis -
I would like to know - why no Kendas?  While I had no trouble with them, 
they're not trustworthy if it's been sitting.  The Dunlops that were on it when 
I bought it were imbalanced and I am sure it was from sitting in a garage for 
some nine years.  It only had 815 miles on it.  So, I would not use any tire 
that has been sitting for a few years, regardless of how much tread it has on 
it.
When I replaced the originals with the Kendas, they made a huge difference; and 
they needed replacement some 8,000 miles later.  
I replaced them myself both times, with the tools in the OEM kit and a pry bar. 
 
At the time I had very little money and had just recovered from my accident 
enough to go to work part time.  It was hard going at first, being on my legs 
for that long.  I worked at night and the 250 was our main transportation, for 
the both of us.  
Mostly, it was for my wife, though.  Now, she won't get on it: go figure.
We both or each went to work on that bike rain or shine, did all of the 
maintenance, and she was faithful to take us everywhere: over 15,000 miles in 
two years,  seldom using the car, because it used too much gas, even at 31mpg 
in town.  We were starting out anew, had little, and spent little.  
That little Honda 250 Nighthawk performed well, never complaining, not even in 
the rain, except once, when a plug went bad: nooo problema...
When I actually put the 450 on the road in the spring, it will have new 
tires(-haven't decided which yet, Metzler or maybe Avon), rebuilt caliper, and 
maybe some attention to the carbs, if I still feel a slight hesitation after 
running a tank or two with SeaFoam.
 
Stanley
 


--- On Sat, 2/13/10, Dennis Hammerl wrote:


From: Dennis Hammerl 
Subject: Re: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, February 13, 2010, 9:23 PM



If you say so.. The condition you describe makes me still think a tire problem. 
You bought it with these tires on ? Block it up so the front wheel is free and 
spin by hand. Look close for the tread to run true and from the side, for 
out-of-round. There is usually a line around a tire that is close to the rim 
that can be used to reference the bead. Sometimes your hand is the best 
instrument to use. Spin the wheel and let it run through a light grip. 
Imperfections can be felt that aren't easily seen. If it meets all of these 
criteria, we'll look elsewhere. It slips me for now, what model is this again ? 
# No,  Kenda is not a brand I would buy or use. sorry. The official policy of 
Honda when pursuing a problem like this is to replace a tire to determine if 
that is the cause (when all else checks out fine) Hidden defects can be 
resolved this way. Barring that, we'll get into more chassis detail. You've 
done a good job of eliminating most things already. I take very seriously 
anything that can compromise safety. 



From: NM85NightHawk 
To: Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers! 
Sent: Sat, February 13, 2010 4:00:45 PM
Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Hello from New Mexico!

Hey guys!
I didn't find any flat spots on the tires. They are nearly new and
still have the little nubby's along the extreme outside edges.

The bead looks to be nice and even on both sides. I had a friend
double check just in case I went blind.

The tires are Kenda Cruiser K671 front and rear.

Are these known to be good tires? Or should I look to replacing them
pretty soon?

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