These are the best photo's I have seen Steve! These came from a link on Facebook from the H&H guy. I never used to do the likes of FB and was banned by my kids from
using it but alas there are so many useful marque specific groups now that I succumbed
For instance I only got to buy a dealer take-off CB500K0 seat from David Silver because I was on his FB site and he offered 1st dibs to his FB buddies.
I had to join this group (I was put onto it by my buddy James Harrington in the UK) BTW the CB72/77 FB site is excellent ..some truly knowledgeable people contributing on there.
https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=cb750.com
Thanks Ash, for your post. i am enjoying following the fate of this bike. i'm glad i don't have any emotional attachment to 2110 like i did with 2113. the reason i liked 2113 was because it was the bike featured in the color ads in american magazines, and when i was 17, still riding my '67 BSA Lightning, i remember reading during 1968 about the possibility of Honda producing a 4 cylinder motorcycle, and knowing if anyone could make them readily available, it would be Honda. When the 2 page color ads came out, i would study those ads for hours and dream about the possibility of owning one. Some guys had girly pinups on their bedroom walls, i had Honda's color ads pinned up on mine. During 1967, my dad had purchased a 1934 Indian 4, at a farm auction, so i felt the decades old mystique of a four, and also was aware of the technical and design issues in making a 4 cylinder motorcycle that would be reliable, and inexpensive to maintain. MV Agusta, and Munch were already producing four's, but the feasibility of owning one seemed impossible due to their exotic nature, how difficult it would be to get one, and the fact there was no dealer network anywhere even close to the primitive, and remote rural area i lived in. when Honda released those ads, i knew the dream could be a reality, there was a Honda dealer 50 miles from where we lived. and so the dream became a reality, when i took delivery of 4779, on September 30, 1969.