I Bought a Brand New 40 year Honda Motorcycle

2022 ж. 16 Мау.
9 554 695 Рет қаралды

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I Got the very unusual opportunity to buy a 40 year old Brand New honda Motorcycle that's still in the Box, and we have to get it running and Drive it home. I cant wait to see whats in store for us inside this box. its going to be epic.
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  • From 1982 - 1985 I worked at a Honda/Yamaha/Suzuki dealership, and my main job was putting together bikes packed just like this. Brings back a lot of memories.

    @philipthompson5796@philipthompson5796 Жыл бұрын
    • You were probably like “the handle bar clamps are on the forks!” when they were trying to find it

      @maxwellstephens939@maxwellstephens939 Жыл бұрын
    • OG

      @Onestonedbake@Onestonedbake Жыл бұрын
    • I was 15 years earlier assembling Yamaha, BSA and Hodakas. We also put together Harleys. But where the other machines had been tested in the factory the Harleys were completely unadjusted and it was a devil of a time getting them to fire up initially.

      @smitajky@smitajky Жыл бұрын
    • Honda c50 or c70 round lamp.. now the price market was like 100 times than before .where can I find that?

      @MrRydoone@MrRydoone Жыл бұрын
    • Didn't they ship dry?

      @pmotley@pmotley Жыл бұрын
  • There must be hundreds or more of these new old stock bikes scattered across the country at dealerships. That’d be a fantastic series! I purchased a ‘00 ZX-12R from a dealer in Texarkana some years back that was still in the crate. Good times.

    @magnumcipher4971@magnumcipher4971 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm thinking the same thing. Here in Ontario Canada I KNOW the bike dealers always had left over stock. Saw them stacked up at the two local shops I used to frequent. They still have listed 2 years previous models. The thing is? They always wanted all the money for 2 yr old bikes. Why would I pay $4500 for a 2yr old bike when a brand new current year was $4600?

      @muskokamike127@muskokamike127 Жыл бұрын
    • Was it up on the self with a zx10 I think? I offered 15 and nope.

      @douglaschitwood8850@douglaschitwood8850 Жыл бұрын
    • A dealer friend of mine bought 10 brand new 06 banshees still in the crate a few years ago from a dealer in Wisconsin that went out of business , best part was he was selling them still with the factory warranty

      @Hard_Right@Hard_Right Жыл бұрын
    • My dad works at a dump Honda usually just dumps the bikes and destroys them there

      @michaelbernhardt389@michaelbernhardt389 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes omg they should have a website just for these! I would love a brand new older bike

      @holeshot1721@holeshot1721 Жыл бұрын
  • Sweet find. I was working in a Honda dealership 20yrs ago when a guy rode in on a shockingly immaculate 60s Hawk or Super Hawk. I goggled gaped and gasped. Guy said it was found in a wooden crate in a relative's basement. She looked and ran like new. Just sitting in a crate for decades. Rich black paint, gleaming chrome, gauges perfect. Even the rubber looked good. I'm still in awe.

    @daviddavid5880@daviddavid5880 Жыл бұрын
    • Gaped

      @michelleobamasthicccocc822@michelleobamasthicccocc822 Жыл бұрын
    • Love how the guys are so reverent. My husband had one, nostalgic.

      @luciaconn6788@luciaconn6788 Жыл бұрын
    • @@michelleobamasthicccocc822 How'd you know!

      @waterfalls4540@waterfalls4540 Жыл бұрын
    • im a brit ride a vtr firestorm still rapid fer a 22 year old bike dont like going slow paid a grand 32 thou om clock eaz better than the ducati it waz copying

      @gruffrossi5420@gruffrossi5420 Жыл бұрын
    • @@gruffrossi5420 really? I got to ride a vtr once back in the day. Awesome bike. Would love to scrounge one up again. Or maybe a Suzuki TL...

      @daviddavid5880@daviddavid5880 Жыл бұрын
  • I've been working at a body shop for a bit now and extra tips I learned was if you're painting the door, it's better to take off the mirror and belt molding (the trim at the bottom of the window) for a better paint job in the end. The mirror can get in the way, and if you're unlucky, the clear coat could stick in that gap between the door and the belt molding.

    @knowitall6180@knowitall6180 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for bringing back some incredible memories. My first street bike was a 1982 Honda Ascot FT500, exactly like this one. I bought it in March of '83 from the Honda dealer in Shawnee, OK. Unfortunately, I totaled it the summer of '85. I was on my way to work and broadsided a young Limousine bull that spooked and ran out an open gate and into the road. The bull wasn't hurt, and I just had minor scrapes, but my Ascot's frame was bent beyond repair.

    @brettstillson3142@brettstillson3142 Жыл бұрын
  • I was a salesman at a motorsports company in 1993 and a similar thing happened to us. One of the employees found two, brand-new mid-1980's on-road/off-road motorcycles in unopened crates in the warehouse. We put them out on the floor and they sold almost immediately.

    @widehotep9257@widehotep9257 Жыл бұрын
    • Nice, I often fancy buying an old new model, a Honda cg125 , I bought new in 2002, stupidly sold it, now they do little similar, they tend to hype new ones up with plastic and over price them

      @rocketguy748@rocketguy748 Жыл бұрын
    • Well, classics often become collectibles because of rarity, then they will be become sought after..

      @adolfemmanuelesparas3922@adolfemmanuelesparas3922 Жыл бұрын
    • Surprised that they hit the floor at all

      @jimmymac4559@jimmymac4559 Жыл бұрын
    • @@rocketguy748 Brother CG125 still is offered in Pakistan Brand New

      @bilal_mansha@bilal_mansha Жыл бұрын
    • @@jimmymac4559 right they'd hit the back of my Trucks

      @mikeyd717@mikeyd717 Жыл бұрын
  • I am so glad I clicked on this video! I had a 1984 Honda Ascot as my very first bike at 16 years old! Looked exactly like this. Really cool to see one come right out of the crate!

    @xT3N3D3RIZ3Rx@xT3N3D3RIZ3Rx Жыл бұрын
  • I had that exact bike when I lived in Arizona in the early 90's. Unfortunately it was stolen and never recovered. I miss it dearly and all of the memories that were made with it. If you ever sell it let me know. Enjoy it.

    @seanclaus5476@seanclaus5476 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank for this video clip. You are fortunate to have someone like Craig with you. His dedication and love for motorcycles are really impressive!

    @gaminiediri@gaminiediri Жыл бұрын
  • This was my first *real* motorcycle! 17 years ago... Wish I still had it. Same year, color, decals etc! My first wreck (hopefully last) occured on it...afterwards I repaired it and turned mine into a dual sport.. lol a bit heavy, and all we had to ride where I grew up (eastern nc, coastal areas) was in sand, the forests around there was basically beach sand, but I could manage it...I'm glad I did, although knda crazy realized it had its benefits Since I put up with wrestling that thing through sand dunes as a teenager it made it to where I had no issues in sand when I switched to a lighter, better suited machine.

    @brandon351smith@brandon351smith Жыл бұрын
    • Curious where did you go to off-road? I’ve been looking for a good spot on this side of the state

      @tuono2914@tuono2914 Жыл бұрын
    • @Memer DreamerI hope this is sarcasm.

      @ClosedPenguin@ClosedPenguin Жыл бұрын
    • @Memer Dreamer I mean 20 hp is still 20 hp. But I think not calling it a real bike is little ignorant

      @ClosedPenguin@ClosedPenguin Жыл бұрын
    • @Memer Dreamer According to some info I found about this bike it says the FT500 is supposedly rated for 33hp at 6500rpm. My fathers' 1980 Honda CX500 was rated for 45-50hp when the model came to the market in 1978. Not the most powerful things on two wheels but by no means as weak as you think. Of course they are also two totally different styles of bike. :)

      @Slane583@Slane583 Жыл бұрын
    • @Memer Dreamer those exact bikes are still raced today! Look it up. The FT stood for Flat Track. And the Ascot was named after Ascot Park raceway. I believe its in California. I had one of those bikes. It handled corners like it was on rails, with wider tires of course. I wish I still had that old thumper! Kick my own ass almost daily for selling it. My buddy had one and he says the same thing. Don't knock those thumpers till you try one. They're a blast!

      @roberto3262@roberto3262 Жыл бұрын
  • Loved them, still do. My first street ride was on a new Ascot FT in the summer of 1982, a friend’s new purchase. A whopping 6, maybe 8 miles, but it was still very memorable. I bought my first new street bike in April 1986, a Honda VF500 Interceptor, but I convinced my best buddy to buy a used Ascot FT so we could ride together. I did some rudimentary hop-up mods to his bike, jet kit, F1 slip-on, even a mild cam, and I would eventually eventually talk him into loaning it to me so I could take my road racing new rider’s school on that bike. I wired it up and prepped it for the track, and scooted around the track in October 1987, successfully getting my race license. I’ve been road racing ever since, and I still have a soft spot for the FT, such a classic design, even if America didn’t get the little thumper. I have raced and ridden a metric ton of bikes since then, but oddly, to the best of my recollection, I don’t think I have ever ridden a VT… 🤔

    @Racer997@Racer997 Жыл бұрын
  • When I was a young fella in the Aussie racing scene, an old bloke I knew had one of these FTs fitted with a little sidecar. His race bike's front wheel fitted into the sidecar and he essentially towed it around to the various racetracks, along with his clothes, race gear, and camping gear. Very cool.

    @sierrahp@sierrahp Жыл бұрын
  • I'm old enough to remember these bikes. This is a major score!...back in the 80's Honda dealers were stuck with too much inventory & they were offering deep, deep discounts! I purchased a Nighthawk 650 in the crate, dealer assembled for $1395 out the door!

    @ftby59mikeD@ftby59mikeD Жыл бұрын
    • Same in Scotland where the Honda CX500B were normally on sale at £1,100 before reductions in England had me travel 150 miles to Newcastle to pick one up, brand new for £750. Brilliant solid bikes and well up for courier punishment!

      @fabianmckenna8197@fabianmckenna8197 Жыл бұрын
    • Yup, mine was an '82 V-45 Magna that I bought brand new in the Winter of 1983 as a leftover with some extras thrown in for $1500. I had a lot of fun with that bike...

      @charles1964@charles1964 Жыл бұрын
    • Had a 1985 Honda 450 Nighthawk.

      @dalegillett8171@dalegillett8171 Жыл бұрын
    • @@dalegillett8171 I remember the Nighthawk television commercials. Do you remember what you paid for it?

      @charles1964@charles1964 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes

      @fahd61841@fahd61841 Жыл бұрын
  • Super interesting episode! It’s like opening a time capsule. It would be cool to have one still in the crate in a museum with a photo in front of it showing what it would look like assembled. It would drive folks nuts knowing it’s still in there!

    @CampandCamera@CampandCamera Жыл бұрын
    • lol that would be hillarious!

      @steinmetz3336@steinmetz3336 Жыл бұрын
    • Empty crate……

      @tiredofthetyranny9874@tiredofthetyranny9874 Жыл бұрын
    • This is what this idiot should have done....good job destroying history. There is a time when any product passes from its designed purpose and moves to artifact. The putz with the bike ruined an artifact.

      @n95265@n95265 Жыл бұрын
  • just love those yellow wing emblems on fuel tank's sides! beautiful rig!

    @victornguyen4114@victornguyen4114 Жыл бұрын
  • I daydream of all the times I want to have a vehicle from the past that is all original straight from the factory. Then I come to the reality I will never be able to have one. Then I see this video in my feed. I wonder how rare this opportunity is to find something like this. I was 20 when this bike was born.

    @NIGHTOWL-jf9zt@NIGHTOWL-jf9zt Жыл бұрын
  • I got one, and it's the greatest little bike ever! Groms, Monkeys, Benelli 135s are gobbled up easily. I'm late to the party on this but the pictures of the ascot at 1:55 is the twin that came out in 1983. The 1982-83 FT500 was/is a single cylinder. Also the single was chain driven and the twin was a shaft drive. I love old 70s,80s Hondas. It takes an in the know guy not to mess up the starter. Don't grind it! It will run highway well but realize it's a 500 single. When I ride it , it always delivers and old guys love seeing it. It should do that 350 miles back to Lancaster easily. The gas mileage is exceptional. And it wheelies so easily !

    @TheBlueDogMan@TheBlueDogMan Жыл бұрын
  • Grew up on a 1982 CB 450. Seeing you put that time machine back together damn near brought a tear to my eye. Beautiful find, excellent bike.

    @SquareOneForge@SquareOneForge Жыл бұрын
    • Had one, (1982 Honda CB450 and a 1984 Yamaha 400 Seca 8Z. Both were great bikes. I wish I still had that 450. It's a collector in good condition.

      @MissionaryInMexico@MissionaryInMexico Жыл бұрын
    • I had the CB360 Honda 1978...👍

      @jamesbarry6979@jamesbarry6979 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesbarry6979 me too, i was poor 18 year old kid and that damn thing got great gas mileage!!!

      @scottadair5541@scottadair5541 Жыл бұрын
    • Wow! I had a CB360T going through High School and then bought a 1982 CB450 “Nighthawk” after joining the Navy and being stationed out in CA. A few years later (1986, I believe), the Honda dealership was practically giving away a “NOS” 1982 CB900F! I think I could have picked it up for around $1,300!

      @63stratoman@63stratoman Жыл бұрын
    • My dad had a smaller displacement version of this bike which looked very similar. I live in the US now and I'm 28 but I grew up in a country in South Asia called Bangladesh. He was a police officer and he used to ride it everyday going to and coming home from the police station. I have some vivid memories of how the bike looked , sounded and how the guage cluster lit up. As I was watching the video without knowing what bike it is and then all of a sudden seeing the gas tank, the classic wing Honda logo, the way the gauge cluster lit up, it just triggered a part of my brain that had been forgotten for 2 decades. It popped up so many old memories, nostalgia and emotions and made me feel like I went back in a time machine. I was obsessed with bikes and cars as a kid so I don't think most people wouldn't experience the same as me. This is the very first bike that I have memories of growing up. I had to mute the video so I could just look at it without all the talking. Just appreciate this piece of art Japan has given to the world and revolutionized the motorcycling industry especially in Asia. "Honda" in my country is a synonym for "motorcycle" and that particular bike is one of the very first to introduce us to the motorcycling culture.

      @thumpertorque_@thumpertorque_ Жыл бұрын
  • Great barn find guys. I've ridden that precise bike same color. A friend at college had it back in 1985 & we swapped bikes for a few days as I recall. Almost bought it too. But it lacked power vs my then impressive 1978 Yamaha XS-750 Special, so I waved off. But great memories TY for this !

    @psalm2forliberty577@psalm2forliberty577 Жыл бұрын
  • I bought one of these back in the day for $1500. Never gave me any trouble at all. A great commuter bike because you sit nice and high above the traffic. The only thing I ever replaced were the bearings in the steering head which got pounded into little D tents so it became hard to steer.

    @patpatpat999@patpatpat999 Жыл бұрын
    • The only problem I had with mine was the starter failing. I think this was fairly common on them.

      @tonyedgecombe6631@tonyedgecombe6631 Жыл бұрын
  • Good to see Honda still uses the same kind of crates on some of their bikes. Got my start building bike out of the crate years ago. Bikes 6 years older than me but I got way more miles!

    @jessemarshall7176@jessemarshall7176 Жыл бұрын
  • Wow how cool to find a 40 year old Honda still boxed up. Would love to know how much you paid for it! Amazing find! 👍👍🔥🔥🔥

    @bryanrb21@bryanrb21 Жыл бұрын
  • Dude!!!!!You got me beat by a mile. In 1989 I bought a 1982 Yamaha Seca 650 in the crate. What a great bike, and yes it came with the warranty.

    @jamesmorrison7847@jamesmorrison7847 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a VT 500, back in 1990 to 1992. It was a really nice bike. It was a little cold blooded at startup but it ran good once you got it started.

    @GurnBograt1986@GurnBograt1986 Жыл бұрын
  • I feel like I am hanging out with good friends when I am watching your channel guys ! It can’t get better than this ! Thank you for being good to each other . Like brothers should be . It is to talk about bikes , or to emphasized the importance of good brotherhood, Or both ! Thank you for allowed me in your channel .

    @ungratefulbastard8166@ungratefulbastard8166 Жыл бұрын
  • I bought my '97 CBR1100XX new in the spring of 1998. I was in the market for one and the dealer checked their computer and it said they had 1 new one left. I remember being back in the warehouse and it was buried behind 3 or 4 other bikes in boxes. They finally got it out and opened up the box. It was packaged very similar to the FT in the video- steel frame with cardboard around it and some assembly required. The windshield and upper fairing were not attached and the clip-on bars were folded back. It was really neat to see it "from birth". I still have the bike.

    @greglivo@greglivo Жыл бұрын
  • Just as I would expect from a Honda! Good times. I was JUST getting into motos at that time.

    @CactusJackSlade@CactusJackSlade Жыл бұрын
  • That was awesome!!!! A two wheel time machine, amazing. Thanks for the video, i enjoyed every second. Greetings from Colombia.

    @colombianguy8194@colombianguy8194 Жыл бұрын
  • This is interesting to me because I owned one of these in the early 80s, bought new (in black), and I loved it. This is definitely a nostalgic blast from the past for me.

    @michaelphillips2079@michaelphillips2079 Жыл бұрын
  • I love vintage Hondas! I'm all about it for sure. Just redid the fork seals and new tires on my '87 Shadow VT700C.

    @davegoodwin1848@davegoodwin1848 Жыл бұрын
  • Bless your hearts - I got one of them - the Vee Twin/shaft drive - same way. In a box NOS. (thank you, Olympia Honda) I LOVED that simple bike and rode it through the late 80s and into late 90s, until somebody crushed me as I was trying to get into my driveway. (sad face and scars)

    @DeeveOnYT@DeeveOnYT Жыл бұрын
  • I bought an '82 like this in May of '84...brand new for a $1k after Honda got stuck with a bunch of them that they couldn't sell @ $2,195!...loved the bike, much more than the SR 500 that I bought in 1980. I had two warranty issues that Honda covered...steering stem bearings were replaced at 7k miles and a leaking cam cover resealed at about 5k. Kept the bike for about a year and racked up 15k trouble free miles, even got gas mileages in the 80s sometimes. Stock chain lasted till 12k and the tires lasted as long as I owned the bike (15k).

    @markhill2279@markhill2279 Жыл бұрын
  • It's amazing to think that theirs still stuff out there laying dormant for as long as I have been alive and longer. It always blows my mind how people just leave them sitting for so long. And thank God that they do so people can discover thease treasures

    @mick0846@mick0846 Жыл бұрын
  • In the 80's, when I lived in San Antonio, I had a little Honda Rebel 250cc and loved that thing...Honda knows how to build motorcycles and I hope they see this video!

    @coloradoboo1071@coloradoboo1071 Жыл бұрын
  • When you went in for the fluids and told the clerk your first name I was totally on board. It's a special moment when I encounter another person that spells Sean the right way!

    @buggman74able@buggman74able Жыл бұрын
  • I had a VT 500 - In the UK they were the replacement for the super popular CX 500 - both were shaft drive and very popular because of their reliability with the Motorcycle dispatch riding community. It was never a great looking bike, but dam I miss that machine. I don't think the FT made it to the UK.

    @SilverfoxJB@SilverfoxJB Жыл бұрын
  • this is just how everyone with a vintage honda feels when they do a full carb clean and valve/timing job for the year. "IT RUNS PERFECT LIKE NEW"

    @RedSiBaron@RedSiBaron Жыл бұрын
  • Love the channel, and love the way you guys are always able to find beautiful old-school bikes & even if they aren't the prettiest you guys can always bring them back to life. I was wondering if you guys have ever come across the monster 6 cylinder Honda cbx 1050 that is one of my all time favorite bikes for so many reasons, that bike would fit perfectly in you're channel/collection. Anyways may your team stay blessed and keep making amazing content

    @gregsanchez7541@gregsanchez7541 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video! So cool to unbox a brand new Honda from the 80’s! I’m pretty sure that it’s a 500 single and not a parallel twin though. The two exhaust pipes are deceiving because it’s a four valve head, thus two exhaust ports and two pipes.

    @martyniner8893@martyniner8893 Жыл бұрын
  • I bought one these new 40 years ago and had a blast on it. Thanks for the memories!

    @lightnin_lou@lightnin_lou Жыл бұрын
  • One of my favorite Honda's of all time.A buddy bought one brand new back in '82.Currently,another friend,owns two of them.They're very similar to the XR500 of 1982.Very cool find boys!

    @dannschroeder694@dannschroeder694 Жыл бұрын
  • This is unbelievable! I've been hunting for a classic motorbike for months. I finally decided on the Honda ft500 and bought it 12 hours before this video was released. Mind blown! Love the content. Chur the lads

    @nickheny@nickheny Жыл бұрын
    • Ohhhhhhh dang that’s crazy

      @BikesandBeards@BikesandBeards Жыл бұрын
  • I am proud of Honda's technological capabilities in Japan. Thank you for the video.

    @motorbikesjp7961@motorbikesjp79617 ай бұрын
  • The saddle of this motorcycle is really beautiful and special👍🏻❤️

    @ariakian2938@ariakian2938 Жыл бұрын
  • I was an owner of a new FT500 back in the day. Saw it on the showroom floor and had to have it. Item of note: You will have electric starter issues as this was Honda’s very first LARGE single cylinder motorcycle WITH AN ELECTRIC STARTER. Not only was it lacking a compression release system (for starting) but was under durable (mechanical) as well. Later Honda issued stronger starter replacement components which helped but was never perfect regardless. By the time the XR650L (dirt single) came out they figured out the starter problem. No fun as Honda decided NOT to include a kick starter on the FT to boot! Best of luck!

    @rondoggone9640@rondoggone9640 Жыл бұрын
  • I love how I always see something new on this channel. Keep up the Good Work Gentlemen.😎

    @brycebrisley4343@brycebrisley4343 Жыл бұрын
  • Great to see more of these old bikes in boxes around the country.

    @DoubleDeckerAnton@DoubleDeckerAnton Жыл бұрын
  • That's crazy! Have any us brands ever started after 40 years like this? Amazing!

    @99yota30@99yota30 Жыл бұрын
  • As a Western NY resident I grinned a big grin when you mentioned this was filmed at Bob Weaver Motorsports. I grew up hearing their radio and tv ads with the "You've Got Weaver Fever!" jingle and the "Your Wife Called And Said It's Ok!" tagline.

    @amstrad00@amstrad00 Жыл бұрын
  • The Ascott may be my favourite Honda of all time. I was in high school when it was relased and have wanted one my entire life. It amazes me that there are still boxed bikes just sitting around.

    @craigsteeves4295@craigsteeves4295 Жыл бұрын
    • I bought a left over in 1984 in the crate for $1000. see the story above.

      @jamesadams2334@jamesadams2334 Жыл бұрын
    • You meant there are still boxed bikes sitting around? :-)

      @mcplutt@mcplutt Жыл бұрын
  • I know someone who has not one but two BSA Lightnings still in the crate. Never opened. For those that don't know, often BSA ran out of parts and would steal them from Triumph. Because these crates have never been opened and that lot of assembly was expected of the dealer, the crates are fairly small for the size of the bike. I LOVED my '69 Candy Red/chrome Lightning. Not as much fun as my Honda 305 Scrambler but a whole lot more power, especially when you ditched those honk'n mufflers. I was able to actually be the TT's all my friends had bought.

    @leefury7@leefury7 Жыл бұрын
  • Weird Tip: Keep your old toothbrushes instead of pitching them, toss them in a jar of isopropyl or ethyl alcohol and label them "cleaning brushes" and keep them in the garage. Then when you have situations like that brake "dust" you can get in there and scrub it nice and clean without jacking up a good knife or cutting yourself. The alcohol keeps them clean but will evaporate from any surface so there's no residue. They've been super useful in my little shop.

    @ralphralpherson9441@ralphralpherson9441 Жыл бұрын
  • My first job was building bikes like this back through the 90's at my dad's dealership. I'd have that thing unboxed and on the road in just over an hour (the battery was always the killer as you needed to fill it with acid and give it a good charge), of course that's if it was new. They did away with crates like that in the late 90's, those side pieces were always an annoyance but you quickly found out to always peel them out before removing the top. All the manufacturers used similar crates. Nowadays they come almost completely built and after only a few parts installed they're ready to go.

    @effervescentrelief@effervescentrelief Жыл бұрын
    • Didn't they ship without fluids?

      @pmotley@pmotley Жыл бұрын
    • Always the least paid position at a stealership. Have a kid do it for free? Brilliant.

      @robsnodgrass915@robsnodgrass915 Жыл бұрын
    • That's not building but assembling.

      @narvul@narvul Жыл бұрын
  • i want a NEW 54 year old 1968 Honda CL450 , that video was so cool i wonder how many vintage old skool bikes are still sitting in crates somewhere.

    @sailawaybob@sailawaybob Жыл бұрын
  • The excitement outweighs the clock anxiety 😆 I bought 85’ Honda Fourtrax 250 off showroom floor. My twin sons have it now! Still going strong! I have 87’ 250X I am 2nd owner . Love them all !

    @t-dog82@t-dog82 Жыл бұрын
  • My first bike was an FT500. One mistake you guys made though - the FT was a 500 SINGLE, not a parallel twin. On mine I had a White Bros. pipe, raised the needle, and went up 2 teeth on the front sprocket. It also had rear shocks from an RD400 and I made brackets to use an upper fairing from an early Seca. That bike was an AWESOME wheelie machine! I'd love to buy this one form you guys!

    @mcm95403@mcm95403 Жыл бұрын
    • I also owned an Ascot also the SR500 thumper from Yamaha.

      @davidj.jorgensen4828@davidj.jorgensen4828 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah I realized that I was wrong about it being a twin

      @BikesandBeards@BikesandBeards Жыл бұрын
    • Sorry, but if you want to purchase a motorcycle, please don't mention wheelie. LOL

      @JerryWasARaceCarDriver@JerryWasARaceCarDriver Жыл бұрын
    • @@JerryWasARaceCarDriver say wut?

      @dogdipstick@dogdipstick Жыл бұрын
    • Yep, had one new and it was the most fun I have ever had on a motorcycle. Nimble and still handled very well in its day. Yes, the White Bros. set was outstanding... but you couldn't keep the front wheel down.

      @paintballphil@paintballphil Жыл бұрын
  • I'm so happy I found this channel, I have worked on project cars for 19 years, I've only recently bought a 125cc, and I'm learning so much from this channel, one thing I have noticed is the bike community is so much nicer than the car community, keep up the great content

    @dozer877@dozer877 Жыл бұрын
    • Less egomaniacs but more hooligans.

      @j0m4m46@j0m4m46 Жыл бұрын
  • As an old parts salesman I appreciate your patience with that man, it's a hassle nobody wants but corporate is always pushing to get your names and info. It's just part of the script.

    @gavin5861@gavin5861 Жыл бұрын
    • Why do they need it? Sound like cops

      @jlo7770@jlo77708 ай бұрын
  • Such a cool bike. The sitting position on Hondas is so perfect imo. This thing is just awesome.

    @BAND-MAID-USA@BAND-MAID-USA Жыл бұрын
  • Awesome! My family owned a Honda dealership and I remember when this bike came out. One of the mechanics had one and he was a fanatic.

    @hollowman1@hollowman1 Жыл бұрын
  • And the engine fired up just like a Honda should, even after 40 years amazing! 😍 Funny to see that some parts are exactly the same as on my Honda MT-8, wish i found a Honda MBX 125F or MB-8 like this 😎

    @EdgeOfPanic@EdgeOfPanic Жыл бұрын
    • When my friend helped me retrieve my fathers 1980 CX500 from my fathers small out building the first thing he did after checking the oil was remove the carbs, sprayed some 2-stroke mix into the intakes and bumped it over with a portable jumper pack and it fired right up. The bike was sitting since 2004 which is when my step-sister was born. I'll be buying the bike off my father eventually but he hasn't given me a price yet. He wants me to get it running first before worrying about any money. It's in decent shape but it is going to need some new tires and some new carbs. The stock carbs are seized with corrosion so they're not worth saving.

      @Slane583@Slane583 Жыл бұрын
    • Most any new machine new in a box etc would fire up bro. With fresh fluids/new battery etc. Calm dwn w/the Honda BS

      @Davido50@Davido50 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Davido50 sounds like you know nothing about Honda.. stay salty

      @michaeldeaton8755@michaeldeaton8755 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Davido50 had a Honda 4 wheeler that would start first crank on a below zero morning.. any other brand would take 10 minutes or longer to start and they would still act funny till it warmed up.. but not Honda.. keep hating but Honda guys know what I'm talking about.. most dependable no questions about it

      @michaeldeaton8755@michaeldeaton8755 Жыл бұрын
  • The Ascot and V Twin where huge flops for Honda when they first came out. I was working in sales at a large volume Honda dealer in Southwest PA a year or so later. Evidently Honda decided to almost give these bikes away. I sold a bunch of these for $500 and the V Twin maybe $200 more! That was a steal even back then! Thanks for your videos. Brings back great memories.

    @Dorich55@Dorich55 Жыл бұрын
  • I used to work in a Honda shop back in the late 70's early 80's, putting Honda's together. Thanks for the memories.

    @ScottPearsony@ScottPearsony Жыл бұрын
  • my first and only brand new motorcycle purchase was a FT Ascot way back in the 80's so as you might guess I really enjoyed this video! Same color, same starter motor sound, and same putt-putt exhaust. It was not a good highway bike but it was ok for zipping around town. I bought it at St Johns Honda in Portland then later when it was time for it's first maintenance the Honda shop in Bend Oregon screwed up and had to order a new head from Honda

    @aliassmithandjones9453@aliassmithandjones9453 Жыл бұрын
    • I loved the shaft drive...dislikes were the front pressurized air forks

      @nickmalone3143@nickmalone3143 Жыл бұрын
  • I am a Beemer fan but I also have a 50 year old Honda CT90 that we stored in a shed for 22 years, without any prep. Last week I decided to get it running for the cottage and after two cranks with the kick starter it fired up. Honda does make some of the best motorcycles in the world.

    @franciscotoro9454@franciscotoro9454 Жыл бұрын
    • Ha glorious!

      @SchoolforHackers@SchoolforHackers Жыл бұрын
  • cant believe it . I did buy this Bike Honda Ascot single stroke in Vancouver Canada August 1983 .driving down to California . just loved this bike .

    @24anwi@24anwi Жыл бұрын
  • Congrats to the bike. Never too late bro😅Even after 40 years, don't give up

    @v_khiangte7085@v_khiangte7085 Жыл бұрын
  • Very cool to see an nos honda still in the crate! Never have I seen brake fluid turn into powder, crazy! Thanks for sharing!

    @puddleduckist@puddleduckist Жыл бұрын
    • doubt its brake fluid, surely bike has no fluids at all in the crate. just alumin. oxide possibly.

      @stevec-b6214@stevec-b6214 Жыл бұрын
    • Not brake fluid, metal corrosion powder

      @joebarber4030@joebarber4030 Жыл бұрын
    • @@joebarber4030 Yeah, being new it never had fluid in it to begin with I would think. My mistake! Thanks!

      @puddleduckist@puddleduckist Жыл бұрын
    • I don't think that there was any brake fluid in the resovour. It is made of an aluminium alloy. And as such it corrodes with the air making it into aluminium oxide. Just dry corrosion.. so clean up and fill. Just oxydized alloy.

      @kenh3344@kenh3344 Жыл бұрын
  • In 1983, I took my motorcycle license test on the FT500. I loved that bike! I owned an ATC250R and borrowed the Ascot for a day from a friend and regularly we would swap bikes for a few days at a time. I have a 2006 XR650L now with a big bore 675 103mm Weisco and cam kit.

    @billbry@billbry Жыл бұрын
    • I took my test on a 93' XR250L, that's when I turned 18. By then, I was a very experienced rider (MX) Another person was taking the test on his dad's Harley. They looked down their noses at me like I was a loser. The guy ended up dropping the hog on it's side. Instant fail, I later saw them in the parking lot and he was crying (for real) getting yelled at by his dad. (Haha) During the stop test, I stopped before any of the graduated lines. The examiner had to get his supervisor because no one had ever stopped in such a short distance before. He didn't know how to score me. Yep, I remember it like it was yesterday. I have to look for a nice XR 650. I miss having a thumper...

      @TheBandit7613@TheBandit7613 Жыл бұрын
    • @@TheBandit7613 I did my 1st DMV drive test for motorcycle in 1973 on a Honda CT70H, piece of cake! All that was required back then was that the bike used had to have a hand clutch, no displacement limits or any of that BS. I had a '03 XR650R watercooled (animal)thumper with rare CA street plates on it, made one heckuva motard bike with 17" wheels, billet hubs and 300mm front rotor! Went to a 16/39 sprocket gearing and bike would do an honest 110 mph, and get there pretty darn quick. Baja Designs light kit rounded out the package. Sold it 2 yrs. later for what I had in it, miss the bike as it was fun waxing sportbikes on tight roads!

      @MM_in_Havasu@MM_in_Havasu Жыл бұрын
    • @@MM_in_Havasu I eventually moved to an XR650. Living in the foothills of Colorado, that XR was a part of me. I spent most nice weekends exploring Colorado. I'd find old ghost towns. Still pretty complete. I never has the liquid cooled version but I can imagine how much torque that thing has. I'd still like to find an unmolested one. My XR would whoop Harleys like nothing. A biker wanted to beat me up once because my XR embarrassed his odd-firing antique.

      @TheBandit7613@TheBandit7613 Жыл бұрын
  • As a Honda guy since '79 (77 xr 75) I just gotta love that old school iron. I still have a 75 XL 125 used for trails, and a rare 69 SL 350.

    @duderama6750@duderama6750 Жыл бұрын
  • I used to be service manager for Honda of Waikiki Hawaii. Our dealership also rented Honda bike. Ft. Derussey was just across the street and Soldiers on leave for R&R would rent bikes from us. We were always having Honda motorcycles in these crates come in and we would have to assemble them just like this, but the first thing I did on a new bike was replace the fork oil. What came out of the forks had a foul odor oil like fish. I was quite busy getting these bikes road worthy and repairing bikes in need of mechanical work.

    @electrician248@electrician2488 ай бұрын
  • cannot describe how envious i am that you found a complete NOS bike, like regardless of what it is, to find something like that is a dream, arguable the closest i think you can get to time traveling, because you get to experience something which is in fact old, but in its most newest condition

    @jhalkoski@jhalkoski Жыл бұрын
  • They were not black(theVT twins), they were a very dark metallic blue. They were quick. With a change of tires they handled well. They made very good fuel mileage.

    @carlcarlamos9055@carlcarlamos9055 Жыл бұрын
  • I love Hondas from those years. I had a 1983 vt 750 Shadow from 2001 to 2018, sold it and it's still running.

    @ukuswa@ukuswa2 ай бұрын
  • The FT is actually a single cyl. OHC with a 4 valve head and twin exhaust ports, Each port has it"s own pipe. It just looks like a twin...Honda did the same thing with the XL/XR's of the day. The first bike I ever bought brand new...

    @joeschmo7317@joeschmo7317 Жыл бұрын
  • Back in the late 1980's a guy I knew was able to buy a brand new Mark Four Ford Zodiac bodyshell more than twenty years after they stopped making them. He transferred all the parts from his older model onto it, renewing any as needed, and ended up with a 'brand new' car more than 20 years after the last one rolled off the production line. Nice

    @thetessellater9163@thetessellater9163 Жыл бұрын
  • Back last century at Fun Motors in Longview Tx we would stay late and do "Set-ups" for the Christmas gift season. Flat rate, the bigger the bike the more you made. Then we would race Z50's thru the shop into the showroom and back. Tough way to make a living as a mechanic but we had FUN.

    @mikeashcraft4354@mikeashcraft4354 Жыл бұрын
  • That's an amazing find! My buddy and I are currently rebuilding a 1973 Honda CR250 Elsinore. The holy grail of motocross bikes. IMHO

    @flipfix@flipfix Жыл бұрын
  • Being an older person I used to go to Ascot to watch flat track and cars. One of my buddies took a 1972 Honda xl250 and removed everything he didn't need and replaced metal parts to plastic (tank and fenders). He caused quite a commotion racing against 2 strokes and placing 3rd. Alot of people came over to us asking questions.

    @johnjones9396@johnjones9396 Жыл бұрын
    • That was my second bike, 72 XL 250. Probably still running somewhere.

      @wes326@wes326 Жыл бұрын
  • Oh, so that is what a FT500 should look like :) Actually I have the engine out of one in my 1982 CB250RS. It is built for local street race series a lot of fun. I love the shocked look when it fired up, I had no doubts, it is a Honda after all. Waiting for part 2

    @doctor2bob@doctor2bob Жыл бұрын
  • Sweet bike. The bodywork reminds me of the Nighthawks. I'd never ride on 40 year-old tires though no matter how good they appear.

    @maddesi2709@maddesi2709 Жыл бұрын
  • Hi guys I like the video. I just really love watching the old Hondas being rebuilt and worked on. When you get a moment check out Brian Matson on his channel keep on wrenching. He has some really detailed videos of rebuilding Hondas. Merry Christmas

    @whatever-gg2qs@whatever-gg2qs Жыл бұрын
  • First bike I learned to ride was a 84 nighthawk 650 blue. It was one my older brothers first bike. He spent half the year with his mom in Florida. Years later as I got older we laugh about how I thought I was getting away riding his bike and he would say you think I left keys there for our dad to ride it, he knew lol. Man we both had a thing for bikes from about 1980 and on. Remember all these bikes sitting In our local Honda dealership. Once we seen our first F-1 or the hurricane 600 we were both hooked. Got mine if memory serves me for just short of 3k. More like $2400. Good times!

    @robertpagel8951@robertpagel8951 Жыл бұрын
  • I love how they had some late 60's early 70's Seadoo's stacked on the shelves so cool. My uncle left a Honda 450 in a crate when he had to bail Vietnam in may of 1975.

    @martyflannigan5052@martyflannigan5052 Жыл бұрын
    • Wtf was he going to Vietnam for in 1975, vacation?

      @billbonu1639@billbonu1639 Жыл бұрын
    • @@billbonu1639 he was there from 66-75 running a communication base

      @martyflannigan5052@martyflannigan5052 Жыл бұрын
  • For some reason, your video reminded me of a widowed friend of my wife's who had an estate sale 2 years ago. I went to help get things in order. In one of the barns, under a tarp, of course, was a 50-year-old, 1970, Honda Trail 90 (CT90) with just under 50 miles on the odometer...pretty much in mint condition. I tried to convince her to let me find someplace to list the bike to make good money as nobody in these parts would pay what it was worth. However, she was insistent that she wanted everything to sell, garage sale style, in two weekends. She put a price of $2000 on it and ended up selling it for $500. Sheez! But I didn't give her any grief, as she sold me many older, but in new condition, power tools (i.e., cordless reciprocating saw, cordless blower, router, compound miter saw with a portable stand, portable generator, etc.) for pennies on the dollar, (not to mention that the year before, she sold me an RV trailer for about $5000 less than she could have gotten if she had advertised). Thanks for your video!

    @michaelquillen2679@michaelquillen2679 Жыл бұрын
  • An Ascot was the first bike I owned. Loved it. Unfortunately stolen from me in 1986 when I was in the Army in Georgia. I’d love to find one like this!

    @Michael02703@Michael0270310 ай бұрын
  • So cool to see a time capsule like this!!!!!! Thanks for sharing this with us!!! :)

    @u.p.tinkering@u.p.tinkering Жыл бұрын
  • My 1st bike I put on the road in the UK was an air cooled CR250 with no front brake & a flat front wheel, but the front wheel was hardly ever in contact with the road much anyway. The red rocket was a beast of a bike & my only bike I regret selling.

    @Knackeredandbroke@Knackeredandbroke Жыл бұрын
  • My tongue hung out when I first saw one of these bikes in 1984 on a trip to Greece on my XT500. We'd just hit Greek soil after getting off the boat from Jugoslavia. Great days. And great clocks on the FT. Real old-school '80s.

    @user-sw2lv3zp6o@user-sw2lv3zp6o Жыл бұрын
  • I love videos like this. I'm sure you'll come across a NOS '86-'87 Honda Big Red 250ES new in the crate one of these days if you haven't yet. I would love to see that.

    @MikeSmith-fe3ng@MikeSmith-fe3ng Жыл бұрын
  • So stoked y'all ended up with this treasure! I was watching this auction from a distance on Bring-a-trailer and saw y'all won, congrats! I had a chance to ride one about 12 years ago or so that had less than 100 miles on it and was hoping to get it. It was being restored after the owner got spooked going over a bridge and got a strong crosswind, so he let it sit in his garage. I didn't have the funds on hand before it was restored, then a collector grabbed it before I could get to it. The one I rode was a single cylinder thumper, I thought the early ones were single cylinder, looks like yours is to, correct? I thought the twins were later. Regardless, I couldn't be happier that y'all ended up with this never ridden beauty, lemme know if you need anyone to give it a test ride! heh!

    @fuadloutfi3012@fuadloutfi3012 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, the FT500 was a single. Many who had ridden the CB250RS were hoping that it would be an upturned RS. Unfortunately, it was nothing of the sort. The FT was hardly any faster than the RS. I think it only had about 6bhp more, but weighed a fair bit more, and had a much more upright riding position, along with skinny forks. It didn't even have much bottom end, and the engine really wasn't as frugal as it should have been. Honda would have done much better to use the XR500 engine and just tried to keep the weight down, but they didn't and the FT really didn't sell. BTW, those lumps weren't exactly the most reliable. They were known to burn oil and had the virtually typical cam chain and cam follower problems that affected so many Hondas of the time. I think the FT500 would be precisely the kind of bike that, when people talk about "The good old days" I think "They really weren't that good at all".

      @davidcolin6519@davidcolin6519 Жыл бұрын
  • “I was worried about being bit by a 40 year old super mouse that lived off eating motorcycle parts” 😂😂😂

    @zodspeed@zodspeed Жыл бұрын
  • I worked at a Honda dealership in 1983/4. We bought every one of these that were in the warehouses on the east coast. Sold them as fast as we could build them at $1,198 plus $200 shipping. We got black ones and red ones. Which ever was on the floor is the color that sold. Fun bikes.

    @Kbailey4JC@Kbailey4JC Жыл бұрын
    • Question for you: why did Honda ship the bikes with brake fluid already added? I though all bikes left factory fully dry

      @donoughryan10@donoughryan10 Жыл бұрын
  • Bought this same bike in Fall 1984 with 800 miles on it. My first bike. I really liked riding it. Not a race bike but good handling and reliable.

    @user-yk5kg7kd4r@user-yk5kg7kd4r2 ай бұрын
  • I had an FT500 in the mid eightes, pulled like a train, I loved it. But the brake calipers needed regular stripping down cos they were prone to seizing up due to the alloy callipers riding on steel pins. Stainless steel might have helped. I think we used Copperslip grease. Maintenance, maintenance, maintenace. I recall it made a dub dub dub kind of sound, nice machine. Fond memories and lots of heat resistant aerosol black paint on the exhaust downpipes. Best regards, dub dub dub ROAR ! 😃

    @johnmitchell1614@johnmitchell1614 Жыл бұрын
    • @hueo far Eh, Lancaster, miles back? No comprehendi. You got one of these machines then? 🤔

      @johnmitchell1614@johnmitchell1614 Жыл бұрын
    • On my vt500 i loved the shaft drive and that engine sounded sweet

      @nickmalone3143@nickmalone3143 Жыл бұрын
    • 50 mpg for vt500 if i recall

      @nickmalone3143@nickmalone3143 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a friend 20 or so years ago that got a crated nos small engine from WW2. It still had the oil and such in gas tank. Put fuel in it checked the points and it cranked 2nd pull and ran great

    @metvelle@metvelle Жыл бұрын
  • Now that's a cool bike use to have one with dirt bike tires on it and rode it in the mtns of West Virginia back on the dirt roads and actually a few easy trails couldn't imagine a brand new one this many years later it would be like round two of my crazy adventures lol

    @oldscoolcooldiecast1879@oldscoolcooldiecast1879 Жыл бұрын
  • 13:09 What a great verse.. if only a lot more people knew this verse can literally change their life..

    @xxangelscenexx247@xxangelscenexx247 Жыл бұрын
  • Nice vid Kerkybar, looking forward to part 2!

    @Jaybird-uq3tb@Jaybird-uq3tb Жыл бұрын
  • I'm curious how a 40 year old crated Harley would turn out. The difference between Japanese made vehicles and US made can been seen in the oil dipstick. Japanese has a FULL line, US gives you an OK area of about an inch. Japan builds things like the US used to, with precision.

    @teewhy2602@teewhy2602 Жыл бұрын
    • Japan built thing like America did before 'Murica existed bro

      @TheBenTonks@TheBenTonks Жыл бұрын
    • I'm not a big harley fan but the simplicity of their design might actually be a benefit in a case like this. Less to go wrong. Or maybe I'm way off lol.

      @Lucas12v@Lucas12v Жыл бұрын
    • It's actually opposite. Harleys are overly complicated, 3 oils to change, pushrods outside the engine, tons of extra seals etc.

      @codycummings6054@codycummings6054 Жыл бұрын
    • I’m amazed at the lack of knowledge from people that watch Sean’s videos. Ignorance is not bliss. Just hateful.

      @Dave-sw2dm@Dave-sw2dm Жыл бұрын
    • @@codycummings6054 True, they are a pain to work in a lot of ways. But on the other hand, hand, have you ever done a valve adjustment on a Honda v4 bike? Not fun. Or adjust/balance the 4 carbs on some metric bikes.

      @Lucas12v@Lucas12v Жыл бұрын
KZhead