Ryan F9 and his camerman, they do it all. Ryan writes all the scripts. And as you can tell, he is a legit genius. I am certain they made this video for me, since I just started working on my CB360 a couple weeks ago, and it's been my new obsession. Coincidence??? Yay!
I'm in no rush, I'll take the CB360 (actually the earlier CB350 is more to my liking). As always, a great video , Ryan! It'll get you there but with a little more soul and comfort. That's why I bought my W800 Street over modern styled bikes. Love it.
I worked in the motorcycle industry for 27 years both retail and manufacturing dealing with Japanese, European, and American brands. Your analysis of the economy, engineering, physics, design, and marketing of the motorcycle industry superior to anything out there. You are the best.
My first bike was a twin Honda CB175 when I was 18, I went up to a Goldwing 1100, but for the past 15 years I'm driving a Honda CM400 1980 twin and fully appreciate the rugged and simple design that is still working fine after 41 years. At 60, I don’t see myself on another bike. Everything I learn on that channel is extremely relevant and informative. Thanks.
I remember trying someone's CB360 twin back in the late 70s. It was raining. The gravel road was a bit muddy. I took it out in a muddy paddock and did some feet-up donuts. It handled well. I liked it. I had a '74 XL350 then upgraded to a 1980 XR250 that had less torque but more of everything else except weight (and I think mine had the factory performance kit fitted by the original owner). Now I have a CRF250L Rally which fills much the same niche (even more so in non-Rally form) with similar power, slightly more weight (which gets you electric start, water cooling, disk brakes with ABS, much bigger tank) and also half the fuel consumption and 8x the maintenance interval. The XL350 was almost exactly $1000 I believe, the CRF250/300L now are $5500 (ABS, non-Rally). Internet says the CPI ration 2021:1974 is 4.5 so, yeah, we're paying slightly more now. (Note: the mid 70s XL250 was seriously underpowered, and I didn't have one ... so I'm using the 350 as the comparison)
He and his team are impecible. I don't even have a bike and I just want to watch nonstop. And the knowledge provided is second to none. I learned so much with this video.
let me offer a perspective from a "senior citizen." i graduated from high school in 1972 and was a car, truck, and motorcycle nut from the first time i could reach the pedals on "anything." my first "bike" was a Harley-Davidson "M-50", then I graduated to a Yamaha "Twin 100", then came a "brand new" cherry red 1970 Honda 350 that I slept with in my bedroom. The Honda was replaced by a new 71 Kawasaki Mach-III 500 "death machine." by my Senior year, i had gone through all these bikes as well as a few Triumph "choppers", a 71 CB750, and a 68 900 Sportster that i pushed more than i rode. so i have a VERY close relationship with "old bikes" that "old people" still like. i also went through scores of cars and trucks over the last 50 years. today, i have a car collection of old mopars - seven 68-69 Barracudas. with all this background noted, let me offer this simple observation: my collection of Barracudas are 54 years old. do you think anyone will be collecting a 2022 Prius 54 years from now? i doubt it. sure, new motorcycles have incredible technology and OF COURSE, they are "better" in many ways. however, when you park that old CB360 beside that new CB300R - the OLD bike just looks SO much classier and "cool." call it the retro-design or the color or the mechanical way so many things worked - the "presence" of that old Honda is just so more memorable. frankly, if i was offered both those bikes for FREE - it would take me about 1 second to say: "thank you, I'll take the old CB360."
you can certainly tell by looking at honda's remakes of their classics: the 2018 super cub, the new monkey, the 2022 DAX, the H'ness CB350, and even something like the resurrected BSA gold star.. the 'sheen' of chrome and quality metal fleck paint on steel tanks and side covers and so on; the new versions all look soulless and faded. all the (heavy) quality parts have been replaced with plastic, which may be lighter and last longer if untouched, but it scuffs easy, fades, cracks, and it's as cheap to look at as it is to produce. same as most cars now, the cheap plastic bodies they can make in any shape let us make the most mathematically aerodynamic and strong-but-lightweight body shape.. but everyone is following the same equation so every bike looks the damn same. i haven't seen a good looking bike since the 80s, that wasn't some sort of throwback design.
I agree with you except for the old cliché of people won't want to fix up modern cars in 50 years. They will, because a Prius or a Tesla will be retro and cool in the future. Cars all go through a similar pattern as you know. New and desirable, older and functional everyday cars, old bangers still working, old and knackered cheap to buy not cool, then as they get older and rarer they become more popular and desirable and the prices go up and up and people will run them again. Probably.
I bought a 350 Honda for $795.00 in 1968 after I got back from Vietnam. Compared to what was available, it was way beyond what they offered. It would go slightly over 100mph and had a 10, 500 redline and seemed fast to me until the 750 Honda came along. Excellent job doing the comparison between the old and the new versions.
My story is almost the same . First bike a 350, the an 1980 750 f. Great bikes. I also had a 360, it was a pig. Fell over a lot. The 360 was to tall, bad design. Ride safe.
I owned a 360t just loved it, when to Portugal with my fiance and camping gear, we had a wonderful time, we married, and years later divorced but I still love the 360
@@theoldleafybeard No he's kind of right. He has done business with Brett Tkacs, who is essentially a professional scam artist. Brett sucessfully advocated for stricter motorcycle licensing laws. The new law? That you must take one of Brett's classes to get your motorcycle license! They're $900 in total.
Reason why the Royal Enfield is doing so well is exactly that it's an actually old tech motorbike at a low upfront and maintenance cost. Just what Ryan ordered 😁
Royal Enfield's Classic 350 has an MSRP of $4600, the CB300R in this video is $5,050, that 10% discount is even less when you consider that OTD costs are going to be something like 7k for both bikes after fees and the stealerships gets their pound of flesh. New bikes, even beginner ones, are not affordable at all for most people.
@@tstartrekdude I wonder why it's like this in canada , in india cb300r is 5100$ whereas classic 350 is 3700$ .... it's pretty significant price difference(I mentioned this price including all tax , insurance ,etc )
@@ankitsharma203Because they can, I assume. They know someone in Canada that considers buying a Royal Enfield is doing so because they like the look of it, not because it's cheaper than a Honda. I've looked at them in Sweden too, but they're just way too expensive. I'd rather get a Ninja300 or similar, it's significantly cheaper up front. That said I am still riding a GSX400 from 1983, so I absolutely agree with the video and an Enfield would be a slight downgrade, at least in power.
Nothing Noone if American politicians were a braking system, they’d just be the piston dragging on rusted calipers after sitting in a field for a decade.
If you like bikes or not, this is just really high quality content. Even with no interest in bikes or knowledge of them you can still just be entertained
That 360 T was my first bike, same color and everything! It was a 76 and I paid $650 for it used in 1981. It came with 3500 miles on the clock and was one of the most reliable bikes I ever owned. Thanks for the trip down memory lane! Great video as always, love the channel.
My first bike as well. In red. In 1985 $250 cash made from baling hay and shaping Christmas trees on tree farm in 90 degree weather all summer. Good times. Man that bike was buzzy and slow but it never let me down.
I'm a Canadian from Vancouver living in Australia - love your videos bro! The humour and shots of Vancouver and top-shelf analysis are awesome! Keep up the good work! I like how you tied the purchase price of the bike into the real life economic considerations of consumers - next level =)
First, another gem. Great piece. Thank you. I’m grandpa in this context being 60 years old. I have witnessed the entire progression first hand. Maybe we got a better deal back then, but there’s a big trade off. My first new motorcycle was a ‘74 Suzuki TM 125 (TM was forerunner to RM) and cost $725. US :-) Today, my MT-10 outperforms the most exotic machinery of 15 years ago with rock solid reliability. Its ugly with transformer eyes and plastic everywhere. But to me, the handling, braking, and acceleration are all worth it. I’d never want to go back to the performance of the 90’s, let alone the ‘70’s. Modern bikes are terrific, but too expensive to attract new riders. I think this was your point. Well taken. Keep up the good work, “Sonny” :-).
He is also not saying build all motos to the 70s standard we just need our entry level bikes to be built to the budget. Get somone in the door with a good experience for 2k and eventually they will want to spend ten. But as it sits a 5k beginner bike puts a lot of potential riders off and makes them either not ride or buy used.
My first street bike in 1981 was a top heavy '77 Suzuki gs750. 7 bikes later my v-twin Vulcan with way better lower center of gravity and balance makes the twisties fun. 1500 for the Suzuki. 2500 for the Kawasaki...I'm not broke, still having fun
@@eleminohpee9078 supply and demand. Either they remove the bike, unlikely, dropped the price or realistically lobbying the govt to deal with old bikes...
Your enthusiasm for motorcycles, wry sense of humour and creative sense is timeless. Not to mention very useful information. Entertaining, smart, content. Hardly any wonder this video got 1.7 million views. I wonder what it would be like to hear your take on other things...Cheers from an 70 year old sailing cruiser who once rode his fathers Honda 350 and thought it was a great replacement for his BMW 750R that was getting a bit too much for him as he got on...Thank you
Thanks for the memories! I had a friend, that had that same bike, we use to go on rides together. I was 15, with a CL 175, he was an older retired man, and his 360 was new. Years ago I happened to see him, and he said "now he's too old to ride a motorcycle, and he wished we had taken a lot more rides together". My Neighbor, Mr Evans
@@queenbee7074 We live in dire times wenn everything out of the ordinary is immidiately suspect. The man obviously has fond memories, so nothing creepy. I wander what dark secrets many people hide wenn they scream 'creepy!' But you obviously were joking.
Wow! I was really surprised how well the old brakes held up. As a rider for decades, I can tell you young-uns that the biggest improvement has been tyres. Modern tyres (even cheap ones) are incredible compared to the stuff we had back in the 80s.
I own my grandfathers old 72 TS185. Compared to all the dirtbikes I've ridden, it is by far the most agile out of the dirtbike world. Not sure how really, but it feels weightless almost. All the new bikes are so bulky and tall, I feel like a turtle on them, but then I get back on the 185, and it feels like I'm part of the bike
I've been saying this for a couple of decades now. The bikes haven't fundamentally changed all that much, it's more evolutionary. The manufacturers need to work on price before the kids loose interest and live in the digital realm.
@@mtnmotoadv Pay no attention to the hat behind the curtain. Oh and he's funding a revolution against you also. Interesting times, but are they any different than my grandfather's era....no, same crooks.
Every of these videos are like separate movies about the motorcycles industry. All of them are filled with love and passion. I always enjoy watching them. Thanks a lot!
I have a 72 CL350 and it is so much fun to ride. The "modern" 300cc class of bikes has absolutely no appeal to me personally but I thought your analysis was really good and very entertaining. Kudos.
Being one of the grandpas that had the original this one has me written all over it. BTW I think a better comparison bould be with the new 500 twin rather than the same capacity single, as they are aimed at the same riding segment. The single is pretty much a commuter, the 350/360 was a open road bike. Hard to believe hey, young whippersnapper! THE big difference between these two in the forks and chassis , if you are riding them. The old bike flexes like wet spagetti on twisties. You can watch the front froks twist under load. If you follow one, you can watch the rear wheel torsionally twist when cornering ( gotta love a thin round tubular swingarm). The wire wheels don't help... The damping and springing on both is equally aweful, despite the intervening decades, but the original had pretty much no aftermarket options to help it. The old drum on the rear would become completely useless as soon as it heated up, so you had ONE piston stopping the whole bike and that had truely aweful pad material. Completely upside down is the fact that the modern single is MUCH smoother than the old twin ( if you want smooth try the twin current CB500f/r/x). The old bike vibrates and tingles to the point where we would put foam grips on to retain any feeling in our hands. Despite the previous comment, I know several people that did the BIG Loop ( around the outside of Australia...sort of) on the 350 and 360 without a mech glitch. Tyres not included. I wouldn't like to do the same on the single. You mentioned that the dropping of the cyl was for financial reasons. If that's the case, why do we still have the ridiculous transverse inline fours, that have to spin their tits off to go anywhere. Made sense when they were aircooled, but a water cooled TI-L4 is just wide for no reason. Don't get me wrong, I loved my CBR250RR ( the real one with 19000rpm 4cyl) ...ON A RACE TRACK, but on the road. Motors that require a million cc's to get any useful torque are just silly. Absolutely love your channel BTW
Looking at the 300r as just a commuter us exactly what he is pointing out. The new generation of riders (us) use whatever bike we have for all types of riding. Very similar to how the older guys did back in the day.
Yup. I had me one of them there CB360s, too, back in the day. I had a lot of fun on that bike until somebody stole the instruments and all the handlebar controls by severing all the cables and wires with side cutters. As usual, speaking as a film maker and a 50 years rider on five continents: superb work in every respect. Always love to see you on my screen.
Agree absolutely on your comments on the handling. As someone who had GT 250's/GT750's and Honda CBX1000's they flexed like crazy. But, it was normal for us and we just rode around the issue. Great fun. Where I absolutely disagree with you is in regard to the inline 4. "Ridiculous" I have no idea how anyone can say that. Many of us prefer inline 4's, we love the high revs and you can ride them perfectly without being on a track. As for your comments regarding large cc to get useful torque, again many many of us like the characteristics of large capacity multi cylinder bikes. As someone who enjoys going up and down the gearbox I do it all the time on my multi that produces 114 lb.ft of torque. I, and many others dislike V twins etc.
It's so cool seeing the bike that I first started riding on back in 1986 in current videos driving on the roads! My bike was a garage find (hidden in the back of a garage at a yard sale). I rode it for 5,000 miles in 2 months as I went from beginner license to full license. Thanks for another excellent video!
I’m 47 and my dad had the same CB360 when I was a kid. I remember riding in the back of it with him. Awesome video Ryan! I couldn’t agree more on your comment at the end.
@@scinovlog9680 I saw the Kawasaki Versys 300 at a bike show in the Philippines when they first came out. I liked the look of it and converted the price to pounds ,what a bargain,IO was sold. They were announced in Britain a couple of months later with a price tag of nearly 40% more. If you think American prices are expensive take a look across the Atlantic.
Can confirm overseas pricing. In moto mad SE Asia, where incomes are far less than North America? The price is adjusted downward. Some of the features change, but you get the same engine and chassis. The prices are great bargain. Big three make it up on volume? There are other complex global market factors, too.
Nice! My first bikes were a CB250RS and a brace of '78 CB250 Twins (one for spares, of course.) A little underpowered, even in their day - don't think I ever got more than 110 km/h (68 mph), even downhill and lying on the tank. But they were a lot of fun on twisty backroads. :-)
My first bike was a 1974 Kawasaki enduro. It was beat to hell, but I loved it. I rode that bike just about everyday for years. I even rode it to school. Never changed the oil, and that thing ran forever. The reliability of those old bikes is uncanny.
It amazes me how Ryan and the Fortnine editing team make even the video subjects I initially disregarded as disinteresting very entertaining to watch. Going through and watching all of Fortnine's videos now, and loving every minute of it. I wish we had more motorcycle content creators stateside that could even come close to this level of production quality. Hats off to you guys.
As a fifty-something former motorcyclist, I chuckled at this. A very nice little production. Beam frames, drilled discs, forks that didn't flex.... they were all a dream or a fantasy back then, so we didn't know what we didn't have because it wasn't out there. A nice
Oh Dildo - like when he comes out with “eeny, meeny, miny, moe, catch a n****r by the toe” or calls a guy in Thailand a “slope” and the time he claimed a UK politician who had lost an eye in an accident was a “one eyed idiot”.
Watched this for the second time today, great presentation. I was a mechanic and service manager, smack in the middle of the '70s, medium weight Japanese twins were a lot of bread and butter for our business. We had the Suzuki GS400 and the Kawasaki KZ400. Both models went on to refinements that made them better each year. Honda dealers weren't nearby but we knew they too had a good product. Would enjoy any of those machines today as my own. Edit: How many here recall the tool kits of the early larger Hondas ('62 - '66)? They included tire levers and touch up paint, I think perhaps patch kits too for some time. I still have some Honda tool kit items from that era, mostly pliers which are as good as any commercial ones I ever used.
Man, your videos are always the perfect combo of information, riding, science, cinematography, and passion. I'm hooked on watching your videos and I simply can't stop. Simply incredible!
Before I watch, the MOMENT I see Ryan F9 video my heart stops. Yes, it’s motorbikes as a topic. But, he is a real visionary type when it comes to bringing the heart and soul of what the motorcycling actually is in mind, body, and spirit with real science. Super detailed sciences with perfect placed rhetorical and comedic references that is never learned in journalism or film school. Thank you God for making Ryan. And thank you to Ryan for creating his verse and changing the world we all live inside and always being brave.
There are many reasons I can think of, I'm sure you'll find more. 1. The rear end of your seat holds you when you give the bike fully open throttles. 2. the passenger is usually lighter and smaller than the rider. This raises their eyeline from your shoulder blades to behind yours, maybe even above if the pillion is the same size, allowing for a straighter back while riding. 3. The rider sits deeper in the bike. Due to how the frame has to be designed and rear wheel clearance, you can put the rider between rear frame and tank - and why wouldn't you? lower CoG means more stability for free. 4. Why have a pillion when you can have another biker with you on their bike and you can both strap your luggage to your pillion seat? With this design, you can use your luggage as a back rest far better as it will be higher up.
If I had to guess I'd say: 1. Modern bikes use a monoshock rear suspension and therefore CAN have a raised passenger seat. 2. It is more comfortable fir the rider. 3. It gives you a more "aggressive" look.
Well coz the tail of Superbikes are raised so when they add the pillion seat on the chassis is the chassis of either its sport bike counter part or it adds some sort of aerodynamics.
For looks. Makes the bike appear aggressive and tough in "adventure" bikes and makes "sports" bikes look fast. Don't like either of these myself but it does give people a style choice.
I've been riding 28 years and like both vintage and modern bikes. I've owned more than 30 motorcycles in that time, and ridden many more as I worked for Honda, and currently have 8 Hondas in my man-cave. I learned to ride on a 1987 Honda NSR250R (MC16) and in comparison the modern learner legal bikes are very vanilla. Some might even say boring. Sure, they're reliable, but there's more to motorcycle ownership IMO than reliability. The NSR I learned on was already 5 years old by the time I got my hands on it, and it showed, but it built character and taught me how to spin spanners ... and do roadside repairs haha. My wife is currently on her learners and riding a 1974 CB350G. This week she serviced it herself, with the help of two different shop manuals, which included tappet clearances and points timing. She needed a little help from me but mostly question and answer type stuff. Getting your hands dirty is not for everyone, but if you have an interest I'd highly recommend buying yourself a 70's Honda and having some fun with it. Vintage motorcycle ownership is very rewarding.
My brother had a gold cb 360t when I was a little kid. I thought it was awesome. Today, after a lifetime of racing/riding, I have a few bikes. One is a 2021 cbr1000rr. I will always ride. I pray to be riding when I die. Keep up the good work. Your videos are very good. Thanks.
I had a 360T, among many other bikes and this video has really made me appreciate it much more. I probably paid under $200 for it and then sold it for some profit after many smiles on country roads. I love this Canadian fellow and his approach to motorcycling as transportation...
That video took me back to 1979, I learned to drive as a newly licensed driver on my Honda CB360. I had a backrest attachment on mine and a windscreen, as well as a chrome pipe engine guard. Only laid it down a few times, but never hurt anything (much). Bike was a tank compared to the new plastic bikes. I think of that old bike all the time, it gave me the confidence and love of driving I still have today at 59. Only now I go out and jump on the Kawi 636 and get around quicker than ever. Keep making videos, you are very good at it! Cheers
Loved your video, terrific!! I had a 1976 CB 360, and put 79,400 Alaska miles on it!! Rebuilt the carbs once. And other than replacing break pads and tires, the bike was never touched. Oh yes, one new chain and two new sprockets. Loved that bike.
I own a bike called as the CB300F which they only have in limited markets. It puts out just around 24hp at around 2/3rd the price of the CB300R. It misses out on the power, shift light and liquid cooling from the CB300R. But the value it provides for the price is fantastic. This sort of matches the bike you were describing at the end of the video.
The CB300F is one of the best value for money bikes in India, more so than anything KTM and RE can offer. And the 300F can do almost everything. It's simply amazing.
I think motorcycles have some amazing advancements that you've highlighted so so well in this video. What i think was lost over time was, price and quality. When you showed the handpainted and chromed out body parts of the old CB, that really spoke to me. People want to act like our new modern stuff is just superior in every way, but you simply cannot deny that we've cut corners in quality for profit. The old bikes just have this hand made feel to them. They were made with pride. I have ridden old motorcycles and new ones, and new bikes have superior rider experience because of how accessible and easy the engineering has made them.. But they just lack that Ineffable feeling of pride that the old bikes have. I think the same can be said for cars. It's tough because everything is getting more expensive so corners must be cut in order for companies to keep up with the competition who are also finding ways to cut corners in order to make cars and bikes more economical. And even then, because of inflation, you get less for more money now. So even if they were made up to that hand made standard, you would be paying tens of thousands of dollars. Even in the last 30 years it has gotten bad. If you compare a 1990's toyota to a toyota made today, you are literally being scammed. They're garbage now. I find that even the most supposed luxurious brands of cars and motorcycles feel cheaply made now.
Also, some of the "advancements" he listed could be found within a few short years of the 360T he featured. Like how the Honda CB250 T also used the engine as a structural member - in the late '70s. But the real test of quality is as the years go by - I wonder how many of these new bikes will still be on the road regularly in 40+ years.
@Rahul Soren Many motorcycles made today can get to >70k miles with good servicing, quite a few even >100-200k or beyond. Most older bikes have a hard time getting that far unless they're extremely overbuilt and rebuild-friendly like Evo-era Harleys or XS650s, because of tolerances and wear and metallurgy and so on.
@@aussiebloke609 For me the biggest advancement is Antilock brakes and realiability of the newer disc braking systems. ABS just makes a bike way safer and more user friendly. But yes, the engine being structural to the frame is pretty huge too.
@@jvogler_art4708 I won't argue about ABS in theory (I've never actually owned a bike with it myself) although I do wish all bikes still all had the front and rear brakes as separate systems instead of linking the foot/rear brake with the front. I see too many people these days that only use the foot brake and it's a disaster waiting to happen when they try to ride an older bike. I still like to be able to lock my rear tyre when I'm on dirt or sand, but I'd never wish to lock my front - having separate systems would permit switching off ABS for the rear when appropriate, without losing all of it's functionality.
When I first started watching your videos, I didn’t think much about it… they were entertaining nothing more nothing less. Over time, I’ve noticed the quality, the telling of a tale, and what must be a lot of effort to get the right shot…or edit. I’m amazed really. Great job! And, I’m still entertained.
Not quite to the same degree but I get the point you're making. You're more likely to get a good deal on a Japanese bike than you would on a Harley not just on the price of the bike but the insurance as well.
in a video about 2 hondas, we get comments bitching about harley... typical. buy what you can afford and enjoy it. no need to wine about what you cant.
@@williamdeimos2354 I think you just stressed the point, young riders mostly cant afford a new or even older Harley. That does not imply they dont want one.
Learn to wrench on your own stuff, then haunt craigslist until you find something you like within budget. Everything takes effort, but sometimes you get to trade more effort for less cold hard cash. Important; older is better [to a point], and there will ALWAYS be more things wrong with it than you catch. Like someone said above; don't whine. Either make it happen, or move on.
I bought that same bike in 1977 brand new out the door for $1260. It was blue just like in your video. Loved that bike and put many miles on her. Liked it so much I bought a used 1976 model in 1983 and loved it again. Brought back memories for me now at 65 years old. thanks.
This group is doing a fantastic job with content and production value.. Informed and clear content is just what this world needs.. I will take brains and clarity over Lies and half truths that seems to be most of social media these days.
"Off course vintage drum brakes are even worse, terrifying and ineffective handling emergency situations like our politicians" god damn, spot on man, spot on LOL
As a owner of a CB 400/4, allow me to disagree. Actually the performance of that big drum rear brake in my bike is surprisingly good, and because for a while i was having trouble the front wheel calliper, I was braking using only the rear with good confidence. I also own a Yamaha MT03, and both bikes are a lot of fun to ride. But guess which one I am going to keep in the long run...
Yes, that was a brilliant call. Keep the camera still and the dog is a blooper, a distraction. Follow the dog and it becomes an in-joke, part of the scene.
@@findaneesh8885 I would have been hard-pressed not to. I wanted to see if the pup was going to relieve itself on that little beauty of a Honda, and how you two would handle it. I learned to ride on that bike's twin back in 1984.
I am the Old Man. I bought a brand spanking new 1976 Kawasaki KH400 2 stroke triple at age 16 from former World Champion racer Steve Bake at Bake Kawasaki. I did not really know what bought until I rode it lol..... A HIGH REVING ROCKET! Love you stuff! Just live across the line in Lynden. WA. AKA South Matsqui :) Cheers keep it going! Good stuff!
Very nostalgic. CB360 was my first motorcycle in 1975. Best thing I did to it was eventually put in electronic ignition. Freed up oodles of time previously spent lightly filing & polishing the ignition points every two weeks! My CB360 was so special. It put out more power & had a pleasant rumbling sound compared to other CB369's.
Wow, I can't wait for my MPI knowledge test next week! I've been watching these like crazy, and to see a Canadian represent the motorcycle community is truly a patriotic thing.
Well done and very thoughtful presentation. It's kind of amazing that you were able to source a rather pristine '75 Honda CB360 to go head to head with the 21st century equivalent Honda CB300R. Ergo, it should be noted, that the the brand new CB300R has to compete with not only other brands but used bikes as well. I feel that by in large, the motorcycle manufacturers have gone the right direction with improving the overall design and build quality. And as a bonus, today's grandson can go buy a new "retro" style machine that has the look of his granddad's machine but one with all the modern amenities and reliability.
Built quality was the old bike Nelson. Look at it and it still looks like it was just out of the showroom floor. That new bike in 40yrs will be faded and dry cracked even if pampered like the old one. They have improved in making something that looks cool on the showroom floor. But quality built was the old bike. You want to talk reliability. Ohh the sensors and the gadgets will never outlast the old school bike. Thermostat electric fan coolant and whatever else they need. You could maintain your own bike back then. Now ohhh i got an engine light might as well bring it to the dealer and get it checked out. A sensor quits the bike shuts down at 10pm on the side of the road well call someone to come and get you with your new smart phone.The old bike well it just did not happen. Newer is not better.
I have worked on motorcycles since January 1997. I remember the older CB’s the KZ’s GS’S XS’s. In the nineties they were sweet. Who could have seen twenty plus years from then there even sweeter. I wish i had bought some to have today!
“Who got the better deal?”
The dealership! They sold 2 bikes and have been open for literally generations.
good ole stealership
Many have closed.
I can tell you which one is marked up more!
We dealerships have to make money as well, or you wouldn't have anywhere to buy new bikes :P
@@memewizard8372 you make enough on servicing alone, since we can't do repairs ourselves anymore with all the useless electronics onboard.
"holy and unafraid of water...like Jesus" Whoever writes the scripts for these videos is a god damned genius. A funny genius
the word "holy" is a double take so you could replace one with the other and the joke still stands
Ryan F9 and his camerman, they do it all. Ryan writes all the scripts. And as you can tell, he is a legit genius. I am certain they made this video for me, since I just started working on my CB360 a couple weeks ago, and it's been my new obsession. Coincidence??? Yay!
@@9inchpp yeah. We all got that, dude.
I'm in no rush, I'll take the CB360 (actually the earlier CB350 is more to my liking). As always, a great video , Ryan! It'll get you there but with a little more soul and comfort. That's why I bought my W800 Street over modern styled bikes. Love it.
He writes his own scripts ;D
The production value of these videos is equal to many TV documentaries.
Or better...
I would counter that the production and script are WAY above and beyond most tripe offered by "documentary type" channels on TV.
How big is his team and how do they do it with the budget they have?
@@eduardosturla the witty yet well thought out script is what made me a fan... even though he's Canadian
Just playin, No hate
The finest channel on RUclips regardless of subject ..
I'm yet to find anything remotely close .
"Build the same motorcycle with old technology at lower cost"
Royal Einfield: "Hold my beer"
jajajaja sii
can get a brand new meteor or classic 350 for 4500.
Honda still does to! They got the same old 4 cylinder they always used on the same bike! They call it a retro now.
Royal Enfield sucks and is shit
Nah Harley been doing it the best by building literally the same motorcycle at a HIGHER cost.
I worked in the motorcycle industry for 27 years both retail and manufacturing dealing with Japanese, European, and American brands. Your analysis of the economy, engineering, physics, design, and marketing of the motorcycle industry superior to anything out there. You are the best.
My first bike was a twin Honda CB175 when I was 18, I went up to a Goldwing 1100, but for the past 15 years I'm driving a Honda CM400 1980 twin and fully appreciate the rugged and simple design that is still working fine after 41 years. At 60, I don’t see myself on another bike. Everything I learn on that channel is extremely relevant and informative. Thanks.
15 years for me...30 years ago! And I agree 100 percent!
Totally agree ! A kind of analysis not found anywhere else on the web. Superb !
I remember trying someone's CB360 twin back in the late 70s. It was raining. The gravel road was a bit muddy. I took it out in a muddy paddock and did some feet-up donuts. It handled well. I liked it. I had a '74 XL350 then upgraded to a 1980 XR250 that had less torque but more of everything else except weight (and I think mine had the factory performance kit fitted by the original owner). Now I have a CRF250L Rally which fills much the same niche (even more so in non-Rally form) with similar power, slightly more weight (which gets you electric start, water cooling, disk brakes with ABS, much bigger tank) and also half the fuel consumption and 8x the maintenance interval. The XL350 was almost exactly $1000 I believe, the CRF250/300L now are $5500 (ABS, non-Rally). Internet says the CPI ration 2021:1974 is 4.5 so, yeah, we're paying slightly more now. (Note: the mid 70s XL250 was seriously underpowered, and I didn't have one ... so I'm using the 350 as the comparison)
Plus those simple vintage bikes are easy to fix. The new ones with all their electronics tend to decay much faster.
I'm grandpa, 63. Loved this video more than you will ever know, very nicely done. I'll take the twin thank you.
Grandpa here 67. I'll take the old bike any day. I road a cb 350 from Chicago to Vegas with 6 harleys quess what bike didn't have any problems
A bike like this just needs an upgrade in brakes ;-)
I actually bought that exact 360 off Ryan for my dad. It’s his favourite bike by far!
I am 64 but not grandpa (I never had kid... Also I don't see myself as a grandpa !) and I take the CB300R, the CB360T was a shitty bike !
@@jacksontaylor5664 sweet
Bruhhhhh 100 on editing. Someone get this man a Netflix or HBO show!
He and his team are impecible. I don't even have a bike and I just want to watch nonstop. And the knowledge provided is second to none. I learned so much with this video.
Why? He's doing just fine here.
Agreed!
Why? its free here.
Why, so the "experts" could give "input" and change his show by telling what to say and bend his opinion to advertisers.
let me offer a perspective from a "senior citizen." i graduated from high school in 1972 and was a car, truck, and motorcycle nut from the first time i could reach the pedals on "anything." my first "bike" was a Harley-Davidson "M-50", then I graduated to a Yamaha "Twin 100", then came a "brand new" cherry red 1970 Honda 350 that I slept with in my bedroom. The Honda was replaced by a new 71 Kawasaki Mach-III 500 "death machine." by my Senior year, i had gone through all these bikes as well as a few Triumph "choppers", a 71 CB750, and a 68 900 Sportster that i pushed more than i rode. so i have a VERY close relationship with "old bikes" that "old people" still like. i also went through scores of cars and trucks over the last 50 years. today, i have a car collection of old mopars - seven 68-69 Barracudas. with all this background noted, let me offer this simple observation: my collection of Barracudas are 54 years old. do you think anyone will be collecting a 2022 Prius 54 years from now? i doubt it. sure, new motorcycles have incredible technology and OF COURSE, they are "better" in many ways. however, when you park that old CB360 beside that new CB300R - the OLD bike just looks SO much classier and "cool." call it the retro-design or the color or the mechanical way so many things worked - the "presence" of that old Honda is just so more memorable. frankly, if i was offered both those bikes for FREE - it would take me about 1 second to say: "thank you, I'll take the old CB360."
you can certainly tell by looking at honda's remakes of their classics: the 2018 super cub, the new monkey, the 2022 DAX, the H'ness CB350, and even something like the resurrected BSA gold star.. the 'sheen' of chrome and quality metal fleck paint on steel tanks and side covers and so on; the new versions all look soulless and faded. all the (heavy) quality parts have been replaced with plastic, which may be lighter and last longer if untouched, but it scuffs easy, fades, cracks, and it's as cheap to look at as it is to produce.
same as most cars now, the cheap plastic bodies they can make in any shape let us make the most mathematically aerodynamic and strong-but-lightweight body shape.. but everyone is following the same equation so every bike looks the damn same. i haven't seen a good looking bike since the 80s, that wasn't some sort of throwback design.
I agree with you except for the old cliché of people won't want to fix up modern cars in 50 years. They will, because a Prius or a Tesla will be retro and cool in the future. Cars all go through a similar pattern as you know. New and desirable, older and functional everyday cars, old bangers still working, old and knackered cheap to buy not cool, then as they get older and rarer they become more popular and desirable and the prices go up and up and people will run them again. Probably.
This is old Top Gear level of a motor show review.
I disagree simply because I hated old Top Gear but love this.
no way, this has actual information and not just macho bullshit.
Maybe not “old” top gear, you are right that sucked. New top gear before they where fired/quit.
@@edwardspan396 when I say 'old top Gear' I mean the one with that insufferable prick that is Jeremy Clarkson.
@@gustavmeyrink_2.0 Show us on the doll where Jeremy touched you.
Im just glad the new one has a round headlight. Long live the round headlight!!!
I'm glad I'm not the only one that thinks this. Any other shape seems unnatural.
I agree i got the 2017 model and the v shape headlight isn’t my favorite
i want a square headlight tho
Couldn't agree with that ending more!
He's the voice of the youth to all those big companies... thanks to him for that but will this video change anything? Hard to believe... :/
is that THE Flump
What are you doing on a motorcycle vid ? xD
:O
its The Fluump :0
I bought a 350 Honda for $795.00 in 1968 after I got back from Vietnam. Compared to what was available, it was way beyond what they offered. It would go slightly over 100mph and had a 10, 500 redline and seemed fast to me until the 750 Honda came along. Excellent job doing the comparison between the old and the new versions.
350 was much better than the 360... my first was an 8 valve Yamaha 500, THAT was a good bike.
My story is almost the same . First bike a 350, the an 1980 750 f. Great bikes. I also had a 360, it was a pig. Fell over a lot.
The 360 was to tall, bad design. Ride safe.
I owned a 360t just loved it, when to Portugal with my fiance and camping gear, we had a wonderful time, we married, and years later divorced but I still love the 360
Call common motor in houston tx. Brendan supplies parts and tech advice for the old hondas. a maybe source a 360 for you
My friend had one in storage and he died.. I don't know what became of it.. I was supposed to help him get it out and get it running..
that sucks that you got a divorce hope your still fine
It's okay buddy, you deserve someone better.
Haha love doesn't want or need anything
This is the most articulate, interesting media on motorcycling I’ve ever seen. This young man is talented. I hope someone pays him well.
Valid point ~ yet he's still kinda a jerk...so for himself he should work.
@@JTA1961 wow, relax. 😂
@@theoldleafybeard No he's kind of right. He has done business with Brett Tkacs, who is essentially a professional scam artist.
Brett sucessfully advocated for stricter motorcycle licensing laws. The new law? That you must take one of Brett's classes to get your motorcycle license! They're $900 in total.
I think I’ve said it before but I’ll say it again: F9 is the best thing to come from Canada since Rush
Got to listen to me some Red Barchetta now
Well said but I'd also add Guess Who to the list.
Mac demarco?
Bryan Adams, anyone?
You're all wrong. the correct answer is John Candy.
Reason why the Royal Enfield is doing so well is exactly that it's an actually old tech motorbike at a low upfront and maintenance cost.
Just what Ryan ordered 😁
Conversely, a big reason Harley Davidson's struggling is that they're selling old tech bikes for cutting edge tech prices.
Royal Enfield's Classic 350 has an MSRP of $4600, the CB300R in this video is $5,050, that 10% discount is even less when you consider that OTD costs are going to be something like 7k for both bikes after fees and the stealerships gets their pound of flesh. New bikes, even beginner ones, are not affordable at all for most people.
@@tstartrekdude I wonder why it's like this in canada , in india cb300r is 5100$ whereas classic 350 is 3700$ .... it's pretty significant price difference(I mentioned this price including all tax , insurance ,etc )
@@ankitsharma203Because they can, I assume. They know someone in Canada that considers buying a Royal Enfield is doing so because they like the look of it, not because it's cheaper than a Honda.
I've looked at them in Sweden too, but they're just way too expensive. I'd rather get a Ninja300 or similar, it's significantly cheaper up front.
That said I am still riding a GSX400 from 1983, so I absolutely agree with the video and an Enfield would be a slight downgrade, at least in power.
@@LarsaXLenfield will be a downgrade in power, handling and finish levels.
"Ineffective at emergency situations, like our politicians."
Nothing Noone if American politicians were a braking system, they’d just be the piston dragging on rusted calipers after sitting in a field for a decade.
Ryan wins the quote of the new decade!
Best comparison ever... He could be Brazilian. 😅😅😅
@@JanitorJay83, you got me by surprise, I startled my family laughing!
America ain't the only country on earth.. .NEWS FLASH I KNOW....
"Holey and unafraid of water, like Jesus" Bro you're killin' me
Ha ha ha ha ha
And they'll both save you ✝️
Its these quips that brings me to Fort9
I was rolling on that one!!
That's exactly what Jesus said to Romans...
Ryan - you're a wordsmith, poet, and a genuine engineer. Incredible content.
Yes, I agree, nice way to put it Mr Graeme Morrison. Another informative and entertaining episode...
@@jonathanwearne so true
If you like bikes or not, this is just really high quality content. Even with no interest in bikes or knowledge of them you can still just be entertained
I agree 100%.
That 360 T was my first bike, same color and everything! It was a 76 and I paid $650 for it used in 1981. It came with 3500 miles on the clock and was one of the most reliable bikes I ever owned. Thanks for the trip down memory lane! Great video as always, love the channel.
My first bike as well. In red. In 1985 $250 cash made from baling hay and shaping Christmas trees on tree farm in 90 degree weather all summer. Good times. Man that bike was buzzy and slow but it never let me down.
5:48 I feel like the cameraman really wanted to film that dog.
I think that dog wanted to mark its territory on that back tire :)
100% Priorities eh.
9:02 stalking
Wonderful happy stupid dog!
Why is the time stamp after it happens pls somebody explain to me why somebody would do this
Perfect: "Can you do this for three grand? Because that will sell motorcycling to the next generation."
Insane to think thats how much a new Grom or Monkey costs today :(
you can if you build your own get friendly with your local bike wreckers and build some cool stuff
Sure, buy the bike from China instead of Japan.
Daveinet you mean like BMW? That’s where they ended up building the 650s... at least the engine.
@@djw1091994 I was up for buying the 125 Trail Cub. £3600....Ye Gods
Will the new bike last 45years I wonder? 🤔
More like 5 years and then the scrap heap. In another 20 years the old 360T will still be desirable and the modern 300...totally forgotten?
not even almost xD
Khaffit hahaha 😂 love this comment
Probably not, it's a budget bike. Most of the old budget bikes aren't around either 🤷♂️
Why wouldn't it? With the same maintanance there's no reason it wouldn't last as long duhh...
I'm a Canadian from Vancouver living in Australia - love your videos bro! The humour and shots of Vancouver and top-shelf analysis are awesome! Keep up the good work! I like how you tied the purchase price of the bike into the real life economic considerations of consumers - next level =)
First, another gem. Great piece. Thank you.
I’m grandpa in this context being 60 years old. I have witnessed the entire progression first hand. Maybe we got a better deal back then, but there’s a big trade off. My first new motorcycle was a ‘74 Suzuki TM 125 (TM was forerunner to RM) and cost $725. US :-) Today, my MT-10 outperforms the most exotic machinery of 15 years ago with rock solid reliability. Its ugly with transformer eyes and plastic everywhere. But to me, the handling, braking, and acceleration are all worth it. I’d never want to go back to the performance of the 90’s, let alone the ‘70’s. Modern bikes are terrific, but too expensive to attract new riders. I think this was your point. Well taken. Keep up the good work, “Sonny” :-).
Most honest yet coherent comment I’ve seen here.
He is also not saying build all motos to the 70s standard we just need our entry level bikes to be built to the budget. Get somone in the door with a good experience for 2k and eventually they will want to spend ten. But as it sits a 5k beginner bike puts a lot of potential riders off and makes them either not ride or buy used.
I'm the same age Gramps, got to modify my first road bike in High School machine shop.
My first street bike in 1981 was a top heavy '77 Suzuki gs750. 7 bikes later my v-twin Vulcan with way better lower center of gravity and balance makes the twisties fun. 1500 for the Suzuki. 2500 for the Kawasaki...I'm not broke, still having fun
@@airglide2 honesty and coherency are made for each other.
"yet" is better off adding an i and hunting bigfoot in Nepal.
Moral of the story: Buy used, don't fret about perfection, have a blast.
Absolutely
If we all buy used and no one buys new, how can we buy used?
@@eleminohpee9078 supply and demand. Either they remove the bike, unlikely, dropped the price or realistically lobbying the govt to deal with old bikes...
@@eleminohpee9078 The manufacturers would be forced to reduce the price of new machines.
@@admiralbeez8143 Nope. If anything due to their loss of profits they would be forced to increase the price further.
his videos feel like everyone is happy in this world and enjoying their sundays.
Your enthusiasm for motorcycles, wry sense of humour and creative sense is timeless. Not to mention very useful information. Entertaining, smart, content. Hardly any wonder this video got 1.7 million views. I wonder what it would be like to hear your take on other things...Cheers from an 70 year old sailing cruiser who once rode his fathers Honda 350 and thought it was a great replacement for his BMW 750R that was getting a bit too much for him as he got on...Thank you
Thanks for the memories! I had a friend, that had that same bike, we use to go on rides together. I was 15, with a CL 175, he was an older retired man, and his 360 was new. Years ago I happened to see him, and he said "now he's too old to ride a motorcycle, and he wished we had taken a lot more rides together". My Neighbor, Mr Evans
That doesn’t sound creepy at all
@@queenbee7074 It's a sad story of a nice old Man
@@queenbee7074 We live in dire times wenn everything out of the ordinary is immidiately suspect. The man obviously has fond memories, so nothing creepy.
I wander what dark secrets many people hide wenn they scream 'creepy!'
But you obviously were joking.
Still cruising on an 82 Suzuki GS 750. Smooooth Reliable & recommended! 👍
@@Bellathebear777 I had some UJM's including a new Suzuki GS550, it was awesome! Mine was a 78.
Wow! I was really surprised how well the old brakes held up. As a rider for decades, I can tell you young-uns that the biggest improvement has been tyres. Modern tyres (even cheap ones) are incredible compared to the stuff we had back in the 80s.
yeah back in the early eighties blow outs were common on heavy cars and tread wear was just awefull.
You never used Dunlop K81.
Pirelli, Michelin.
@@edwardroberts8761 Continental, Heidenau, Metzeler.
@@C4H10N4O2 they were great too. The shop I worked at didn't really stock them.
Oh my morning just got better.
Oh my night just got better. 11:07 here brother. From Philippines!
My evening got better in Ireland lol
and my afternoon
Better morning in Brazil!
Just got back from work and its your morning..interesting.
I own my grandfathers old 72 TS185. Compared to all the dirtbikes I've ridden, it is by far the most agile out of the dirtbike world. Not sure how really, but it feels weightless almost. All the new bikes are so bulky and tall, I feel like a turtle on them, but then I get back on the 185, and it feels like I'm part of the bike
5:45 i appreciate how the cameraman panned a bit to follow the dog, and you left it in the final cut.
Best motorcycle content on RUclips
Thanks i try my best on every video so you guys can enjoy
Amen.
Not sure why you needed to add the word motorcycle in there. Best content on RUclips in general.
Correction, best motorcycle content anywhere..
I would some of the best content PERIOD!
9/9 for production quality.
5/7
8/8
All I ever think about is Boobies.
@@LTLT900 That will change after you buy some. You'll get over it.
A big applause for the whole team. I've seen several of your videos and the quality is excellent! This one is phenomenal.
"Wages have been stagnant for 50 years but the cost of living has not" pointing that out will get you banned from them tube
@J G Too honest
Reason? The global scam of the Federal Reserve.
I've been saying this for a couple of decades now. The bikes haven't fundamentally changed all that much, it's more evolutionary. The manufacturers need to work on price before the kids loose interest and live in the digital realm.
all hail the holy oyveytube overlords
@@mtnmotoadv Pay no attention to the hat behind the curtain. Oh and he's funding a revolution against you also. Interesting times, but are they any different than my grandfather's era....no, same crooks.
1973 CB 350 was my first bike. At 16 yrs. of age I could take apart and repair anything on that bike. Such a simple machine.
Using the2022 cb350 great bike
I love how this video has an actual conclusion and an Actual Answer to the question!!
Every of these videos are like separate movies about the motorcycles industry. All of them are filled with love and passion. I always enjoy watching them. Thanks a lot!
The choice of words and the innuendos, make his narration hilarious. Love his style
He sounds like a cross between Rod Serling and Agent Smith.
"You'll die before you'll ever need to replace one of these, but that day may come sooner than you like."
Fortnine: sell yesterday's motorcycle for less money
Motto Guzzi and Triumph: sell yesterday's motorcycle for more money
Triumph? I think harley fits better
@@ericiglesias4313 sell caveman technology for a kidney
@Markus Holler to be fair yes, :)
but they'll never give fortnine one to review :(
Don't forget Harley: sell yesterday's motorcycle for more than you'd spend on a car.
@@joshbobst1629 to be fair their entry levels aren't too bad, 9-10k
I have a 72 CL350 and it is so much fun to ride. The "modern" 300cc class of bikes has absolutely no appeal to me personally but I thought your analysis was really good and very entertaining. Kudos.
👍
Being one of the grandpas that had the original this one has me written all over it. BTW I think a better comparison bould be with the new 500 twin rather than the same capacity single, as they are aimed at the same riding segment. The single is pretty much a commuter, the 350/360 was a open road bike. Hard to believe hey, young whippersnapper!
THE big difference between these two in the forks and chassis , if you are riding them. The old bike flexes like wet spagetti on twisties. You can watch the front froks twist under load. If you follow one, you can watch the rear wheel torsionally twist when cornering ( gotta love a thin round tubular swingarm). The wire wheels don't help...
The damping and springing on both is equally aweful, despite the intervening decades, but the original had pretty much no aftermarket options to help it.
The old drum on the rear would become completely useless as soon as it heated up, so you had ONE piston stopping the whole bike and that had truely aweful pad material.
Completely upside down is the fact that the modern single is MUCH smoother than the old twin ( if you want smooth try the twin current CB500f/r/x). The old bike vibrates and tingles to the point where we would put foam grips on to retain any feeling in our hands.
Despite the previous comment, I know several people that did the BIG Loop ( around the outside of Australia...sort of) on the 350 and 360 without a mech glitch. Tyres not included. I wouldn't like to do the same on the single.
You mentioned that the dropping of the cyl was for financial reasons. If that's the case, why do we still have the ridiculous transverse inline fours, that have to spin their tits off to go anywhere. Made sense when they were aircooled, but a water cooled TI-L4 is just wide for no reason. Don't get me wrong, I loved my CBR250RR ( the real one with 19000rpm 4cyl) ...ON A RACE TRACK, but on the road. Motors that require a million cc's to get any useful torque are just silly.
Absolutely love your channel BTW
Well said sir
Looking at the 300r as just a commuter us exactly what he is pointing out. The new generation of riders (us) use whatever bike we have for all types of riding. Very similar to how the older guys did back in the day.
Yup. I had me one of them there CB360s, too, back in the day. I had a lot of fun on that bike until somebody stole the instruments and all the handlebar controls by severing all the cables and wires with side cutters. As usual, speaking as a film maker and a 50 years rider on five continents: superb work in every respect. Always love to see you on my screen.
The current Honda 500 twins are future classics many of us will look back upon.
Agree absolutely on your comments on the handling. As someone who had GT 250's/GT750's and Honda CBX1000's they flexed like crazy. But, it was normal for us and we just rode around the issue. Great fun. Where I absolutely disagree with you is in regard to the inline 4. "Ridiculous" I have no idea how anyone can say that. Many of us prefer inline 4's, we love the high revs and you can ride them perfectly without being on a track. As for your comments regarding large cc to get useful torque, again many many of us like the characteristics of large capacity multi cylinder bikes. As someone who enjoys going up and down the gearbox I do it all the time on my multi that produces 114 lb.ft of torque. I, and many others dislike V twins etc.
note to editor-loved the old 70's era match needle viewfinder framing. Your creativity doesn't go unnoticed !
This has to be the most informative and highest production quality motorcycle channel on youtube.
Was coming here to say this but you beat me to it. Brilliant quality.
Agreed.
It's so cool seeing the bike that I first started riding on back in 1986 in current videos driving on the roads! My bike was a garage find (hidden in the back of a garage at a yard sale). I rode it for 5,000 miles in 2 months as I went from beginner license to full license. Thanks for another excellent video!
5:16 "Current disks are holy and therefore unafraid of water, like Jesus." Best thing I've ever heard HAHAHAA
I heard it as hole-y...guess that could work too.
@@lukecalumlyonwrath7723 "Holey" would be the correct of spelling it if he didn't add the "like Jesus" comment at the end, turning it into a joke.
I never comment. But man, I have to say these films are amazing all around every single time
Films they are indeed!
I remember taking my new wife across Canada in the early 80’s with all our camping gear....and never having a problem with the ct360 we rode...awesome
I’m 47 and my dad had the same CB360 when I was a kid. I remember riding in the back of it with him. Awesome video Ryan! I couldn’t agree more on your comment at the end.
“Beauty is beholden to the age of the eye”
This man is right. Motorbikes are too god damn expensive nowadays.
kiki the gerbil in Cambodia, you can pick up a new Grom/MSX125 for less than $2500. Used ones goes for $900-$1200.
@@scinovlog9680 I saw the Kawasaki Versys 300 at a bike show in the Philippines when they first came out. I liked the look of it and converted the price to pounds ,what a bargain,IO was sold. They were announced in Britain a couple of months later with a price tag of nearly 40% more. If you think American prices are expensive take a look across the Atlantic.
Can confirm overseas pricing. In moto mad SE Asia, where incomes are far less than North America? The price is adjusted downward. Some of the features change, but you get the same engine and chassis. The prices are great bargain. Big three make it up on volume? There are other complex global market factors, too.
Inflation bois
In Singapore, a brand new Honda/Yamaha moped will cost you 9000 USD.
Im restoring a vintage 1979 CB myself for my first bike- thanks for letting me know what Im getting into vs a new bike, really cool video
You can always resto mod it. Modern discs and calipers to help with the braking etc.
i got a 74" Moto guzzi 250ts with dual front drum brakes cable operated, so thecnecly no brakes.
Nice! My first bikes were a CB250RS and a brace of '78 CB250 Twins (one for spares, of course.) A little underpowered, even in their day - don't think I ever got more than 110 km/h (68 mph), even downhill and lying on the tank. But they were a lot of fun on twisty backroads. :-)
My first bike was a 1974 Kawasaki enduro. It was beat to hell, but I loved it.
I rode that bike just about everyday for years. I even rode it to school. Never changed the oil, and that thing ran forever. The reliability of those old bikes is uncanny.
It amazes me how Ryan and the Fortnine editing team make even the video subjects I initially disregarded as disinteresting very entertaining to watch. Going through and watching all of Fortnine's videos now, and loving every minute of it. I wish we had more motorcycle content creators stateside that could even come close to this level of production quality. Hats off to you guys.
As a fifty-something former motorcyclist, I chuckled at this. A very nice little production.
Beam frames, drilled discs, forks that didn't flex.... they were all a dream or a fantasy back then, so we didn't know what we didn't have because it wasn't out there.
A nice
The BBC should have grabbed this guy to take over Top Gear - he is the new Jeremy Clarkson but without the needless insults. Genius.
yes! absolutely!! give this man his own show.... wait, he already has that here... put this there!
neeless insults is what we need
Yeh I agree a good insult can be a thing of beauty - but Clarkson often stepped well over the line being racist, sexist etc.
Oh Dildo - like when he comes out with “eeny, meeny, miny, moe, catch a n****r by the toe” or calls a guy in Thailand a “slope” and the time he claimed a UK politician who had lost an eye in an accident was a “one eyed idiot”.
@Dildo Baggins How noble of you, Dildo.......
Watched this for the second time today, great presentation. I was a mechanic and service manager, smack in the middle of the '70s, medium weight Japanese twins were a lot of bread and butter for our business. We had the Suzuki GS400 and the Kawasaki KZ400. Both models went on to refinements that made them better each year. Honda dealers weren't nearby but we knew they too had a good product. Would enjoy any of those machines today as my own.
Edit: How many here recall the tool kits of the early larger Hondas ('62 - '66)? They included tire levers and touch up paint, I think perhaps patch kits too for some time. I still have some Honda tool kit items from that era, mostly pliers which are as good as any commercial ones I ever used.
This is the best put together channel on the planet
Man, your videos are always the perfect combo of information, riding, science, cinematography, and passion. I'm hooked on watching your videos and I simply can't stop. Simply incredible!
Before I watch, the MOMENT I see Ryan F9 video my heart stops. Yes, it’s motorbikes as a topic. But, he is a real visionary type when it comes to bringing the heart and soul of what the motorcycling actually is in mind, body, and spirit with real science. Super detailed sciences with perfect placed rhetorical and comedic references that is never learned in journalism or film school. Thank you God for making Ryan. And thank you to Ryan for creating his verse and changing the world we all live inside and always being brave.
Question: Why do all these newer bike have a raised passenger seat or pillon? (Perhaps you could do a vid about it)
There are many reasons I can think of, I'm sure you'll find more.
1. The rear end of your seat holds you when you give the bike fully open throttles.
2. the passenger is usually lighter and smaller than the rider. This raises their eyeline from your shoulder blades to behind yours, maybe even above if the pillion is the same size, allowing for a straighter back while riding.
3. The rider sits deeper in the bike. Due to how the frame has to be designed and rear wheel clearance, you can put the rider between rear frame and tank - and why wouldn't you? lower CoG means more stability for free.
4. Why have a pillion when you can have another biker with you on their bike and you can both strap your luggage to your pillion seat? With this design, you can use your luggage as a back rest far better as it will be higher up.
If I had to guess I'd say:
1. Modern bikes use a monoshock rear suspension and therefore CAN have a raised passenger seat.
2. It is more comfortable fir the rider.
3. It gives you a more "aggressive" look.
Well coz the tail of Superbikes are raised so when they add the pillion seat on the chassis is the chassis of either its sport bike counter part or it adds some sort of aerodynamics.
For looks.
Makes the bike appear aggressive and tough in "adventure" bikes and makes "sports" bikes look fast.
Don't like either of these myself but it does give people a style choice.
To make the older bike more beautiful
What a great case study on the evolution of motorcycles. I used to think a 360 was a big bike😬
In the 70s, a 360 was considered a medium size bike. 100s were small. 650 big. About 78, some CB350 Hondas were beating some 650s in the quarter.
"holy and unafraid of water...like Jesus" lolll cracked me up
holey
Jesus created water. Why would He be afraid of anything?
And then he touched the discs! The pain!
@QuestionMan I bet Jesus himself would laugh at that.
@@exothermal.sprocket so his passion was just for show? I guess I don't feel so bad for him anymore. Thanks!
I've been riding 28 years and like both vintage and modern bikes. I've owned more than 30 motorcycles in that time, and ridden many more as I worked for Honda, and currently have 8 Hondas in my man-cave.
I learned to ride on a 1987 Honda NSR250R (MC16) and in comparison the modern learner legal bikes are very vanilla. Some might even say boring. Sure, they're reliable, but there's more to motorcycle ownership IMO than reliability. The NSR I learned on was already 5 years old by the time I got my hands on it, and it showed, but it built character and taught me how to spin spanners ... and do roadside repairs haha.
My wife is currently on her learners and riding a 1974 CB350G. This week she serviced it herself, with the help of two different shop manuals, which included tappet clearances and points timing. She needed a little help from me but mostly question and answer type stuff.
Getting your hands dirty is not for everyone, but if you have an interest I'd highly recommend buying yourself a 70's Honda and having some fun with it. Vintage motorcycle ownership is very rewarding.
"Mixing every known metric with a hockey stick." That was pure genius. Great video in understandable terminology.
My brother had a gold cb 360t when I was a little kid. I thought it was awesome. Today, after a lifetime of racing/riding, I have a few bikes. One is a 2021 cbr1000rr. I will always ride. I pray to be riding when I die. Keep up the good work. Your videos are very good. Thanks.
And that friends, is why Royal Enfield 650's are going to sell like hell!!!!
Would love to see a comparison of the Interceptor 650 with a 70s Commando or late 60s Bonnie
And the interceptor has 270 crank which will sound good
Randail Lizarte not as good as a Commando or Bonnie with the 360 crank though although a 360 crank has other issues it does sound amazing.
Honda has come up with a similar modern classic CB350 here in India . Hope that does well
Damn, a month late hahaha
I knew somebody would think of that too, they seem like a great idea now
I had a 360T, among many other bikes and this video has really made me appreciate it much more. I probably paid under $200 for it and then sold it for some profit after many smiles on country roads. I love this Canadian fellow and his approach to motorcycling as transportation...
I enjoy the way he appreciates all the small differences and simple old & new features .
That video took me back to 1979, I learned to drive as a newly licensed driver on my Honda CB360. I had a backrest attachment on mine and a windscreen, as well as a chrome pipe engine guard. Only laid it down a few times, but never hurt anything (much). Bike was a tank compared to the new plastic bikes. I think of that old bike all the time, it gave me the confidence and love of driving I still have today at 59. Only now I go out and jump on the Kawi 636 and get around quicker than ever.
Keep making videos, you are very good at it! Cheers
Been riding on and off for 30 years... learned more about my motorcycles in this video than I had in the decades of riding. Brilliant work!
5:53 who else tried to wipe their screen thinking its a hair.
100% Blew on the screen
I admit my foolishness.
Hello, my name is Patrick, and I too was fooled.
Same
I thought it was just me.
Loved your video, terrific!! I had a 1976 CB 360, and put 79,400 Alaska miles on it!! Rebuilt the carbs once. And other than replacing break pads and tires, the bike was never touched. Oh yes, one new chain and two new sprockets. Loved that bike.
I own a bike called as the CB300F which they only have in limited markets. It puts out just around 24hp at around 2/3rd the price of the CB300R. It misses out on the power, shift light and liquid cooling from the CB300R. But the value it provides for the price is fantastic. This sort of matches the bike you were describing at the end of the video.
The CB300F is one of the best value for money bikes in India, more so than anything KTM and RE can offer. And the 300F can do almost everything. It's simply amazing.
@@thebuddhasmiles its new engine and more vibs than a typical honda engine..
But budget matters🫠
I think motorcycles have some amazing advancements that you've highlighted so so well in this video. What i think was lost over time was, price and quality. When you showed the handpainted and chromed out body parts of the old CB, that really spoke to me. People want to act like our new modern stuff is just superior in every way, but you simply cannot deny that we've cut corners in quality for profit. The old bikes just have this hand made feel to them. They were made with pride. I have ridden old motorcycles and new ones, and new bikes have superior rider experience because of how accessible and easy the engineering has made them.. But they just lack that Ineffable feeling of pride that the old bikes have. I think the same can be said for cars. It's tough because everything is getting more expensive so corners must be cut in order for companies to keep up with the competition who are also finding ways to cut corners in order to make cars and bikes more economical. And even then, because of inflation, you get less for more money now. So even if they were made up to that hand made standard, you would be paying tens of thousands of dollars. Even in the last 30 years it has gotten bad. If you compare a 1990's toyota to a toyota made today, you are literally being scammed. They're garbage now.
I find that even the most supposed luxurious brands of cars and motorcycles feel cheaply made now.
Check out the Yamaha SR400 - it's a rare bike made to that old spec at relatively similar prices, details and all.
Also, some of the "advancements" he listed could be found within a few short years of the 360T he featured. Like how the Honda CB250 T also used the engine as a structural member - in the late '70s. But the real test of quality is as the years go by - I wonder how many of these new bikes will still be on the road regularly in 40+ years.
@Rahul Soren Many motorcycles made today can get to >70k miles with good servicing, quite a few even >100-200k or beyond. Most older bikes have a hard time getting that far unless they're extremely overbuilt and rebuild-friendly like Evo-era Harleys or XS650s, because of tolerances and wear and metallurgy and so on.
@@aussiebloke609 For me the biggest advancement is Antilock brakes and realiability of the newer disc braking systems. ABS just makes a bike way safer and more user friendly. But yes, the engine being structural to the frame is pretty huge too.
@@jvogler_art4708 I won't argue about ABS in theory (I've never actually owned a bike with it myself) although I do wish all bikes still all had the front and rear brakes as separate systems instead of linking the foot/rear brake with the front. I see too many people these days that only use the foot brake and it's a disaster waiting to happen when they try to ride an older bike. I still like to be able to lock my rear tyre when I'm on dirt or sand, but I'd never wish to lock my front - having separate systems would permit switching off ABS for the rear when appropriate, without losing all of it's functionality.
I love tge "retro-tutorial" feel of this video. Kudos to everyone involved!
Really liked this review. Like always! I just got home from a 4hr ride on my ‘76 Honda CB 550. She runs like a clock!
love my 75' cb 550! rebuilt and screams.
When I first started watching your videos, I didn’t think much about it… they were entertaining nothing more nothing less. Over time, I’ve noticed the quality, the telling of a tale, and what must be a lot of effort to get the right shot…or edit. I’m amazed really. Great job! And, I’m still entertained.
I’m a Grandpa and I got it right. Bought two new ones in 76 one was a CJ 360 no electric starter “ I do miss them so.
Now it’s a gold wing
Gotta say after watching motorcycle videos on youtube for 3 years, you are the best motorcycle youtuber ever!
love the mototcycle physics!
hey look its the Harley problem again
"We need to get young riders, let's sell them a $29,000 bike!"
I'm not spending new car money on a bike. I'm not sorry Hahaha I don't like spending new car money on a new car.
Not quite to the same degree but I get the point you're making. You're more likely to get a good deal on a Japanese bike than you would on a Harley not just on the price of the bike but the insurance as well.
in a video about 2 hondas, we get comments bitching about harley... typical. buy what you can afford and enjoy it. no need to wine about what you cant.
@@williamdeimos2354 I think you just stressed the point, young riders mostly cant afford a new or even older Harley. That does not imply they dont want one.
Learn to wrench on your own stuff, then haunt craigslist until you find something you like within budget.
Everything takes effort, but sometimes you get to trade more effort for less cold hard cash. Important; older is better [to a point], and there will ALWAYS be more things wrong with it than you catch.
Like someone said above; don't whine. Either make it happen, or move on.
I bought that same bike in 1977 brand new out the door for $1260. It was blue just like in your video. Loved that bike and put many miles on her. Liked it so much I bought a used 1976 model in 1983 and loved it again. Brought back memories for me now at 65 years old. thanks.
Wow, I'm impressed. However, I'm impressed with the production style and content every time, therefore I'm confused that I stay impressed.
This group is doing a fantastic job with content and production value.. Informed and clear content is just what this world needs.. I will take brains and clarity over Lies and half truths that seems to be most of social media these days.
"Off course vintage drum brakes are even worse, terrifying and ineffective handling emergency situations like our politicians" god damn, spot on man, spot on LOL
As a owner of a CB 400/4, allow me to disagree. Actually the performance of that big drum rear brake in my bike is surprisingly good, and because for a while i was having trouble the front wheel calliper, I was braking using only the rear with good confidence. I also own a Yamaha MT03, and both bikes are a lot of fun to ride. But guess which one I am going to keep in the long run...
"Off course vintage drum brakes are even worse". Dude, my '62 BMW has the original 'antilock' drum brakes. How's that for ahead of its time?
@@42much1 hang on to and preserve your Honda 400 four. They are becoming VERY hard to find.
I love how Aneesh kept the dog that entered in the shot at 5:45 as long as possible
I was worried because there wasn't a tree or hydrant around.
I almost followed him out of the frame. Priorities eh!
Yes, that was a brilliant call. Keep the camera still and the dog is a blooper, a distraction. Follow the dog and it becomes an in-joke, part of the scene.
@@findaneesh8885 I would have been hard-pressed not to. I wanted to see if the pup was going to relieve itself on that little beauty of a Honda, and how you two would handle it. I learned to ride on that bike's twin back in 1984.
I am the Old Man. I bought a brand spanking new 1976 Kawasaki KH400 2 stroke triple at age 16 from former World Champion racer Steve Bake at Bake Kawasaki. I did not really know what bought until I rode it lol..... A HIGH REVING ROCKET!
Love you stuff! Just live across the line in Lynden. WA. AKA South Matsqui :)
Cheers keep it going! Good stuff!
5:19 I shall now always refer to drilled rotors as 'jesus brakes', lol
If motorcycling was a religion , he would be the Messiah 🔥
holy and unafraid of water
God more like 😅
Riding his motorcycle on water.
He'd wheelie across the Atlantic with a hypermotard , Messiah style
@Khaffit cause u don't get life of Brian references
Thank you for this great comparison. I grew up motorcycling in the 70s.
Very nostalgic. CB360 was my first motorcycle in 1975. Best thing I did to it was eventually put in electronic ignition. Freed up oodles of time previously spent lightly filing & polishing the ignition points every two weeks! My CB360 was so special. It put out more power & had a pleasant rumbling sound compared to other CB369's.
Wow, I can't wait for my MPI knowledge test next week! I've been watching these like crazy, and to see a Canadian represent the motorcycle community is truly a patriotic thing.
This is an absolute masterpiece of production quality! Hats off.
My mind says modern, but my heart says classic.
And my bank says:"Walk!"
go for a royal enfield 650.
@@punavmirlekar I have an XSR900 🤣
@@adiohead dammm! i thought you were looking to buy a motorcycle haha! i suggested RE because it is low tech. ... anyway! happy & safe riding mate
@@punavmirlekar even the metallurgy is low tech ... and low quality
I know nothing about bikes and will probably never buy one, but that was fascinating!
Good to see you got someone to lend you the CB300R, can’t believe you got it done all in 2 weeks from asking nice job FN team!
Well done and very thoughtful presentation. It's kind of amazing that you were able to source a rather pristine '75 Honda CB360 to go head to head with the 21st century equivalent Honda CB300R. Ergo, it should be noted, that the the brand new CB300R has to compete with not only other brands but used bikes as well. I feel that by in large, the motorcycle manufacturers have gone the right direction with improving the overall design and build quality. And as a bonus, today's grandson can go buy a new "retro" style machine that has the look of his granddad's machine but one with all the modern amenities and reliability.
Built quality was the old bike Nelson. Look at it and it still looks like
it was just out of the showroom floor. That new bike in 40yrs will be faded
and dry cracked even if pampered like the old one. They have improved in
making something that looks cool on the showroom floor. But quality
built was the old bike. You want to talk reliability. Ohh the sensors and the
gadgets will never outlast the old school bike. Thermostat electric fan coolant
and whatever else they need. You could maintain your own bike back then.
Now ohhh i got an engine light might as well bring it to the dealer and get it
checked out. A sensor quits the bike shuts down at 10pm on the side of the
road well call someone to come and get you with your new smart phone.The
old bike well it just did not happen. Newer is not better.
Amazing in snowy, roadsalty Canada maybe. But vintage CBs are like illegitimate kindergarteners where I live. Every neighborhood has a handful.
F9’s vids are always a masterpiece
I have worked on motorcycles since January 1997. I remember the older CB’s the KZ’s GS’S XS’s. In the nineties they were sweet. Who could have seen twenty plus years from then there even sweeter. I wish i had bought some to have today!