An OEM restoration has three things that are the absolute hardest to get correct; Paint, Seat, Electric Harness. Chrome is difficult because almost everyone produces SHOW chrome which is not the same as the OEM. Zinc platting is also difficult to match the original. Wheels can be difficult if you do not start with NOS components.
The term 'restore' means something different to each of us. Is a Motion-Pro cable a replacement or a restored item? Is a new seat cover on original foam and seat-pan (not repainted) a restoration or just a cover-up... errr....cosmetic restoration? Are new pipes with a paragraph of mandates and warnings a restoration or a replacement? Powder-coating looks good, is durable, and easily repaired. But did it hide a crack in the frame? or cause a poor ground? Where is the original factory 'run' in the frame-paint? NASCAR and several other race sanctioning promoters have banned powder-coating for safety purposes.
I have completed several ground-up restorations of the CL72 and CL77 models including motor rebuilds. I have also restored a few other bikes to 'Rider' condition using good original parts. I ride an original CB750K3 that I purchased new. I keep it reasonably respectable by occasionally replacing a nut or a bolt, or a turn-signal stem, and was fortunate to find an OEM set of pipes that must have been take-offs when new. It looks good from 8-feet

I do think a CB750 is now one of the easier bikes to restore............to whatever level you want. It has very few frame components to paint. The fenders, tanks, side-covers, pipes, seats, decals, instrument faces, are all available to simply 'install' when they arrive in the mail. The rubber components and cables are either available as NOS or re-popped items. BTW......chewy.........I may have some of those brake-rod components.
Keep em shiny.............and upright
