Hello everyone!
I'm new to the site and this is my first post. I didn't want to hijack twright3's recent thread on removing his stuck K1 carbs, (CB750 K1 stuck carb removal (sohc4.net)) but some of the replies in that thread were quite helpful and informative and I have a few questions of my own.
As for me, I've been riding all manner of two-wheelers for 60+ years. I was building and riding Whizzers and Cushmans while still in grammar school and riding and wrenching on Harleys and British bikes by high school. I bought my CB750 (mfg. 12/1970) VIN: 10721XX brand new in 1971 and best I can figure, it's an early K1, as opposed to a "new factory K1" mentioned below... but my VIN tag just says CB750. Did Honda ever put CB750K, CB750K1, K2, etc., on later model VIN tags?
I rode the 750 to both coasts a time or two from the mid-west in the 70s & 80s and the 750 was everything I wanted in a motorcycle... until I got bitten by a Goldwing bug... first a GL1100 and later in 1994, a 1989 GL1500 which became my regular ride... near or far. So the 750 was parked in 1994, and it sat unloved and unattended to, in my shop, until 2012 when I put some fresh gas in the tank, drained the carb bowls, changed the oil and spark plugs and started it right up. It actually ran fairly well on the few rides I took and a lot spiffier than the GW. I knew the front brake needed some TLC and a set of fresh tires wouldn't hurt, but I parked it again, thinking (mistakenly) that I could resurrect the old 750 Four with no sweat, anytime I wanted. Huh!
Fast forward to the fall of 2021 when for a variety of reasons, this 75-year-old biker decided it was time for something a little sportier and a bit lighter than my Goldwing, for everyday riding. I'm not sure why, but I decided to get another of my 70's vintage bikes on the road again... a '73 XLH1000 Ironhead Sportster... the antithesis of everything I liked about my Hondas I have no regrets on the choice, as there is something magical about the feel and the sound of a stock mufflered Ironhead. The Sportster is starting, and running, and stopping, and charging, and looking just great again. And I must say that the 2022 riding season on the XLH was one of the most enjoyable I've had in years.
But I'm thinking some here may understand how much my 750 still wants to be ridden and won't think I'm crazy when I hear it whispering, "Ride me!", whenever I walk by. So, after sitting for another 10 years, I've decided my next project will be to get my CB750 back on the road... so here I am.
Carbs - As removed

So far, I've pulled, disassembled, and cleaned the carbs in an ultrasonic cleaner. Dawn detergent in distilled water only. It did a pretty good job except for heavy varnish on the flat rack plate and on the bottom of the inlet end of a couple of carbs. (i.e. the ones that were leaking.) I've downloaded a Honda SM and the K1-8 supplement as well as a fairly comprehensive parts catalog, but they don't mention a Keihin model number. The top of each carb's mounting flange is marked "7A" on the left side, and all are marked "IL" on the right side... except carb #2 which is marked "IK" on the right side of the flange. If anyone can explain these markings, please do.
I found a really good thread here on rebuilding later model PD42(?) carbs with a lot of pictures, but nothing similar for these carbs..
One reply in twright3's thread...
... The plastic floats in a K1 indicate the bike is a New Factory K1. In the future, you might find that to be helpful info, supposing the floats were not changed by someone before you. 
Re modern gasolines (notes for when you get it running again): the K1 carbs usually (I would say 'always', but not all bikes are factory original today) need to have their emulsifier tube's larger holes opened up a little more, like to 0.039", with a size drill. They were too small by circa 1985 (MTBE fuels) and are STILL too small with modern ethanol-laced fuels, so they make the plugs foul quickly. The OEM emulsifier holes are only 0.033" in most of the K1 657A series carbs.
... has me thinking my carbs are likely the "K1 657A series carbs" that HondaMan mentioned but my carbs have metal floats. So, does that indicate my bike is an "Old Factory K1" as opposed to HondaMan's "New Factory K1"? Any explanations here on the terms/history of New Factory vs Old (?) are appreciated.
I see $25 carb gasket kits on partzilla with float bowl gaskets, washers and o-rings and the Honda parts listings and diagrams (E-26 Carburetor Keihin) I've downloaded also list kits and don't show individual part numbers to search for. Is there a better way to buy individual gaskets and o-rings for these Keihin 657A (?) carbs?
I've also discovered a very small pinhole in one of my metal floats in a "pre-ultrasonic dunk test". That particular bowl was the nastiest of the four carbs and was probably leaking and evaporating gas in there for a long time. I've removed all the water from my dunk test, but I can still hear something rattling around inside the float. It sounds like a single very small "glob" of something and I'm thinking perhaps coagulated particulates of something left behind from evaporating gas. Anyway, my questions are...
1) Has anyone had any luck soldering up a pinhole leak in a Keihin metal float? I know plastic floats are available but I'd kinda like to stick with my metal floats. Suggestions welcome!
2) Assuming I am successful in sealing the leaking float with solder, is there enough excess buoyancy in the pair of floats to mitigate the extra weight of whatever remains inside one of the floats on the float bar?
3) I think I read somewhere, but can anyone explain the practice, or the theory behind, setting one float in the same bowl higher (or lower) than the other float? Or did I dream that up?
I also read in twright3's stuck carb thread that you all like pictures...
... Post us up a pic of the bike someday - we all love pics !
...so I dug up this photo of my 1971 CB750 in about 1973.
The Rally Winners

My first and current wife of 47 years and I, had just won a local motorcycle rally! Some may notice, it only took me two years (in all my youthful wisdom), to ditch the original clunky looking, upswept, wimpy sounding, stock 750 mufflers, for the "so much cooler" and "so much louder", 4 into 2, unbaffled collector setup. (I sure wish I could remember what happened to the original mufflers!)
ZT