[...] I was just pointing out that model year wasn't a U.S. marketing ploy, that's all.
Point me
one genuine Honda Parts List, that determines the model by year.
I know of one 'half half' one, but that one was edited by
American Honda. The year is irrelevant. There are markets that don't even have the same era calender as you have! Moreover the year in some markets may indicate to: when the bike was first registered in that country (arrival) or when it first received a license plate number, and there are more variations. It's called diversity.
You do miles, others do km. It's a fact of life.
If you do the effort - and you only have to do it
once - to pinpoint what exact model you have, you can save yourself a lot of frustration and you will 'revaluate' your Clymer or Haynes manual.
Every bike has a frame- and a enginenumber. Fact. The true identity actually is in the
framenumber, because one can mount another engine in that frame. Both frame- and enginenumbers are listed in the various CB500 and CB550 parts lists. By identifying your bike, you will also learn the 'area code' and so you will learn that Honda had different cables in different markets. Always good to know when ordering, don't you think? I remember quite a few times here, things went wrong and an owner ended up with the wrong cables and clutch plates. Just disciplin yourself
once and you can't go wrong.
Praise yourself lucky some people did the effort to share their genuine Honda documents for all the world to consult. People differ however. The
only time I myself have invited a member here to share
his owner's manual (CB550K2) which still isn't on the internet, he refused, saying: "Oh, no, mine is in its plastic cover and I don't want to get it out." Mind you, other people have spent
weekends scanning and uploading documents to make them available for all of us...
Back to the 'year'. If you talk years, the rest of the world will not know, what you're talking about. Realise that Europe did not import the CB750K3, K4 or K5 for instance. If your thread begins by indicating your model, the way Honda did, readers can conclude rightaway whether the content is relevant for them or not. The 'year' leaves us clueless. Another example: the CB500K1 model has been marketed in Europe for quite some years
unchanged. Maybe hard for Americans to grasp, because they're accustomed to a new model every year: a goldmine for the advertising to which Americans seem addicted, judging by the presence of the phenomenon just about anywhere, anytime and we all know what that has resulted in: blessings like electric car windows and 17 (!) cupholders in cars that have... 7 seats. 2,43 cupholder per person. Isn't that great?!
Best service in this forum you can give a newcomer in my - as always - humble opinion is to show how that person can help himself. Yes, you read well: an
opinion. An opinion however that, when shared, can save us a lot of unnecessary posts.
[...] Posting pictures of a parts diagram claiming that's what he has when it isn't, plus not being original to the bike, certainly doesn't help with pinpointing correct parts.
Oh, where did I do
that?