Honda sold a fairing series called the Hondaline fairing during those years, made expressly for the bikes. They are identifiable: there is a long, horizontal lower edge to the sides, while the upper portion is steeply sloped. They have rectangular turn signal lens that are flush to the front of the fairing on both sides. They often have cracks in the mounting flanges where they bolt to the [very complicated] fairing mounts. The CB900 fairing kit included a 4 or 6 pound weight that bolted where the original headlight used to go when the fairing was installed, so as to not change the "feel" of the steering, Honda said...
There are also air vents to bring cooler air to the rider, as those fairings were notorious for pulling engine heat up behind them on a hot summer's day, 30-50 MPH ride.
The fairings came with a wiring connector and adapter harness: you removed the headlight and turn signals, installed the weight and its bracketry, hung the wiring behind the weight and plugged the harness adapter into the mate where the headlight and turn signals used to plug in (before you removed the headlight).