Sorted through all the gears available between 2 sets of CB450 gears and shafts, as well as the 500T shafts and gears I bought a couple months ago. In the process I discovered something I haven't seen much in these engines, a bad bearing on the mainshaft of (of all engines) the 450 engine with the lowest mileage and the cleanest internally. Because the 17 tooth 1st gear I wanted to use is part of the mainshaft, fortunately the other mainshaft had a good ball bearing on the clutch end. It takes time to count the teeth on each gear to be sure of which is which, since one tooth doesn't visually change the gear size much.

Also found some discrepancies in gear teeth listings at both CMSNL and Partzilla, as well as missing gear teeth information from some of the listings. Had to go to the Honda CB450K1-K5 parts book to find accurate entries for all gears. Also found out I could search the worded description for each gear to find the missing information (in most cases, but there were a couple that still couldn't be found) and discovered that Partzilla uses yet another supplier for some NOS transmission parts and the gear information is shown as supplied by them.

So I arrived at the combination I plan to use, and as a last confirmation I assembled both shafts and then re-counted each gear's teeth, did the math, and took notes on both paper and the 50 year old crankcase.


Also found some discrepancies in gear teeth listings at both CMSNL and Partzilla, as well as missing gear teeth information from some of the listings. Had to go to the Honda CB450K1-K5 parts book to find accurate entries for all gears. Also found out I could search the worded description for each gear to find the missing information (in most cases, but there were a couple that still couldn't be found) and discovered that Partzilla uses yet another supplier for some NOS transmission parts and the gear information is shown as supplied by them.

So I arrived at the combination I plan to use, and as a last confirmation I assembled both shafts and then re-counted each gear's teeth, did the math, and took notes on both paper and the 50 year old crankcase.



































